SHARE
COPY LINK

COVID-19

Travelling to Italy? Here’s what you need to know about coronavirus tests

Whether you’re visiting Italy or you live here and plan to travel abroad, here’s what you should know about Italy’s coronavirus test rules for travellers.

Travelling to Italy? Here’s what you need to know about coronavirus tests
Photo: AFP

Italy doesn’t have a blanket testing requirement for all travellers – so entering the country doesn’t automatically require a nasal swab.

Instead the rules are based on which country you’re arriving from and which region of Italy you’re going to, as well as all the other restrictions on who can enter Italy in the first place and whether they have to quarantine.

We’ll try and answer the big questions about how it all works.

Which travellers have to get a coronavirus test in Italy?

Since August, it has been mandatory to get tested if you’re travelling to Italy from Spain, Greece, Croatia or Malta. That rule remains in force until at least October 7th.

READ ALSO: Italy's latest emergency decree extends most rules until October 7th

Travellers can either get tested before they travel – both molecular (PCR) and rapid antigen tests are accepted, so long as they’re carried out no more than 72 hours before your journey – or within 48 hours of arriving.

Provided your test comes back negative, you won’t have to quarantine upon entering Italy from one of these four countries (though it may depend which region you’re going to: some regions have different quarantine and testing rules, so be sure to check with the local authorities first).

How do you get tested upon arrival?

The easiest way to get tested is at the airport, port or station you arrive into: several of Italy’s main transit hubs, including Fiumicino and Ciampino airports in Rome, Malpensa and Linate airports in Milan, Marco Polo airport in Venice, the ports of Civitavecchia and Livorno as well as Santa Maria Novella train station in Florence, have set up rapid testing facilities for passengers.

The procedure varies depending on where you arrive: in most cases it’s drop-in and free of charge, but it may be limited to passengers arriving from Spain, Greece, Croatia or Malta, or require registration in advance.

READ ALSO: 

The process typically involves giving your contact details, getting your nose swabbed and agreeing to self-isolate while you wait for the results – which, in the case of the antigen tests being used for most mass screening in Italy, should come within hours.

You may or may not be required to wait around for the results (a drive-through centre will probably tell you to leave, but facilities with more space may have you wait). If you head off, plan on self-isolating as a precaution until you get the result.

You will be contacted the same day by local health authorities if you test positive, but may not hear anything at all if you’re negative. You should be able to call or email for confirmation of your result: ask at the test centre who to contact.


Drive-through testing at the port of Civitavecchia. Photo: Vincenzo Pinto/AFP

Alternatively, you can opt to arrange a coronavirus test within 48 hours of arriving in Italy (that's the national government's rule, but some regions suggest 24 hours or less).

Depending on the facilities available in your region, you may be able to go straight to a drop-in centre, or you might have to make an appointment with your usual doctor or via the regional health service. Find out how to contact each Italian region’s coronavirus helpline here.

What happens if you test positive?

The main concern for travellers is that they could be asymptomatic, test positive upon arrival, and end up spending their long-awaited Italian break in a quarantine facility.

If you test positve, the regional health authoriity will contact you and explain the next steps and your options. The rules vary by region, but if you decie to stay in Italy you will be asked to quarantine for 14 days.

Hotels are unlikely to allow you to quarantine on their premises, so if you can't go to a private address the health authority will arrange quarantine facilities.

These can range from confortable – such as a hotel that has been requisitioned for this purpose – to far less inviting: for example, the island of Sardinia's quarantine facilities include disused army barracks.

You are also expected to quarantine until you have taken the test and been confirmed negative.

Does Italy waive travel and quarantine restrictions if you test negative?

No and no. Apart from for travellers from EU members Spain, Greece, Croatia and Malta, in most cases Italy does not accept a negative test result as a substitute for quarantine.

So if you’re entering from outside Europe or from a designated ‘high-risk’ country, you will have spend your first 14 days in Italy in isolation whether you get tested or not. Find out which countries are currently on Italy’s quarantine list here.

Nor can you evade Italy’s ban on non-essential travel from outside Europe by showing a negative test result. In other words, tourists from the United States, India, Russia or any other country on which Italy has travel restrictions can’t hope to enter by getting a coronavirus test before leaving. Read more about Italy’s travel rules here.

READ ALSO: Italy approves travel ban exemption for separated international couples

What about travellers from other countries?

As Italy ramps up testing, other travellers may be able to claim a free coronavirus test too.

Many regions are offering voluntary tests to residents who return from the holiday hotspot Sardinia, after hundreds of cases on the mainland were linked to trips to the island.

READ ALSO: Why has Italy avoided the surge in Covid cases seen in France and Spain?

The region of Tuscany is offering free testing to any resident who returns from another country, regardless where, while at Florence train station you can get tested upon showing a ticket for any interregional train.

Meanwhile some testing centres at ports and airports are open to all passengers: Rome’s Fiumicino airport, for instance, has a drive-through centre in its car park.

As well as walk-in and drive-through centres, you also have the option of asking your GP to prescribe you a coronavirus test (that you can take for free) or getting one done at a private laboratory (which you’ll have to pay for).

 

Member comments

  1. Do you know for those people arriving in Italy driving through the Mont Blanc Tunnel or the Gran San Bernardo? Are they doing swabs there? In the Aosta Valley I found online only tests at the hospital in downtown Aosta, but not sure if those are the fast tests or the ones you have to wait for two days for a response. I am measuring if worth spending 500£+ for a family of four to get tested in the UK prior to going to Italy. Any other news you have, I would appreciate it. 🙂

  2. Arrived into Bergamo last night from uk ready to show my very expensive document proving my COVID test results as negative . nOONE asked to see this at all ! What a farse!,

  3. I drove into Piemonte (red zone) last week on UK plates coming in via gothard tunnel and maggiore from Switzerland. Stopped at the border but guards confused (i have no italian so we couldnt discuss) they just waived me in. I stayed at 2 airbnb’s folks very friendly but wondering how i made it in. Ive had no test or been asked to. I am basically quarantined anyway as there is nothing doing. My challenge is to get a rental place to meet requirements for residency before brexit deadline – whilst under lockdown! Any suggestions welcomed 😉

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

STRIKES

UPDATE: Is Italy’s nationwide rail strike on Sunday still going ahead?

A 23-hour nationwide rail strike planned for Sunday, May 19th was postponed on Thursday following orders from Italy's Transport Ministry.

UPDATE: Is Italy’s nationwide rail strike on Sunday still going ahead?

Passengers travelling across Italy by train were expected to face delays or cancellations this weekend as staff at state-owned railway operator Ferrovie dello Stato – which includes Trenitalia, Trenord and Trenitalia Tper – and private company Italo planned to strike from 3am on Sunday, May 19th to 2am on Monday, May 20th, for a total of 23 hours.

But Italy’s Transport Ministry on Thursday issued an injunction postponing the walkout to a future date, saying that the protest may have resulted in “major repercussions and public order and safety issues” at the Emilia Romagna Formula 1 Grand Prix over the weekend.

The walkout had been called by the PdM/PdB transport union in mid-April to demand the renewal of collective labour agreements in the rail transport sector.

The planned protest was set to affect all types of rail travel, from long-distance services to regional and local ones, with passengers in multiple areas of the country expected to face delays and cancellations. 

READ ALSO: The transport strikes that will hit travel in Italy in May 2024

Staff at national rail operator Trenitalia, private long-distance operator Italo and regional train companies Trenord and Trenitalia Tper were all expected to take part in the walkout.

As of Friday morning, the PdM/PdB union had not yet issued a response and there was no detail as to when the walkout would take place.

Some Italian media reports on Friday said that rail workers may openly challenge the injunction and go ahead with the strike on Sunday, but there was no statement from the PdM/PdB union nor the involved rail operators supporting this claim. 

Keep up with the latest updates in The Local’s strike news section.

SHOW COMMENTS