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Venice has started issuing day tickets for tourists to reduce overtourism. The US$5.50 tickets are available online, and visitors caught without a permit could face a fine of €50 to €300. Photo: AFP

Venice tourist tax for day trippers comes in as the overwhelmed Italian city works to reduce visitor numbers

  • Venice has been a popular tourist destination for centuries, with its distinctive canals and architecture and the impressive St Mark’s Square
  • However, it is being overwhelmed by millions of annual visitors, so it now requires tourists visiting for the day at peak periods to buy US$5.50 entry tickets
Tourism

Tickets went on sale on Tuesday for day trippers wanting to visit Venice in the coming months as part of efforts to tackle overtourism in the Italian city.

During 29 of the busiest days between April 25 and July 14, visitors entering the old city centre between 8.30am and 4pm will need a €5 (US$5.50) ticket.

The website selling the tickets went live on Tuesday, and is available in English and Italian. Buyers get a QR code granting them access for a day. Anyone caught without a ticket will face a fine of between €50 (US$55) and €300.

Residents or people born in the municipality are exempt and need only show their identity cards.

The annual Regata Storica (Historical Regatta) on the Grand Canal, close to Rialto Bridge, in Venice in September 2023. Photo: AFP

There are other exemptions, from commuters and homeowners in the city to close relatives of residents. Visitors aged under 14 and tourists with hotel bookings will need to be registered and obtain a QR code, but access for them will be free of charge.

Restrictions will not apply to the lagoon’s smaller islands, such as Murano, famous for its glassmaking industry.

For now, the scheme, approved last year, does not set a limit on the number of entries.

Authorities debated for years on how to regulate the millions of visitors to the city, drawn by St Mark’s Square, the Rialto Bridge and its countless picturesque canals.

The introduction of daily tickets was repeatedly postponed over concerns it would dent tourist revenue and compromise freedom of movement. City authorities took action after Unesco warned it could list the city as an at-risk site.
St. Mark’s Basilica (front) seen from St Mark’s Campanile (bell tower) and a view of Venice towards the east. Photo: AFP

Unesco put Venice on its world heritage list in 1987 as an “extraordinary architectural masterpiece”, but has repeatedly warned that the city needs to better manage tourism.

“Venice is the first city in the world to introduce such a system, which could serve as a model for other fragile and delicate cities that must be protected,” Mayor Luigi Brugnaro said last year.

But he called it a “first step” rather than a “revolution” and said authorities stand ready to make changes to ensure it works.

Tickets will initially be required between April 25, a national holiday in Italy, and May 5, and on nine subsequent weekends in May, June and July.

Some 3.2 million tourists stayed overnight in Venice’s historic centre in 2022, according to official data – a number that does not include the thousands of visitors who visit just for the day.

Additional reporting by Reuters

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