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VENICE

What are the new rules for tourist groups visiting Venice?

The famed Italian city of Venice will restrict tour group sizes from summer 2024 in an effort to regulate crowds of tourists that throng the streets.

What are the new rules for tourist groups visiting Venice?
Rialto Bridge in Venice (Photo by Laurent EMMANUEL / AFP)

The Italian city of Venice announced on Saturday new regulations on the size of tourist groups to reduce the number of huge crowds and improve the lives of locals. 

The measure will come into effect from June. The use of loudspeakers will also be banned as they “create confusion” the city said in a statement.

Elizabeth Pesce, the city’s security councillor said: “This is an important measure to improve the management of organized groups and promote sustainable tourism.”

The rule is an amendment to the police and urban security regulation dedicated to ‘regulating the methods of conducting visits for accompanied groups, with particular attention to the needs to protect residents and promoting pedestrian mobility’.

Simone Venturini, tourism councillor for the city added: “The measure is part of a broader framework of interventions aimed at ensuring a greater balance between the needs of those who live in the city and those who come to visit it.”

He concluded the introduction of the new rule on June 1st will give operators enough time to organise themselves.

The regulation was announced just five weeks after the city said it would introduce a fee of €5 for day trippers starting from April 25th to May 5th this year. The fee will also apply for the rest of the weekends in May and June as well as the first two weeks of July. Tickets will be sold via an online platform that’s expected to be up later this month. 

Both the moves come after UNESCO warned it could list the city as an at-risk heritage site, partly due to the risk of over-tourism.

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TOURISM

Italy’s Cinque Terre to make hiking trail one-way for Labour Day

The Cinque Terre National Park, one of Italy's most popular tourist destinations, is set to enforce one-way restrictions on a major hiking path on Wednesday, May 1st.

Italy's Cinque Terre to make hiking trail one-way for Labour Day

The restriction applies on the stretch of the Sentiero Verde Azzurro path from Monterosso to Vernazza, and will be in force between 9am and 2pm, authorities said in an update on the park’s website.

Hikers will be able to enter the path at Monterosso and exit at Vernazza, walking south-east, but not travel in the opposite direction. Other stretches of the Sentiero Verde Azzurro will remain two-way.

READ ALSO: The Italian tourist destinations bringing in restrictions this summer

The Monterosso-Vernazza stretch has “passages that are narrow and steep, factors which in the event of large numbers of people could lead to queues and potentially critical situations,” park authorities said.

The same rule was enforced from April 25th-28th, over Italy’s Liberation Day long weekend, and may be extended to the weekend of May 4th-5th.

The measure was previously trialled over major holidays in 2023, allowing “thousands of guests to appreciate the wonder of our territory in absolute safety,” said park President Donatella Bianchi.

The day rate for a Cinque Terre Trekking Card also rises from €7.50 to €15 on Wednesday as surge pricing kicks in. Find the dates when you’ll pay the most to access the Cinque Terre hiking trails on this calendar.

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