Villafranca Tirrena is a comune (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Messina in the Italian region Sicily, located about east of Palermo and about northwest of Messina.
Villafranca Tirrena borders the following municipalities: Messina, Saponara.
Villafranca Tirrena borders to the north with the Tyrrhenian Sea, to the south-east with the municipality of Messina and to the north-west with the municipal territory of Saponara. Altimetrically, the territory extends between 0 and 828 m above sea level, mainly made up of hilly areas which leave space near the coast to a flat area on which a large part of the urban center stands. Most of the municipal territory is used for specialized crops (citrus groves, vineyards, olive groves).
What separates it from the municipality of Messina is the eastern border of the Gallo stream. In the western part of the territory there are the Calvaruso and Santa Caterina streams: the first starts from the hills above Calvaruso and descends to the Tyrrhenian Sea, the second has its sources in the hills of Saponara and Calvaruso and under the Bauso block of flats near the SS113 it flows into the first giving rise to a single delta.
Formerly called Bauso, Villafranca Tirrena became an independent municipality in 1825 maintaining the name of Bauso until 1929, when it changed its name to the current Villafranca Tirrena by associating the two towns of Calvaruso and Saponara (the latter became independent in 1952).
The first documented news dates back to 1271 when King Charles of Anjou assigned the Bàusus fief to Pierre Gruyer, which had previously belonged to Enrico de Dissinto. In the Aragonese era, the Bauso fiefdom together with the nearby Calvaruso belonged to various noble families (Manna, Gioeni, Giovanni da Taranto) until reaching the treasurer of the Kingdom Nicolò Castagna in 1399, upon whose death the fiefdoms went as dowry to his niece Pina and through women they passed first to the Bonifacios and then to the Ventimiglias, La Grua, Pollicino, Merulla and Spadafora. In 1548, the barony of Bauso was purchased by Giovanni Nicola Cottone. In 1590 Stefano Cottone had the castle rebuilt there, in 1591, Emperor Philip II elevated the fiefdom of Bauso to a county and in 1623 Philip IV of Spain invested Giuseppe Cottone with the title of Prince of Castelnuovo (another name for the Bauso county). In the eighteenth century, Abbot Vito Amico informs us that the territory of Bauso was cultivated with orchards and mulberry trees. and that the air was unhealthy. From other documents we know that the town, with its warehouse located in the current Piazza Dante, at the time Piazza del Fondaco, already active in the century. XVI, it was a stopping point along the Palermo-Messina road. In 1819, the land of Bauso and the castle with the attached title of prince of Castelnuovo, were sold by Carlo Cottone Cedronio to Domenico Marcello Pettini, former judge of the Grand Civil Court of Palermo, who purchased it for 9,000 onze.
The coat of arms consists of a Samnite shield in which, on a blue background, a lion crowned with gold is depicted, holding a twig of silver-flowered cotton between its paws. Motto: Potentior. The banner is a blue cloth
After a period of abandonment, the castle was reopened to the public in 2003 and today the restoration work is being completed which will bring the ancient noble residence, with its sumptuous garden, back to its original splendor.
In the Municipality there is a Comprehensive Institute that groups together nursery schools, primary schools and lower secondary schools.
The municipality is served by the Villafranca Tirrena-Saponara station located on the Messina-Palermo railway. Located along the state road 113, between 1890 and 1932 the town was served by the "Bauso" station of the Messina-Barcelona tramway, managed by SATS.
The municipality is served both by AST the public company controlled by the Sicilian Region that manages interurban public transport on the island, private extra-urban transport companies.
Since March 2025 the Municipality has served by some urban and extra-urban bus service of ATM Messina with lines 32, 33, 33bis and two months later also lines 25 and 26.