My wife and I spent a week at the Tramontano at the beginning of July 2019. We decided on this hotel because the cost for B and B was substantially cheaper than the hotel where we normally stay - a saving of about £900.
There were no complaints about the room and balcony, with a fantastic view of Vesuvias and the Bay of Naples. The standards of cleanliness were excellent, and the hotel itself was everything you might expect from a 300-year-old building, oozing class and history. A great swimming pool, too.
Our only downside was the hotel's beach. The cost of two sun beds and one umbrella while we were there was 27 euros a day, which might have been acceptabale had the beach provided a good customer experience. Sadly, not. Sun beds crammed in like Blackpool on a hot day with officious beach guards telling you where you can and can't sit. Brits didn't get to sit on the actual, beach, which appeared to be reserved for Italian families. We were steered to beds on the decking, but by mid-day the sun had shifted and it proved impossible to move the umbrella as there was no space to do so.
Rather naughtily, the hotel's guide book talks about 'free access' to the beach. Strictly speaking, this is true. You can swim and walk on the beach and decking free of charge. But if you want a sunbed and an umbrella - and who wouldn't? - you pay a substantial amount.