Loading Page...

Do you have to pay for toilets in Venice?

All the restrooms are accessible with a coin that needs to be inserted in the proper coin acceptors. The entry fee, determined by the City Hall of Venice, is of euro 1,50, Vat included, in all the restrooms except for the Tronchetto island and the Napoleonic gardens, where the fee is of 1,00, euro Vat included.



People Also Ask

To use a public toilet in Venice, you must pay around 1,5 euros per visit. You'll find an attendant or sometimes a tourniquet at the restroom entrance.

MORE DETAILS

Using a Public Bathroom in Italy If you use a public pay bathroom, you'll pay a small fee (usually €0.50 to €1.00) by inserting Euro coins into a machine or paying an attendant. Occasionally, the bathroom will be 'free,' but you're expected to 'tip' the attendant (€0.50 to €1.00 is fine).

MORE DETAILS

Venice is very unique in terms of its sewage disposal; the canals are the main way waste is disposed of in Venice, though new technology has improved the sewage aspect of Venice's infrastructure.

MORE DETAILS

To use a public toilet in Venice, you must pay around 1,5 euros per visit. You'll find an attendant or sometimes a tourniquet at the restroom entrance. That's why it's good to have change on hand, as you'll pay in cash. The Venice public toilets are free of charge for visitors with disabilities.

MORE DETAILS

TOILETS IN VENICE Do not rely on toilet paper being present in the bathroom (here's where your map would be most useful). Be prepared to search for the method of flushing the toilet. There are as many ways to flush toilets in Venice as there are gondolas.

MORE DETAILS

You can drink the water in Venice and save yourself the expense and waste of bottled water. Venice's tap water is pumped in from the Italian mainland so you don't have to worry about anything questionable in the water that is floating under the city. That lagoon water is not coming out of the tap.

MORE DETAILS

If you ask locals “Do you tip in Italy?”, they'll explain that while they sometimes leave a small tip, it's generally not necessary. In Italy, gratuity (or una mancia, pronounced oo-nah MAN-chah) is considered a bonus for exceptional service. And it's not often that you'll find a tip jar at a register.

MORE DETAILS

Do people wear jeans in Venice? Yes, they do. Most of the places in Venice are fine with casual attire. In summer it's a bit too hot to wear jeans, so I'd rather wear linen trousers, skirts and shorts.

MORE DETAILS

Yet there is a little surprise reserved for all Venice lovers and that is there isn't only salty water surrounding it but also a network access to public water from a hydraulic system. Good and free. In fact while walking along Venice you will often bump into -when most needed- many fountains.

MORE DETAILS

Water Bus Tickets Pass Vaporetto Water Bus line number 12 is a line which leaves from Fondamente Nove to go to Punta Sabbioni, stopping successively at Murano, Mazzorbo, Torcello, Burano and Treporti. Good to know: This water bus has toilets.

MORE DETAILS

In Venice, like many popular travel destinations, tips and gratuities are discretionary and dependent on the service quality you've received. Sometimes it's appropriate to tip simply because it's customary - for example in a restaurant, hotel or cab.

MORE DETAILS

The northern Italian city of Venice is a notoriously expensive place for a vacation.

MORE DETAILS

It's also very dangerous to swim in the canals because of motorboats and gondolas circulating the canals constantly and at a rapid pace. Not even on the so-called fondamenta (the seashores) are you allowed to swim. It is even more dangerous, since bigger boats regularly stop by.

MORE DETAILS

No problem taking your rolling luggage to Venice, no matter what kind of wheels it has. . . . And if you stay at a hotel w/ a dock and take a water taxi you can get to your hotel w/o dragging your luggage anywhere. Diane, you may need to lift your bag at some point, off carousels, trains etc.

MORE DETAILS