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BackVenice Mayor Proposes Dynamic Pricing for Day-Tripper Access Fee
Venice Mayor Proposes Dynamic Pricing for Day-Tripper Access Fee
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The Independent World2d agoTravel3 min read

Venice Mayor Proposes Dynamic Pricing for Day-Tripper Access Fee

Quick Look

Venice's mayor is seeking government approval to implement a dynamic pricing system for the city's day-tripper access fee, potentially raising charges to 50 euros on peak days to combat overcrowding and fund maintenance.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Venice implemented a day-tripper access fee in 2024 to manage tourism. The current 10-euro fee has been criticized for not adequately addressing overcrowding and for commercializing the city.

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To combat overcrowding, Venice's new mayor is seeking government approval for a dynamic pricing system on its three-year-old day-tripper access fee, with charges potentially rising to 50 euros on peak days.

Mayor Simone Venturini said that the current 10-euro fee has not done enough to deter visitors on peak days.

Instead of a fixed higher fee, the city wants to enact a form of surge-pricing, allowing the charge to rise with demand on its busiest days.

Venturini stated the system would both discourage overcrowding and help cover the costs of maintaining the city.

“We spend 100 million euros a year just to maintain Venice physically, and nobody gives us that money. Not Europe. Not the Italian state. International critics don’t pay it either. It’s paid by the people of Venice, and in part through tourism taxes,” said Venturini, who was elected mayor last month after serving as the city’s top tourism official when the day-tripper tax was launched in 2024.

The access fee itself has been widely criticized by activists, housing advocates and opposition politicians for not doing enough to ease crowding in the city, while reducing Venice to a tourist attraction by charging admission. They also say the focus is too much on managing tourist flows, and not enough on bringing more residents back to the historic part of the city.

Venturini said the money is necessary to clean and maintain the city. The proposal for a surge-pricing structure would require an amendment to Italy’s special law governing Venice, and Venturini said he had already discussed the idea with the tourism minister.

“Day-trippers obviously generate waste — they eat, they drink, they throw things away. That comes at a huge cost,” which he said are driven up “because everything has to be done by hand, with brooms, boats and handcarts.”

While the 50-euro price proposal has made headlines and drawn criticism for being prohibitive for many visitors, particularly families, Venturini said the amount was chosen as an upper limit, giving the city room to experiment with different pricing levels. He said they are still working with researchers to determine the right threshold.

“If, for example, more than 40,000 people had already booked for a given day, those above that threshold might be asked to pay a little more—20, 25 or 30 euros,” Venturini said. “We asked for a broad range, up to 50 euros, and then it would be up to the city to manage the system through further testing. It doesn’t mean everyone who comes to Venice would pay 50 euros.”

While opposition politicians have proposed putting a cap on the number of visitors a day, Venturini said current Italian law does not allow that.

The number of residents of Venice’s canaled historic center has dropped to below 48,000 — while the number of tourist beds has risen to more than 51,500, according to the most recent figures tracked by the Ocio housing advocacy group from January.

Venturini argued that the city’s population is understated because many students and seasonal workers spend most of the year in Venice without registering as residents.

“That doesn’t mean we are satisfied. We need to do more,” he said.

Venice collected 2.4 million euros on 29 peak days from more than 485,000 day-trippers during the test phase in 2024. That rose to 5.4 million euros last year after Venice increased the number of days to 54 and doubled the fee to 10 euros for last-minute registrations on the city platform. This year, an additional six days have been added, but no figures have yet been released on arrivals or revenues.

Venturini said the money collected covers “only a small part of the costs of managing tourism.”

“The goal is not to raise money or to turn Venice into a ticketed city,” he said. “The goal is to give both residents and visitors a better experience on days when the city would otherwise be too crowded.”

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Venice will likely implement a tiered pricing system for day-trippers, with higher fees on peak days.

    Likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • Will the Italian government approve the dynamic pricing amendment?
  • What will be the final threshold for the surge pricing?
  • How will the new pricing affect the number of residents in Venice?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by The Independent World.

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