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LA BELLA VITA

La Bella Vita: Tickets to visit Venice and Italy’s unwritten rules on tipping

From mastering Italian-style tipping etiquette to understanding Venice's new ticketing system, our weekly newsletter La Bella Vita offers you an essential starting point for eating, talking, drinking and living like an Italian.

St Mark's Square, Venice
Tourists walk across St Mark's Square in Venice. Photo by MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP

As you might have seen in the news recently, tickets for Venice are now officially on sale after the city launched its new online platform allowing for payment of its ‘tourist tax’.

Day-trippers will need to pay five euros to enter the city centre on 29 key dates this year: during the first peak tourism period of the year, from April 25th to May 5th, and then on all weekends in May and June as well as the first two weekends of July.

The long-planned scheme is being trialled this year in a move intended to thin the crowds and lessen the impact of mass tourism in Venice’s centro storico.

 
But the website isn’t just for day-trippers. Whether you’re a Venice resident, second-home owner, or regular visitor, you’ll probably need to get to grips with the new system.
 
Some readers who have already used the portal reported finding it confusing or having technical issues, so we tried it out ourselves. We broke down who exactly has to pay the charge, how the website works, and how to claim an exemption:

How to use Venice’s new ‘tourist tax’ website

Another perennial source of confusion among visitors to Italy is tipping culture – which is understandable, considering that you may be told different things about this depending on who you ask.

As regular visitors know, tipping is not required or expected in Italy. But despite this, one reader recently wrote in to say waiters at restaurants she visits in Italy regularly hint that “service is not included.” Are they telling the truth, she asks, or is she right to be wary? Should ‘servizio’ be listed on the bill? And if you want to tip Italian-style, how much is normal?

We answer these questions and more about tipping at Italy’s restaurants in the article below:

When and how much should I tip in Italy?

Restaurant, Rome

Visitors to Italy are often unsure whether, or how much, to tip – and some unscrupulous restaurants may take advantage. Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP

Moving to a sleepy Italian village and opening a B&B is the dream for many retirees – but not only. This week, we spoke to one British-Italian couple who did it in their forties.

Moving from London to a Tuscan village of just 400 inhabitants, they swapped grey skies for sunshine and the 9-5 grind for the seasonal lifestyle that comes with running a small hospitality business.

If you’ve ever dreamed of doing something similar, here’s what they told us about finding their new home, running the business, and the challenges and rewards along the way:

‘How we left the UK to open a B&B in a Tuscan village’

Remember if you’d like to have this weekly newsletter sent straight to your inbox you can sign up for it via Newsletter preferences in “My Account”.

Is there an aspect of the Italian way of life you’d like to see us write more about? Please email me at [email protected].

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LA BELLA VITA

La Bella Vita: The Italian regions with the best beaches and unlucky Friday 17th

From the cleanest beaches in Italy to some distinctively Italian superstitions, our weekly newsletter La Bella Vita offers you an essential starting point for eating, talking, drinking and living like an Italian.

La Bella Vita: The Italian regions with the best beaches and unlucky Friday 17th

La Bella Vita is our regular look at the real culture of Italy – from language to cuisine, manners to art. This newsletter is published weekly and you can receive it directly to your inbox, by going to newsletter preferences in ‘My Account’ or following the instructions in the newsletter box below.

From the Italian Riviera to the shores of Salento, Italy boasts some of the Mediterranean’s most unspoilt coastline – and the number of officially pristine Italian beaches recently increased.

Fourteen new towns this week had their names added to the Foundation for Environmental Education’s list of ‘Blue Flag’ beach destinations, the world’s cleanest and greenest stretches of coast.

To help visualise the latest rankings, we’ve created a map of the Italian regions with the highest number of Blue Flag beaches in 2024.

MAP: Which regions of Italy have the most Blue Flag beaches in 2024?

You may have heard of unlucky Friday the 13th, but in Italy, it’s Friday the 17th you really need to watch out for.

That’s because in Roman numerals the number 17 (XVII) is an anagram of the Latin word VIXI, meaning “I have lived” – the use of the past tense suggests death, and therefore bad luck.

You can find a list of some other quintessentially Italian superstitions, from spilling olive oil to touching iron, below.

Unlucky Friday 17th – and 12 other Italian superstitions to beware of

Black cats are to be avoided in Italy. Photo by Valeriano G on Unsplash

The Colosseum and Pompeii may be ranked among the world’s wonders – but that doesn’t mean they’re to everyone’s taste.

From complaints about the Colosseum’s lack of a roof to the Milan Duomo’s “gaudy and tacky” exterior and Pompeii’s shoddy street paving, some visitors leave Italy decidedly unimpressed by its most celebrated attractions.

We’ve put together some of the most scathing reviews from dissatisfied customers.

‘Not even that ancient’: The harshest TripAdvisor comments about Italy’s sights

Remember if you’d like to have this weekly newsletter sent straight to your inbox you can sign up for it via Newsletter preferences in “My Account”.

Is there an aspect of the Italian way of life you’d like to see us write more about? Please email me at [email protected].

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