Destinations Italy Venice
Italy · Veneto

Venice

6 sestieri
36 restaurants & bacari
12 palazzi & hotels
28 things to do

The most photographed city in the world, and somehow still strange every time. Skip San Marco at noon, cross the bridge into Cannaregio for cicchetti, stand at the bar, drink an ombra, repeat. Wake up to bells, eat squid-ink pasta on a canal, get lost on purpose. The water is the trick. Acqua alta in November is the price of admission in winter — bring boots.

Currency
EUR €
Best Time
Apr · May · Sep · Oct
Language
Italian · Venetian
Daily Budget
€180–700
Plug Type
C · F · L
Tipping
Round up, coperto usual
Time Zone
CET / UTC+1
Avoid
Aug heat · Nov–Dec acqua alta
A note from Hala

Venice is sinking, expensive, and overrun. It is also the most singular city ever built, and three days in the right neighbourhoods — by which we mean almost any neighbourhood that isn't San Marco — will reset what you think a city can be. The trick is to do it on Venetian time. Cicchetti at 11 a.m. with a glass of white. The vaporetto at sunset instead of the gondola at noon. Dinner at 9 p.m. in Castello. The crowds leave at 6. The city is yours after that.

Stay three nights. One in San Marco only if money is no object. Otherwise: Cannaregio or Dorsoduro. Walk everywhere; the map lies, the alleys end in canals, that's the joy.

Stay in Cannaregio. Eat in Castello. Drink in Dorsoduro. Cross to San Marco at 7 a.m. or never.
Quick take

Best in late April–early June and mid-September–October. Carnevale (late Jan/early Feb) is a separate, brilliant trip but book a year out. August is hot, mosquito-heavy, and the canals smell. Acqua alta season (Oct–Jan) means flooded piazzas — pack rubber boots, the city sells them on the spot. The €5 day-tripper access fee applies on peak weekends April–July — overnight guests are exempt.

Know before you go

The sestieri.

Venice is divided into six neighbourhoods called sestieri — historic districts that each have their own rhythm. Pick a base outside San Marco. Walk between them across bridges. The numbers on every door are not street addresses; they're sestiere-wide, so don't try to navigate by them — use a landmark instead.

01

San Marco

The postcard

The piazza, the Basilica, the Doge's Palace, and every cruise-ship day-tripper in the western hemisphere from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Beautiful, real, and unavoidable. Visit at 7 a.m. or after 8 p.m. when the crowds clear and the marble glows. Stay here only if you want the Gritti or Aman experience and don't mind paying for it.

Visit earlySt Mark's BasilicaAvoid 10 a.m.–4 p.m.
02

Cannaregio

The locals' Venice

The northern sestiere, where Venetians actually live, eat, and drink. Wide sun-drenched fondamente along the canals, the Jewish Ghetto (the original — the word was invented here in 1516), and the best aperitivo strip in the city along Fondamenta della Misericordia. This is where you stay if you want a real Venice trip.

Stay hereAperitivo stripThe Ghetto
03

Dorsoduro

The art & bacaro neighbourhood

South of the Grand Canal, anchored by the Peggy Guggenheim, the Accademia, and the Punta della Dogana. Quieter than San Marco, more art-school than Cannaregio, with the Zattere promenade running along the Giudecca Canal — the best long walk in the city. Strong on bacari (Cantine Schiavi, Al Squero) and gelato (Nico).

Stay herePeggy GuggenheimZattere walk
04

San Polo & Santa Croce

The market sestiere

The Rialto Market is here — both the produce market and the open-air fish market, where every serious Venetian chef shops at 6 a.m. The streets around it are the original cicchetti circuit: All'Arco, Do Mori, Do Spade, Al Mercà, Dai Zemei all within five minutes of each other. Go hungry.

Cicchetti crawlRialto MarketFrari Basilica
05

Castello

The quiet east

The largest and least touristed sestiere, stretching east from San Marco toward the Arsenale and the Biennale gardens. Working-class Venice on Via Garibaldi, Renaissance churches, and the city's best seafood restaurant (Alle Testiere) hidden in an alley. Where you eat dinner if you want to feel like you're in someone's neighbourhood, not on a stage.

Best dinnersVia GaribaldiBiennale
06

The Islands

Burano, Murano, Torcello, Giudecca

Murano for glass, Burano for the painted houses and lace, Torcello for the silence and the seventh-century basilica. Giudecca for the Cipriani if money is no object, the Redentore if not. Take the vaporetto north — half a day on Burano and Torcello together is better than a full day chasing all four.

Day tripVaporetto 12Skip Lido
Where We Eat

The table.

Venice eats in two registers — bacari for cicchetti and an ombra at the bar, then sit-down trattorias for fish from the lagoon at dinner. The cliché that Venetian food is bad is a tourist-trap problem, not a Venice problem. Avoid the places with multilingual menus and pictures of the food, follow the Venetians at 6 p.m., and the city eats as well as anywhere in Italy. The fish is local, the cheese is from the mainland, and the prosecco is from a hill an hour north.

Coffee · Breakfast · Pasticceria

Venice doesn't really do breakfast — Venetians have a coffee and a pastry at the bar, standing, in under five minutes. The good pasticcerie are tiny, busy, and worth the elbow politics. Skip the hotel buffet.

Pasticceria Tonolo — swap for photo

Pasticceria Tonolo

Must orderkrapfen alla crema + espresso

The most beloved pastry shop in Venice, in business since 1886. Standing-room only, screaming-match ordering at the counter, the best krapfen (cream-filled doughnut) in the city.

A Dorsoduro institution, packed every morning with students from Ca' Foscari and locals on their second coffee. Order at the cassa, take the receipt to the counter, point at what you want. The cream puffs are the headline — pistachio, dark chocolate, and the classic crema all deserve the trip. During Carnevale (Jan–Feb) the line goes around the block for their frittelle, which are arguably the best in Italy.

DorsoduroSince 1886Stand at bar
Pasticceria Tonolo on Facebook ↗
Rosa Salva — swap for photo

Rosa Salva

€€
Must orderzaeti + cappuccino

A 150-year-old Venetian institution with three locations across the city. Old-world service, marble counters, the city's most elegant breakfast.

The grandest of the historic pasticcerie, founded in 1879 and still family-run. Three locations — the one on Campo San Giovanni e Paolo (Castello) is the most photogenic, the one in Calle Fiubera (San Marco) is the most convenient. Zaeti — the yellow cornmeal-and-raisin biscuits — are the Venetian classic. Their tiramisù is a top-three in the city. Sit-down service costs more but the room is worth it once.

3 locationsSince 1879Sit-down option
rosasalva.it ↗
Pasticceria Dal Mas — swap for photo

Pasticceria Dal Mas

Must ordercornetto al pistacchio + espresso

Two minutes from Santa Lucia station, run by the same family since 1906 — the right first breakfast if you arrive by train.

A working bakery on Rio Terà Lista di Spagna, with a proper pasticceria counter behind a vintage neon sign. The cornetti are warm, the laminated dough is the real thing (Dal Mas keeps a separate "atelier" workshop for serious pastry), and the prices haven't been reset for tourists. Drop your bag at the hotel, walk back here, eat standing, and start the day. Open from 6:30 a.m.

Cannaregio2 min from stationOpen early
dalmasdolci.com ↗
Caffè Florian — swap for photo

Caffè Florian

€€€€
Must ordercioccolata calda · marbled marble tables

Open since 1720. The most touristy café in Venice and, somehow, still the most beautiful room. Once a year, do it once.

Goethe drank here. Casanova drank here. Byron, Proust, Dickens, Andy Warhol. The orchestras play on the terrace from 10 a.m. to midnight and the orchestra surcharge is real — €6 per drink for the music. Inside, the gilded rooms (Sala del Senato, Sala Liberty, Sala Cinese) cost the same as the terrace but feel like a museum after dark. Go in at 10 a.m., order the thick cioccolata calda — denser than pudding, served with whipped cream — and sit in the Sala degli Uomini Illustri. €18 well spent.

San MarcoOrchestra surcharge €6Sit inside
caffeflorian.com ↗
Torrefazione Cannaregio — swap for photo

Torrefazione Cannaregio

Must orderespresso macchiato + a bag of beans

Venice's serious coffee roaster — beans roasted on the premises, on a quiet canal in Cannaregio. The barista actually knows what she's doing.

A two-minute walk off the Strada Nova, the Marchi family has been roasting here since 1930. Twenty-plus varieties on the wall (single-origin Ethiopian, Brazilian, Indian Mysore), all roasted on-site. The espresso is correctly pulled — short, dense, brown crema — which sounds basic until you've had three weeks of charred hotel coffee. Locals come in for a quick standing macchiato and a 250g bag of beans on the way to work. €1.20 at the counter. Take a kilo home.

CannaregioStand at the counterRoasted on-site
torrefazionecannaregio.it ↗

Bacari · Cicchetti · Stand-Up Lunch

A bacaro is a Venetian standing wine bar. Cicchetti are the small bites on the counter — crostini, polpette, baccalà mantecato, fried things on toothpicks. You order an ombra (a small glass of house white) and three or four cicchetti, eat at the counter or out front, pay €10–15 total, move to the next one. This is lunch in Venice. Don't sit down.

All'Arco — swap for photo

Osteria All'Arco

Must ordercrostini with raw tuna and lardo

The most famous bacaro in Venice and arguably the best — a tiny counter behind Rialto Market run by Francesco Pinto and his son Matteo. The crostini are the city benchmark.

Open since 1962, no tables inside, three small ones outside that you'll never get. Stand at the window or out in the calle, hold a glass of prosecco in one hand and a plate of crostini in the other. Their thinly toasted baguette base is what sets them apart — the crostini stay crisp under whatever's on top. Order three: the raw tuna with lardo, the soft-boiled egg with anchovy, and the baccalà mantecato. €2 each, €4 for the prosecco.

The benchmarkSan PoloLunch only — closes 2:30
@osteriaallarco on Instagram ↗
Cantine del Vino già Schiavi — swap for photo

Cantine del Vino già Schiavi

Must ordertuna and cocoa crostino + a Soave

A Dorsoduro family bacaro on the canal across from the gondola workshop. The inventive crostini are the most photographed in Venice — the tuna-with-cocoa one earned the legend.

Run by the De Rossi family for three generations, with a wall of wine bottles inside and a glass case of about 40 different crostini at any given moment — tuna with cocoa, gorgonzola with pear, sarde in saor, pâté with truffle. Standing room only inside. Take your glass and plate across the calle to the canal edge, sit on the stone wall, watch the gondolas being repaired across the water. This is the Venice Instagram cliché, executed correctly.

DorsoduroStand by the canalCash preferred
cantinaschiavi.com ↗
Cantina Do Mori — swap for photo

Cantina Do Mori

Must orderfrancobolli (tiny tramezzini) + a Raboso

The oldest bacaro in Venice — open since 1462, behind the Rialto Market. Copper pots dangling from the ceiling, no seating, and a working-man's wine list.

Casanova is supposed to have drunk here. So have a few hundred thousand Venetians since 1462. The francobolli — postage-stamp-sized tramezzini filled with crab, salami, mortadella — are the speciality, eaten by the dozen. There's no menu posted; point at what you want, the bartender pours an ombra to match. Closes at 7:30 p.m., closed Sundays. Cash strongly preferred. The room is a time capsule.

Open since 1462San PoloCash only
cantinadomori.it ↗
Al Mercà — swap for photo

Al Mercà

Must orderporchetta panino + a spritz Select

A tiny hole-in-the-wall on the campo behind Rialto, no inside seating at all. Possibly the best mini-panini in the city.

A shoebox-sized counter on Campo Bella Vienna, identifiable from a block away by the crowd of locals spilling into the square with cocktails. Order a mini-panino — the porchetta, the mortadella with pistachio, the soppressa with smoked scamorza — and a Select spritz (Venetian preference, not Aperol). €2 each. Stand in the campo, watch the market wind down, repeat. Best between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. or 6 to 8 p.m.

San PoloStanding onlyOrder Select spritz
@almercavenezia on Instagram ↗
Osteria Al Squero — swap for photo

Osteria Al Squero

Must orderbaccalà mantecato + an ombra

Directly across the canal from Squero di San Trovaso — the working gondola repair yard — this Dorsoduro bacaro has the best view-to-price ratio in Venice.

Twelve seats inside, none outside, but the whole sidewalk along the canal is fair game. Get an ombra (€1.50–2), a baccalà mantecato crostino, a polpetta or two, and sit on the stone steps watching gondolas getting their hulls scraped at one of the last working squeri in the city. The vibe is local-young, the cicchetti are honest, and the canal scene is unmatched.

DorsoduroCanalside seatingClosed Sun + Mon
Osteria Al Squero on Facebook ↗
Cantina Do Spade — swap for photo

Cantina Do Spade

€€
Must orderspicy polpette + crispy calamari

A 15th-century bacaro near Rialto that was reportedly in Casanova's little black book. Famously serves the city's best polpette.

More dining-room than counter, with a proper sit-down option in the back if cicchetti aren't enough. Their spicy polpetta — beef and salami with smoked scamorza — is the signature, and the fried calamari is among the best in the city. Order at the counter for cheaper bar prices. Excellent regional wine list, particularly the Rabosos and Soave classico. Open till 10 p.m., which is late for a bacaro.

San PoloOpen lateBar OR sit-down
cantinadospade.com ↗
Vino Vero — swap for photo

Vino Vero

€€
Must orderburrata crostino + a natural orange wine

The natural-wine bacaro on the Misericordia aperitivo strip. The most stylish wine list in the city and creative cicchetti that go beyond tradition.

If Schiavi is the classic and Al Squero is the laid-back local, Vino Vero is the new-Venetian. A blackboard of natural wines by the glass — organic, biodynamic, lots of orange wines and obscure varietals from the Veneto and Friuli — paired with cicchetti that lean modern (burrata with anchovy and lemon, beef tartare crostini, smoked tuna). Stand inside or take your glass across the fondamenta to the canal.

CannaregioNatural wine focusCanal seating
@vinovero_venezia on Instagram ↗
Osteria Dai Zemei — swap for photo

Osteria dai Zemei

Must ordercreative crostini + Spritz Select

Run by twins (zemei in Venetian) Franco and Giovanni Tagliapietra near Rialto. Photos of other twins line the ceiling. Some of the most inventive cicchetti in the city.

A tiny rustic-chic counter on Ruga Vecchia San Giovanni, where the twins have been doing cicchetti since 2002. The crostini topping rotates daily — recent hits have included radicchio with smoked goat cheese, mackerel with apple, and a baccalà mantecato with chestnuts. Their Select spritz is consistently called the best in San Polo. Pull up at the counter, order three, repeat.

San PoloCreative cicchettiClosed Tuesday
ostariadaizemei.it ↗
Bacarando in Corte dell'Orso — swap for photo

Bacarando in Corte dell'Orso

€€
Must ordermini-panini with truffle salami

A bacaro tucked into a hidden courtyard behind Campo San Bartolomeo — three minutes from the Rialto Bridge and the only tourist who finds it is one who's actually looking.

Walk under the sottoportego della Bissa and you land in a tiny stone courtyard with a single doorway. Inside, the cicchetti rotate hourly — fried zucchini flowers stuffed with ricotta, polpette in tomato, mini-panini with speck or truffle salami, seafood skewers from the morning's catch. Eight-hundred-something liquors behind the bar, a small upstairs room for a sit-down dinner if needed, occasional live music on weekends. Ginger Spritz here is the unexpected order. Stay for one round; the place fills up after 7.

San MarcoCourtyard hiddenLive music weekends
bacarando.com ↗
Acqua e Mais — swap for photo

Acqua e Mais

Must ordera scartosso of fritto misto + grilled cuttlefish

A hole-in-the-wall window in San Polo serving fried lagoon seafood in paper cones — Venetian street food at its most honest. €5 to €10, eaten standing in the calle.

Campiello dei Meloni, near Rialto. Chef Alvise — a former fine-dining cook who reset to do this — fries to order: small whole anchovies, calamari, shrimp, sardines, baby octopus, plus a slab of grilled polenta at the bottom of the cone to keep everything hot. The scartosso is the Venetian word for the folded paper cone. There's no seating; locals walk to a nearby campo with a fountain and eat there. Cash easier than card. Closed Sundays. Phil Rosenthal filmed here for Somebody Feed Phil.

San Polo€5–10 per coneStand and eat
acquaemais.it ↗
Rosticceria Gislon — swap for photo

Rosticceria Gislon

Must ordermozzarella in carrozza with anchovy + a small beer

Open since 1930 near the Rialto, the rosticceria locals come to when they don't want to dress up. Mozzarella in carrozza for €2, served with no ceremony.

A few steps off Campo San Bartolomeo, follow the neon sign down the calle. Ground floor is self-service: point at what looks good — fried mozzarella sandwiches, baccalà fritto, arancini, lasagne, grilled cuttlefish, sarde in saor. Eat at the counter or a stool. The mozzarella in carrozza with anchovy is the order; the version with prosciutto is also good. Upstairs is a sit-down dining room with the same food at slightly higher prices and more tourists. Stay downstairs. Excellent value for Venice — a full lunch for €15.

San MarcoSince ~1930Self-service downstairs
Rosticceria Gislon ↗

Dinner · Splurge · Sit-Down Trattorias

Cicchetti for lunch, then a proper Venetian dinner. The good ones are all small, all booking essential, and all serve fish from the lagoon prepared with restraint — none of the heavy, sauced, tourist-trap versions. Book two weeks ahead, three for Testiere.

Osteria alle Testiere — swap for photo

Osteria alle Testiere

€€€€
Must ordergnocchetti with crab + grilled scallops

The Venice seafood benchmark. Twenty seats, two seatings a night, chef Bruno Gavagnin in the kitchen and Luca Di Vita running the room since 1993. Book three weeks ahead.

A pocket-sized room in a Castello alley with hand-painted bed-headboards (testiere) on the walls — that's where the name comes from. The menu changes daily based on what came in at Rialto market that morning. Order whatever Luca recommends; he speaks four languages, he knows what's perfect, and he's not wrong. The razor clams in garlic and herbs are legendary, as are the gnocchetti with spider crab. The wine list is small and impeccable, leaning natural Veneto and Friuli. Two services: 7 p.m. and 9:15 p.m. Book direct by email or phone; Resy is not happening here.

Reserve 3 weeks aheadCastelloMichelin selected
osterialletestiere.it ↗
Anice Stellato — swap for photo

Osteria Anice Stellato

€€€
Must ordergrilled octopus + spaghetti alla busara

A canalside trattoria in Cannaregio with tables on the fondamenta, opposite the old Jewish Ghetto. Creative Venetian — modern execution, traditional roots.

Named for star anise — the spice route into Venice is the conceit — and the kitchen plays with that idea (a touch of cumin in the pasta water, a hint of curry on the octopus), but never enough to overwrite the Venetian base. The fegato alla veneziana (calf's liver with onions) is one of the best in the city; the grilled octopus is the universal table order. Sit outside in spring and autumn — the canal traffic is mostly residents this far from San Marco. Closed Sunday and Monday.

CannaregioCanalside tablesClosed Sun + Mon
osteriaanicestellato.com ↗
Antiche Carampane — swap for photo

Trattoria Antiche Carampane

€€€€
Must orderspaghetti alle vongole veraci

San Polo's beloved seafood hideout — a sign at the door that famously reads "no pizza, no lasagna, no tourist menu." That's exactly the energy.

Tucked down an unmarked calle near Ponte delle Tette (yes, that's the actual name — Bridge of Breasts, a former red-light district reference), Carampane has been a serious fish trattoria since the 1980s. The spaghetti alle vongole veraci uses the proper small Venetian clams, not the larger imported ones — the difference is everything. The fritto misto for two is the table order; the soft-shell crab (moeche) in season is once-in-a-lifetime. Booking weeks ahead. Cash and card both fine.

No tourist menuSan PoloReserve 2+ weeks
antichecarampane.com ↗
Local — swap for photo

Local

€€€€€
Must orderthe tasting menu

A one-Michelin-star modern Venetian in Castello — chef Salvatore Sodano cooking lagoon ingredients with technique and restraint. The "fancy dinner" pick.

If Testiere is the platonic Venetian trattoria, Local is the platonic next-step Venetian. Sodano's menu reads like a love letter to the lagoon: cuttlefish-ink risotto, branzino aged in seaweed, sgroppino reinvented as a palate cleanser. Two tasting menus (six or nine courses), or à la carte. The room is white-tablecloth-modern, not formal — jeans and blazers are fine. Wine pairings are excellent. Closed Tuesday and Wednesday.

1 Michelin starCastelloTasting menu only
ristorantelocal.com ↗
Venissa — swap for photo

Venissa Ristorante

€€€€€
Must orderwhatever's foraged + the Dorona wine

On the island of Mazzorbo, off Burano — a one-Michelin-star restaurant inside a walled vineyard. The most special-occasion dinner in the lagoon.

The Bisol family bought a forgotten vineyard on Mazzorbo, replanted the ancient Dorona di Venezia grape, and built a small inn and restaurant around it. Chef Francesco Brutto cooks tasting menus drawn from the orchard and the lagoon — wild herbs picked that morning, fish from the Burano fishermen, vegetables from the kitchen garden. You take the vaporetto out, eat dinner over four hours, sleep at the inn upstairs, return on the morning boat. The clearest expression of the lagoon as a place that produces food.

1 Michelin starMazzorbo islandVaporetto 12
venissa.it ↗
Al Covo — swap for photo

Ristorante Al Covo

€€€€
Must ordercuttlefish in its ink + the tiramisù

A 40-year husband-and-wife operation in Castello — Cesare Benelli in the kitchen, Diane (from Texas) running the room. Honest Venetian seafood, no menu shortcuts.

Cesare buys every fish from the Rialto market himself, every morning. The result is a kitchen with no excuses — if the rombo isn't perfect, it doesn't go on the menu that night. The black ink-stained cuttlefish over polenta is the dish to order; the tiramisù has been called the best in the city by people who've tried them all. Diane will tell you exactly what to drink, in English, and she's never wrong. Closed Wednesday and Thursday.

CastelloFamily-run since 1987Closed Wed + Thu
ristorantealcovo.com ↗
Estro Vino e Cucina — swap for photo

Estro Vino e Cucina

€€€
Must orderwhatever the chalkboard says + something from the natural wine list

A natural-wine restaurant in Dorsoduro from the Spezzamonte brothers — 600 bottles, modern Venetian cooking, the most considered young dining room in the city.

Alberto buys the fish at Rialto every morning; Dario runs the floor and the wine. They opened in 2014 and the room has been quietly filling with the right kind of Venetian since — university faculty, gallery types, off-shift hotel concierges. The menu is short and changes daily, anchored to whatever's coming out of the lagoon plus vegetables from Sant'Erasmo. The wine list is the heart of the place: 600 bottles, all natural, organized by producer instead of region, which is the giveaway. The crystal-bread amuse-bouche with egg yolk is theirs. Closed Tuesday.

Dorsoduro600 natural winesClosed Tuesday
estrovenezia.com ↗
Wistèria — swap for photo

Wistèria

€€€€
Must orderthe 6-course Serendipity tasting + pumpkin-licorice-almond dessert

A Michelin-starred kitchen on a quiet rio in San Polo — Andrea Martin and Max Rossetti out front, chef Valerio Dallamano cooking modern Venetian. Terrace tables under actual wisteria.

San Polo 2908, on the Rio de la Frescada — fifteen minutes from anywhere. Andrea and Max have been partners since the '90s; they opened Wistèria after a long stretch running a humbler place around the corner, and the Michelin star came in 2021. The restaurant is named for the wisteria vines that cover the outdoor terrace from April through June (book the terrace then, only then). Six- or eight-course tasting menus, no à la carte, vegetable-forward without being precious. The matzo meatball with mustard and onion is the surprise; the Sant'Erasmo radish course is the room's loved one. Reserve three weeks ahead.

★ MichelinSan PoloClosed Wednesday
wisteria-restaurant.com ↗
Ristorante Quadri — swap for photo

Ristorante Quadri

€€€€€
Must orderthe tasting menu + a window-side table

The Michelin-starred dining room directly above the Piazza San Marco crowds — Alajmo family kitchen, velvet banquettes, Murano chandeliers, the only dinner in the city where San Marco is the wallpaper.

Massimiliano and Raffaele Alajmo took over Quadri in 2011 — same family that runs three-star Le Calandre in Padua — and the room is now a Philippe Starck redesign in dusty pink, gold, and Murano glass. The food is contemporary Venetian: rice with seven kinds of garlic, lagoon shrimp with a tomato water, langoustine with bergamot. €230 tasting menu, lunch from €130 for a shorter version. Book a window table looking down onto the piazza — the music from the cafés below comes up through the floor. Closed Monday and Tuesday.

★ MichelinSan MarcoWindow-table only
alajmo.it ↗
Ristorante Glam — swap for photo

Ristorante Glam

€€€€€
Must order"Art, Gardens and Lagoon" tasting menu

Venice's only two-Michelin-star restaurant — Enrico Bartolini's outpost inside Palazzo Venart, run day-to-day by chef Donato Ascani. Thirty seats, courtyard under a magnolia, the Grand Canal a few steps away.

Bartolini is Italy's most-decorated chef (twelve Michelin stars across his restaurants). Glam opened in 2016, took its first star in 2017, its second in 2023 — the only restaurant in Venice with two. Donato Ascani has been resident chef since opening. The cooking is rooted in the lagoon and the kitchen gardens of Sant'Erasmo — the menu is "instinctive," in Bartolini's word, guided by the morning market. €220 for the tasting menu, lunch a notch under. Book three weeks out. Closed Monday and Tuesday.

★★ MichelinSanta CroceClosed Mon + Tue
enricobartolini.net ↗
Al Covino — swap for photo

Al Covino

€€€
Must orderwhatever Claudio decides + Claudia's chocolate cake

Sixteen seats in Castello. Chef Claudio De Lauzieres cooks Venice-meets-Naples; his partner Claudia runs pastry. Indagare-listed sibling to the more famous Al Covo.

Castello 3829 — five minutes from the Arsenale, on a calle most maps skip. The room is small enough that the open kitchen and the dining floor are basically the same space. Three-course prix-fixe at €40, wine pairings €15 — for Venice, that's a steal. The menu changes weekly. Slow Food principles, mostly local fish, a Neapolitan accent on the seasonings (Claudio's from Naples). Claudia's caprese cake is the dessert to order; the cassata is the one to know about. Reserve a week ahead, two for weekends.

Castello€40 prix-fixe16 seats
alcovino.it ↗
Corte Sconta — swap for photo

Corte Sconta

€€€€
Must orderthe antipasto-misto seafood parade + the spider crab

A garden-courtyard seafood trattoria in Castello, hidden behind an unmarked door — the kind of long, late, wine-drenched dinner Venice was made for.

Calle del Pestrin, Castello, behind a door with no sign. Once inside, a tiled courtyard with about a dozen tables under a wisteria-strung pergola. The kitchen sends out a parade of seafood antipasti — twelve to fifteen small plates, in sequence, from raw scampi to baby octopus to salt-cured mackerel. Then a pasta (the spaghetti with bottarga is the classic). Then a fish second. Two-and-a-half hours, easily. Hemingway loved this place when it was still secret; now it's still hard to find but no longer secret. Reservations essential. Closed Sundays + Mondays + most of August.

CastelloCourtyard tablesClosed Sun + Mon
cortescontave.com ↗
Trattoria Anzolo Raffaele — swap for photo

Trattoria Anzolo Raffaele

€€€
Must orderthe San Daniele prosciutto + the duck-ragù gnocchi

A husband-and-wife trattoria on a quiet Dorsoduro campo — Venetian, Friulian, and Sardinian cooking, all done at home and served outside under the church wall.

Campo dell'Angelo Raffaele, Dorsoduro 1722. Previously called "Pane Vino e San Daniele" — they reverted to the older name in the 2010s. The kitchen runs on three traditions: Venetian fish, Friulian cured meats (the San Daniele prosciutto is sliced thin enough to read through), and Sardinian touches from the owners' second home — they make their own small-batch wine and olive oil there. Outdoor tables on the campo are the move in spring and fall; the inside dining room is warm in winter. Service is unhurried in the proper way. Reserve a few days out.

DorsoduroFamily-runOutdoor tables
trattoriaanzoloraffaele.it ↗

Aperitivo · Bars · Late Night

Venice drinks in the open air. The Misericordia strip in Cannaregio is the most beloved aperitivo run in the city. Then the historic bars (Harry's, Florian) if you want to do them once. Then home — Venice doesn't really do late.

Harry's Bar — swap for photo

Harry's Bar

€€€€€
Must ordera Bellini — the original

Where Giuseppe Cipriani invented the Bellini (white peach + Prosecco) in 1948 and where Hemingway parked at the bar for two decades. The classic Venice cocktail moment.

Yes, a Bellini costs €27. Yes, the room is small and clubby and feels exactly like 1955 (it should — almost nothing about it has changed). Go once. Sit at the bar, not a table — table service adds the surcharge but the bar gives you the view of the door, which is the entire point. The Bellini is best March–September when white peaches are in season; the rest of the year they use frozen purée and it's not the same. Order one, drink slowly, leave.

Bellini was invented hereSan MarcoSit at the bar
cipriani.com ↗
Al Timon — swap for photo

Al Timon

€€
Must ordera Negroni + cicchetti on the moored boat

The Cannaregio aperitivo anchor on Fondamenta dei Ormesini. A moored boat in front of the bar that doubles as outdoor seating in the warmer months.

Open since 2008, run by Stefano Maraffin and his wife. The cicchetti are good, the wine list is solid, and there's a Fiorentina steak on the menu if dinner becomes an option. The genuine appeal is the wooden boat tied to the fondamenta out front — you can grab a glass and a plate and post up there, watching the rest of Cannaregio do the same. Live music two nights a week in summer. The Misericordia strip is where Venetians actually drink at 7 p.m.

CannaregioBoat seatingLive music summer
@altimon.osteriaecucina on Instagram ↗
Il Mercante — swap for photo

Il Mercante

€€€
Must orderwhatever the bartender's mixing tonight

A 19th-century café reborn as one of Venice's most ambitious cocktail bars. Travel-inspired drinks, candlelight, no street noise. The romantic option.

Inside a small café next to the Frari Basilica that already had a 200-year history — now run by a bar team that ranks in the World's 50 Best Bars conversation. The menu rotates seasonally around a travel theme (Marrakech, Tokyo, Mexico City) with cocktails built around ingredients from those places. Reservations recommended after 9 p.m. The room is small, the lighting is low, the music is jazz. Closed Mondays.

San PoloCocktail programReservations help
ilmercantevenezia.com ↗
Bacareto da Lele — swap for photo

Bacareto da Lele

Must order€1 mini-panino + €0.80 wine

A closet-sized standing bar near the train station, beloved by students and shipyard workers. Mini-paninis for €1, wine for €0.80 a glass.

If All'Arco is the connoisseur's bacaro, Lele is the people's. The mini-panini — crisp little rolls filled with cheese, salami, mortadella, or vegetable spreads — cost €1 each. Wine starts at €0.80. The crowd is half student, half local construction worker, all standing in the campo out front. Cash only, no seating, opens at 6 a.m. for the workers and closes at 8 p.m. The first or last ombra of the trip, depending on direction.

€1 paniniSanta CroceCash only · closes 8 p.m.
Bacareto da Lele on Facebook ↗
Experimental Cocktail Club — swap for photo

Experimental Cocktail Club

€€€
Must orderwhatever's on the seasonal list

The bar inside Il Palazzo Experimental on the Zattere — discreet side entrance, Cristina Celestino interiors, the most serious cocktail program in Venice.

Part of the Experimental Group (Paris, London, New York, Menorca), tucked into the corner of Il Palazzo Experimental's lobby with its own quiet entrance on the canal-side fondamenta. Celestino designed the room around polychromatic marble countertops and torchon rope mouldings — a sober nod to Carlo Scarpa. The menu rotates seasonally and favors Italian spirits (Cynar, Select, grappa) with global technique. Reserve for weekends; the room seats maybe thirty. Open Thursday to Monday, 6:30 p.m. to 1 a.m., until 2 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays.

Dorsoduro · ZattereReserve weekendsClosed Tue + Wed
palazzoexperimental.com ↗

Gelato · Sweet Endings

Venice isn't Sicily or Naples on gelato — but the three spots below are seriously good, and one of them has been making it since 1935. Skip anything with neon-colored tubs or pistachio-too-green-to-be-real.

Suso Gelatoteca — swap for photo

Suso Gelatoteca

Must orderManet (chocolate-hazelnut + salt)

A small Venetian-owned operation two minutes from Rialto with the most inventive flavours in the city. Their signature "Manet" is the legend.

Opened in 2012 by a local family, with two locations now — both close to Rialto. The flavour list rotates weekly around Italian dessert classics: tiramisù gelato, salted pistachio with dark chocolate, butter biscotti with vanilla, an excellent dairy-free sorbet bench. Their Manet — chocolate-hazelnut topped with salty pistachio cream — is the bestseller for a reason. Lines wrap the calle in summer; come at 11 a.m. or 4 p.m. to avoid them.

San MarcoVegan optionsAvoid peak hours
suso.gelatoteca.it ↗
Gelateria Nico — swap for photo

Gelateria Nico

€€
Must orderGianduiotto da passeggio

On the Zattere promenade since 1935 — the inventor of the Gianduiotto (hazelnut gelato submerged in whipped cream). Eat it walking. The view is the room.

The classic. Nico opened in 1935, and four generations of the same family have run it since. The Gianduiotto da passeggio is the signature: a block of dense hazelnut gelato dropped into a cup of whipped cream — heavy, ridiculous, walked along the Zattere with the Giudecca canal on your left and the sun on your face. The cocktail menu is also good if you'd rather a spritz — same prices, same view. Open until midnight in summer.

Invented the GianduiottoDorsoduro · ZattereSince 1935
gelaterianico.com ↗
Where We Sleep

The stay.

Venice rewards staying in. Wake up to bells, listen to gondolas at midnight, watch the fog roll across a canal from your window. The right hotels are mostly converted palazzi — 5 to 30 rooms, frescoed ceilings, no two alike. Fourteen places, organised by price. Avoid anything calling itself a "Venetian-themed" anything; in Venice, the building does the work.

€€ €250–400/night — boutique & design hotels
Embroidered headboard suite
Garden courtyard
Library lounge
Breakfast room
Drag to see more

The Romanelli family has run small Venice hotels for three generations; this is their design-led one. Nine rooms, all different, all decorated with a mix of Italian, North African, and Asian textiles — embroidered headboards, Berber rugs, low brass lamps. The location is the trick: between the Accademia and Campo Santo Stefano, five minutes from San Marco but completely off the tourist route. Breakfast in the courtyard garden in spring is unreasonably good. No restaurant on site, but the in-house bar pours an excellent spritz.

What it's known for
Private garden courtyard — rare in Venice
Romanelli family ownership since 2002
Dorsoduro location, 5 min walk to Accademia
Each of the 9 rooms is individually decorated
NeighborhoodDorsoduro · Calle del Dose 2683/84
Rate range€260–460/night
Best forCouples · design travelers · second-time Venice
Walk toAccademia 4 min · San Marco 12 min
Good to know
No restaurant — strong concierge for bookings
Cantine Schiavi bacaro is 3 minutes away
Nine rooms — book 2+ months out for May/Oct
InsiderRequest a room on the top floor — they have skylights that catch the morning sun, and the rooftop access (residents only) gives you a view across to the Salute. Worth the extra €40.
Book at novecento.biz ↗
Art Deco suite
Original 1930s furniture
Roof terrace
Wellness room
Drag to see more

A 500-year-old merchant's townhouse rebuilt as a working museum of 1930s Italian design. Original Fortunato Depero artworks, custom marquetry by architects Roberto Luigi Canovaro and Pierluigi Pescolderung, exposed brickwork mixed with steel and lacquer. The contrast — Renaissance bones, Futurist surfaces — is the whole pitch, and it works. Steps from the Accademia and Peggy Guggenheim. The rooftop with deckchairs is open to all guests; it's where you eat breakfast in summer.

What it's known for
Italian Art Deco / Futurist design throughout
Original Fortunato Depero artwork in lobby
Roof terrace with rooftop view
3 minute walk to Accademia and Peggy Guggenheim
NeighborhoodDorsoduro · Rio Terà Foscarini 979/A
Rate range€280–520/night
Best forDesign lovers · couples · art-circuit travelers
Walk toAccademia 2 min · Peggy Guggenheim 5 min
Good to know
Small wellness center with Turkish bath
No on-site restaurant, full breakfast service
Room sizes vary widely — confirm category
InsiderAsk for room 305 or 405 — they have the original Depero-style murals on the ceiling and the most space. The Junior Suites are not noticeably better than the Deluxe rooms; save the upgrade.
Book at capisanihotel.it ↗
€€€ €400–700/night — designer palazzi & boutique stays
Striped Meilichzon suite
Adriatica cocktail bar
Canal-side facade
Garden courtyard
Drag to see more

The Experimental Group (Paris, London, Ibiza, Biarritz) took over a 16th-century palazzo on the Zattere in 2019 and gave it the Dorothée Meilichzon treatment — pastel pinks and greens, vertical stripes, custom terrazzo, brass everything. The ground-floor Adriatica is one of the most stylish cocktail bars in Venice. There's a private garden out back — a real one, with mature plane trees — used for breakfast in warm months. The crowd is international, design-conscious, and 25–40. The vibe is what San Marco palazzi do not have.

What it's known for
Dorothée Meilichzon design throughout
Adriatica — destination cocktail bar on the canal
Private garden — rare in Venice
Zattere location with Giudecca canal views
NeighborhoodDorsoduro · Fondamenta Zattere allo Spirito Santo 1411
Rate range€420–950/night
Best forDesign crowd · couples · cocktail people · 25–40
Walk toAccademia 10 min · San Marco vaporetto 4 stops
Good to know
Adriatica bar gets busy after 9 — rooms above can hear it
Restaurant on site is good but skippable
Private boat transfer available from airport
InsiderRequest a garden-facing room, not canal-facing. The canal looks great but the vaporetti run until 11 p.m. and the noise wakes light sleepers. The garden side is silent and gets morning sun.
Book at palazzoexperimental.com ↗
Doge's Room suite
Moorish Room
Roof terrace bar
Salute-facing balcony
Drag to see more

Family-owned by the Campagnola brothers since 2004, in a 16th-century palazzo two minutes from the Punta della Dogana. Twelve traditionally Venetian rooms (red velvet, Murano chandeliers, antique mirrors), plus five themed "concept" rooms — the Doge's Room, the Oriental Room, the Sala del Doge — that are theatrical in a way only Venice gets to be. The roof terrace has a tiny but functional bar and a clear view of the Salute dome. Couples-only by reputation; not suited for families or larger groups.

What it's known for
Five individually themed concept suites
Two-minute walk to Santa Maria della Salute
Roof terrace with Salute views
Couples-focused, no children under 12
NeighborhoodDorsoduro · Rio Terà dei Catecumeni 111
Rate range€450–1200/night
Best forHoneymoons · anniversaries · second-time Venice
Walk toSalute 2 min · Peggy Guggenheim 6 min
Good to know
Adults-only — no guests under 12
No restaurant, room service only
Private water entrance — book a launch from VCE
InsiderThe Doge's Room is the famous one and worth it once if you'll only stay one night. For multi-night stays the Sala del Doge — same theme, more space, better bathroom — is the better call. Avoid the standard "Classic" rooms; they're smaller than the photos suggest.
Book at camariaadele.it ↗
Minimalist suite
Contemporary art lounge
Breakfast nook
Library
Drag to see more

The anti-Venice Venice hotel — modern Italian design, concrete and pale-grey palettes, contemporary art on every wall, no velvet, no chandeliers, no fake "Venetian style." Owner Chiara Bocchini collects design pieces and rotates artwork seasonally. Seven rooms only, so it feels like a private house. The location is exactly right: between the Peggy Guggenheim and the Salute, one block from the Grand Canal but on a quiet side calle. Breakfast is delivered to your room. The opposite of the painted-ceiling Venice clichés in the best possible way.

What it's known for
Modern design, no Venetian kitsch
Rotating contemporary art collection
Seven rooms — private-home feel
Block from Peggy Guggenheim Collection
NeighborhoodDorsoduro · Ramo da Mula 724
Rate range€390–680/night
Best forDesign crowd · art lovers · solo travelers
Walk toPeggy Guggenheim 1 min · Salute 4 min
Good to know
No 24-hour reception — keys via doorbell after 10 p.m.
Breakfast delivered in-room, not communal
Sister property DD694 also has 7 rooms nearby
InsiderRoom 6 has a small private terrace with a partial view across the rooftops to the Salute dome. The rate premium is €40–60 a night and it's worth every cent in May or September.
Book at thecharminghouse.com ↗
€€€€ €380–1,400/night — grand palazzi & design icons
Grand Canal facade
Red-walled deluxe room
Antinoo's restaurant terrace
Canal-side suite balcony
Drag to see more

A 15th-century Gothic palazzo (Palazzo Genovese) on the Punta della Dogana, where the Grand Canal meets the Giudecca canal — the most photographed corner of the city, directly opposite San Marco. The interiors are full-tilt contemporary: lipstick-red walls, gilded panels, black Murano chandeliers, lamps with twisting root-like stems clearly inspired by the Guggenheim collection next door. It shouldn't work and somehow does. Antinoo's restaurant runs a long, sunlit terrace over the water — the best aperitivo view in this corner of the city, museum-quality and almost no one knows about it. Five minutes from the Accademia, ten from San Marco by foot, two by water taxi from the hotel's private dock.

What it's known for
Position at the mouth of the Grand Canal
Bold, eclectic interiors — not your antique-heavy Venetian palazzo
Antinoo's terrace cocktails
Steps from the Peggy Guggenheim Collection
NeighborhoodDorsoduro · Punta della Dogana
Rate range€380–1,200/night
Best forCouples · Grand Canal views · design-confident travelers
Walk toPeggy Guggenheim 4 min · San Marco 10 min
Good to know
Vaporetto Salute stop is steps from the lobby
Spring for a canal-facing room — the rear ones face an internal garden
Michelin Guide-listed
InsiderThe two top-floor canal suites with private balconies — rooms 502 and 503 — have the best sunset over San Marco of any hotel in the city. Worth the upgrade for one night even if the rest of the stay is in a standard room. Otherwise, request a low-floor canal-facing deluxe — the angle is wider and you're closer to the water.
Book at sinahotels.com ↗
Lobby — Murano chandelier
Lagoon-view suite
VERO restaurant
Interior courtyard
Drag to see more

Built in 1272 as a hostel for pilgrims on their way to the Holy Land, then a convent, then a nursing home, then empty for eighteen years, then this. Patricia Urquiola spent three years restoring it before it opened in 2021 — clean lines, custom Murano lamps, brown-marble bathrooms, soft Veneto-palette textiles. The lobby's 14,000-tile Murano chandelier is the room. The Castello lagoon-front position is the move: a quiet, working-class neighborhood that doesn't churn through tourists like San Marco, with the Biennale gardens and the Arsenale at the doorstep — perfect for art-year trips. Two restaurants (VERO is the sit-down, Essentia is breakfast in the courtyard), a small spa, a 24-hour Merchant of Venice scent on the floors. The opposite of a velvet-swagged palazzo, in the best way.

What it's known for
Patricia Urquiola — designer's design hotel
Lagoon position, Biennale-adjacent
66 rooms (57 are suites)
Small Luxury Hotels of the World
NeighborhoodCastello · Riva Ca' di Dio 2181
Rate range€450–1,400/night
Best forDesign lovers · Biennale visitors · longer stays in a less-touristed sestiere
Walk toArsenale 5 min · San Marco 12 min · Biennale gardens 8 min
Good to know
Private water-taxi dock on the lagoon-front
Courtyard rooms are €100+ less than lagoon-views but lose the view
Pair with Biennale visits — the gardens are walkable
InsiderThe Altana Suite on the top floor has a private rooftop terrace with a 360-degree lagoon view that includes San Giorgio Maggiore — the best private view in this stretch of Castello. If it's available and the budget allows, take it for one night and use it as the room you have aperitivo in. Otherwise, the lagoon-view Deluxe rooms on the second floor have the cleanest direct water view at the lower-suite price.
Book at vretreats.com ↗
Junior suite
Palais Royal restaurant
Indoor pool
Cortile internal courtyard
Drag to see more

The most-talked-about Venice opening in years. A former bank in San Marco, redone by Evok (the team behind Nolinski Paris and Brach) in a confident, contemporary key — sage greens and burgundy, custom marble bathrooms, frescoed ceilings restored rather than recreated. The Palais Royal restaurant is run by chef Philip Chronopoulos, who keeps a star at Palais Royal in Paris — and is delivering one of the best modern Italian dinners in the city. There's an indoor pool, a serious spa, and a courtyard café. Among the few hotels in San Marco worth staying in.

What it's known for
Opened 2024 — newest grand hotel in the city
Le Palais Royal Venezia restaurant by Philip Chronopoulos
Full spa with indoor pool
5-min walk to Piazza San Marco
NeighborhoodSan Marco · Calle Larga 22 Marzo 2398
Rate range€780–2,000/night
Best forDesign-led travelers · couples · destination dining
Walk toSan Marco 5 min · La Fenice 3 min
Good to know
Indoor pool — rare in Venice
Book Le Palais Royal restaurant in advance
No Grand Canal view, but quiet calle frontage
InsiderGet a Junior Suite over a Classic — the bathrooms and dressing rooms in the Junior Suites use the original 19th-century banking-hall windows, which face a beautiful internal courtyard nobody else can see. The premium is worth it.
Book at nolinskivenezia.com ↗
Post-Venetian suite
Grand Canal balcony
Brutalist lobby
Restaurant Quadri
Drag to see more

If Aman is Venice's classical pole, this is its punk one. Diesel founder Renzo Rosso bought a 13th-century palazzo five minutes from Rialto Bridge and gave it a wild treatment — exposed concrete and original frescoes in the same room, neon signs in the windows, antique gondola prows leaning against modern art, Murano chandeliers next to 1980s Memphis chairs. The result reads as "Wes Anderson directs a Venetian fever dream," and it works. Thirty-six rooms, most with Grand Canal balconies. The restaurant is good but the bar is the headline.

What it's known for
Renzo Rosso's "Post-Venetian" maximalist design
Grand Canal facade, balconies in most rooms
Five-minute walk to Rialto Bridge
Fitness center + restaurant + bar
NeighborhoodCannaregio · Calle del Magazen, Rialto
Rate range€820–2,200/night
Best forMaximalists · design crowd · younger luxury travelers
Walk toRialto Bridge 5 min · Ca' d'Oro 7 min
Good to know
The aesthetic is loud — not for everyone
Grand Canal rooms are the obvious upgrade
Private water taxi pickup available from VCE
InsiderThe Garden Junior Suites have private outdoor space — extremely rare in Venice — and overlook a hidden interior courtyard with mature trees. Better than a Canal Suite if you're staying three or more nights and want a quiet retreat.
Book at thevenicevenice.com ↗
€€€€€ €1,400+/night — the grand dames & Aman
Grand Canal suite
The Terrace facing the Salute
Riva Lounge
Spa with Sisley Paris
Drag to see more

Built in 1525 as the private residence of Doge Andrea Gritti, the hotel still feels like a family palazzo opened up for guests rather than a hotel done up to look like one. The Terrace — front-row on the Grand Canal, looking directly across to Santa Maria della Salute — is one of the great spaces in any hotel in Europe. Eighty-two rooms, most of them with original mosaic floors or hand-painted furniture. The Gritti SPA is run with Sisley Paris. The Riva Lounge is where everyone in San Marco ends up at sunset. The grand dame, deserved.

What it's known for
The Terrace — best Grand Canal seat in Venice
The Gritti Epicurean School (cooking classes)
Hemingway, Churchill, Bogart all stayed here
Direct Grand Canal water entrance
NeighborhoodSan Marco · Campo Santa Maria del Giglio
Rate range€1,500–4,500/night
Best forAnniversaries · destinations · classic luxury travelers
Walk toSan Marco 6 min · La Fenice 4 min
Good to know
Guests exempt from Venice day-tripper fee
The Terrace is open to non-guests for drinks too
Aquariva speedboat experiences book in advance
InsiderCocktail on the Terrace at sunset is the move whether or not you stay. Walk in, sit, order a Negroni, watch the boats. The Hemingway Suite is the famous one, but the Pisani Suite next door has a better balcony angle on the canal and roughly the same view.
Book at thegrittipalace.com ↗
Tiepolo Suite with frescoes
Piano nobile salons
Private canalside garden
Arva restaurant
Drag to see more

Inside the Palazzo Papadopoli — one of eight monumental palazzi on the Grand Canal — with original 18th-century Tiepolo frescoes still on the ceilings of the piano nobile suites, a 16th-century Sansovino fireplace in the salon, and two private gardens (a rarity bordering on absurdity in this city). Twenty-four suites only, designed by Jean-Michel Gathy with a restrained Aman hand — no overdesign, just letting the palazzo do the work. The food at Arva is excellent. Service is exactly what Aman service always is. The Clooneys got married here in 2014; that's now a fact, not a flex.

What it's known for
Original Tiepolo frescoes in the piano nobile suites
Two private gardens — almost unheard of in Venice
Grand Canal palazzo with private water entrance
Aman-level service and discretion
NeighborhoodSan Polo · Palazzo Papadopoli, Calle Tiepolo
Rate range€2,400–9,000/night
Best forOnce-in-a-lifetime · honeymoons · special occasions
Walk toRialto Bridge 4 min · San Marco 12 min
Good to know
Only 24 suites — book 4+ months ahead
Spa is small but world-class
Private boat from airport included in some rates
InsiderThe Tiepolo Suite has the original ceiling fresco directly above the bed; the Stampalia Suite has the better view; the Alcova Tiepolo has both at a more reasonable rate. If you want frescoes, ask the reservations team for "the piano nobile suites" — that's where the original 18th-century rooms are.
Book at aman.com ↗
Lagoon-view suite
Olympic-size pool
Cip's Club waterfront
Three-acre gardens
Drag to see more

Founded in 1958 by Giuseppe Cipriani (yes, the same one who opened Harry's Bar) on three acres at the tip of Giudecca island, with a swimming pool he commissioned because "if Venice doesn't have one, mine should." Ninety-six rooms across a main building, a annex (the Palazzo Vendramin), and the Casanova Garden Suites — all set in formal Italian gardens with a view across the lagoon to San Marco. Cip's Club out on the water is a destination for lunch by itself. The private boat shuttle runs every twenty minutes to San Marco, day and night. The escape-Venice-while-staying-in-Venice option.

What it's known for
Only Olympic-size pool in Venice
Three acres of private gardens
Private 24-hour boat shuttle to San Marco
Cip's Club waterfront restaurant
NeighborhoodGiudecca · Giudecca 10
Rate range€1,800–6,500/night
Best forFamilies · longer stays · pool people · honeymoons
Walk toBoat shuttle 5 min to San Marco · Redentore 8 min
Good to know
Closed November to March
Family-friendly — kids actually welcomed
Boat ride means 24-hour shuttle planning
InsiderThe Palazzo Vendramin annex suites have the best lagoon views — better than the main building — and the Casanova Garden Suites have private terraces with hot tubs. For families, the lagoon-view rooms in the main wing are still the best call. Ride the shuttle for sunset at least once.
Book at belmond.com ↗
What We Do

The moves.

The water that defines the city, the palazzi worth the queue, the islands that earn the half-day, and the rituals locals still keep.

01€9.50 single

Vaporetto #1 down the Grand Canal at sunset

Piazzale Roma → San Marco · ~45 minutes

The single best thing you can do for €9.50 in Venice. The #1 is the slow boat — it stops at every palazzo, every bridge, every twist of the canal between the train station and San Marco. Board at Piazzale Roma or Ferrovia, stand at the back (the open-air section), and ride the full route around 6 p.m. when the light goes copper. Better than a gondola, cheaper than dinner, and the locals are commuting next to you. Buy a 24-hour pass for €25 if you'll repeat it.

€9.50 single / €25 day45 minStand at the back
actv.avmspa.it ↗
02€90 / 30 min

A gondola ride — once, at dusk, off the Grand Canal

Avoid San Marco stands · try San Tomà or Santa Sofia

The price is fixed by the city: €90 for thirty minutes, €110 after 7 p.m. for six people. It is worth doing once, on the small inner canals where the boats can barely pass, not the chaotic loop in front of San Marco. Find a stand in San Polo (San Tomà) or Cannaregio (Santa Sofia traghetto). Ask the gondolier to take you into the rii — the narrow back canals — and avoid the singing add-on (€40 extra and aggressively cheesy). Dusk is the moment.

€90 / 30 min€110 after 7 p.m.Up to 6 people
03€2 crossing

The traghetto — the local way across the canal

7 crossing points along the Grand Canal

Where there's no bridge, locals cross the Grand Canal standing up in a stripped-down gondola called a traghetto. Two euros, two minutes, and you're across — used mostly to skip a fifteen-minute walk to the nearest bridge. The Santa Sofia crossing (near Rialto Market) and the San Tomà crossing are still active most mornings. Stand if you're brave, sit if you're not. Cash only, exact change appreciated.

€2 cash2 min crossingMornings most reliable
04Free to watch

Squero di San Trovaso — the gondola repair yard

Fondamenta Bonlini · Dorsoduro

One of three working squeri left in the city, where they still build and repair gondolas by hand using techniques unchanged since the 16th century. You can't go inside — it's a working workshop — but you can stand on the opposite bank of the Rio di San Trovaso and watch the masters at work. Each gondola takes about 500 hours to build, weighs 700 kg, and uses eight different types of wood. Best in the morning, weekdays.

FreeWeekday morningsView from across the rio
05Free walk

Zattere — the sunset promenade locals actually use

Dorsoduro · facing Giudecca

The long, sunlit fondamenta on the south edge of Dorsoduro, facing the Giudecca canal. The widest sidewalk in Venice. Joggers, students, dog-walkers, gelato eaters from Nico's at the western end. The Punta della Dogana sits at the eastern tip. Walk the full length around 6 p.m. when the sun sets behind Giudecca's Redentore church. Sit at any of the floating café-pontoons for a Spritz with your feet over the water.

Free~1 km walkSunset best
06Free area

The Jewish Ghetto — the original ghetto

Campo del Ghetto Nuovo · Cannaregio

The word "ghetto" was coined here in 1516 — the Venetian Republic confined the Jewish community to this small island in Cannaregio, gated and locked at night. Five synagogues remain, three still active, and the museum tour is the only way to see the interiors. The square is quiet, residential, and one of the few places in Venice where the city's complicated history is laid bare. The bakery on the campo (Volpe) still makes traditional Venetian-Jewish pastries.

€12 museum + synagogue tour1.5 hrClosed Saturdays
museoebraico.it ↗
07€115–165 · Mar–Oct

Brenta Riviera by Burchiello — a day among the Palladian villas

Boards Venice (San Marco) or Padua · Mar through Oct

A full-day boat down the Brenta canal, the 18th-century waterway that the Venetian nobility used to reach their summer estates inland. Nine swing bridges, five locks (true "water lifts" that raise the boat ten meters between Venice and Padua), and three guided villa stops — Villa Foscari "La Malcontenta," Villa Widmann, and the vast Villa Pisani at Stra, where Hitler and Mussolini once met. The pace is slow on purpose; the views are weeping willows, Palladian facades, and a kind of slow-Veneto silence you don't find anywhere in the city. Nine and a half hours, lunch optional and not included. Occasionally cancelled when the Brenta runs shallow — check the forecast.

€115–165 pp9.5 hrSeason Mar–Oct
ilburchiello.it ↗
08€50–90

Kayak the back canals at sunrise

Laguna Kayak · launches from Certosa or Sant'Erasmo

An entirely different Venice — paddling a sea kayak through the rio behind San Marco at 6:30 a.m., when the city is empty and the only sound is your own paddle. Laguna Kayak runs small-group tours through hidden canals, salt marshes, and lagoon islands most visitors never see, including a route that loops around the back of Murano and the abandoned plague island of Poveglia. Sunrise tours are the move; the light is unreal and you'll have the canals to yourselves. Tide-dependent — they'll move your booking if the water's wrong.

€50–90 pp2–4 hrSunrise best
lagunakayak.com ↗
01Book ahead · €30+

Doge's Palace + Bridge of Sighs

Piazza San Marco · San Marco

The seat of the Venetian Republic for 700 years. Tintoretto's Paradise — the largest oil painting in the world — covers an entire wall of the Great Council Chamber. The Bridge of Sighs connects the palace to the old prison; Casanova was held in the cells beneath. Buy the Secret Itineraries tour (€32) if you can — it takes you through the prison, the torture chamber, and Casanova's actual cell. Otherwise the standard €30 ticket is plenty. Book the first slot at 9 a.m.

€30 / €32 Secret Tour2–3 hrFirst slot 9 a.m.
palazzoducale.visitmuve.it ↗
02€6 priority

St Mark's Basilica

Piazza San Marco · San Marco

8,000 square meters of gold-ground mosaics inside a Byzantine-Greek-cross plan that has no equal in Europe. The bronze horses in the upper loggia were looted from Constantinople in 1204; the originals are inside (the outdoor ones are copies). The Pala d'Oro — a gold and enamel altarpiece studded with 1,927 gemstones — costs €5 extra and is worth it. Pre-book the €6 priority entry online or you'll queue an hour. No bags, no shoulders, no shorts.

€6 priority+€5 Pala d'OroCover shoulders + knees
basilicasanmarco.it ↗
03€16

Peggy Guggenheim Collection

Palazzo Venier dei Leoni · Dorsoduro

Peggy Guggenheim lived in this unfinished one-story palazzo on the Grand Canal from 1949 until her death in 1979. Her collection — Pollock, Picasso, Magritte, Ernst (her husband), Brancusi, Calder — is hung in her actual rooms, with her terrace looking onto the canal and Marini's bronze horseman pointing across the water. The most personal museum in the city. Open Wednesday to Monday; closed Tuesdays. Sculpture garden in back where Peggy and her fourteen dogs are buried.

€161.5 hrClosed Tuesdays
guggenheim-venice.it ↗
04€15

Gallerie dell'Accademia

Campo della Carità · Dorsoduro

The single best collection of Venetian painting in the world — Bellini, Giorgione, Titian, Veronese, Tintoretto, Tiepolo — in the deconsecrated complex of Santa Maria della Carità. Veronese's vast Feast in the House of Levi was originally painted as a Last Supper before the Inquisition objected to the dwarfs and dogs. Less crowded than Doge's Palace, easier to actually see the paintings. Two hours is enough. Free first Sunday of the month.

€152 hrFree 1st Sunday
gallerieaccademia.it ↗
05€15

Punta della Dogana — contemporary art in the old customs house

Punta della Dogana · Dorsoduro tip

François Pinault's contemporary collection inside the triangular 17th-century customs house at the very tip of Dorsoduro, where the Grand Canal meets the Giudecca canal. Tadao Ando renovated the interior in 2009 — pristine concrete, original brick, very little signage. The exhibitions rotate; the building is the constant. The view from the steps at the tip is one of the great views in the world: San Marco to the left, Salute behind you, Giudecca opposite. Combined ticket with Palazzo Grassi.

€15 / €20 combo1.5 hrClosed Tuesdays
pinaultcollection.com ↗
06€5

Frari Basilica — Titian's church

Campo dei Frari · San Polo

The Franciscan basilica nobody queues for, which holds two of the great altarpieces in Western art: Titian's Assumption of the Virgin (1518) above the main altar, and his Pesaro Madonna in the left nave. Titian himself is buried inside. So is Canova, in his own pyramid tomb. Cold stone, brown brick, candle-smoke smell, and a Donatello wooden John the Baptist that almost no one looks at. €5 is the best art-to-euro ratio in the city.

€545 minQuietest 10 a.m.
basilicadeifrari.it ↗
07€10

Palazzo Fortuny — the Spanish painter's Venetian atelier

Campo San Beneto · San Marco

Mariano Fortuny y Madrazo — the Spanish-born painter, photographer, set designer, and fashion innovator who invented the pleated silk Delphos gown in 1907 — lived and worked in this Gothic palazzo from 1898 until his death in 1949. The house was donated to Venice in 1956 by his widow Henriette and reopened as a permanent museum in March 2022 after extensive restoration from the 2019 acqua alta floods. The interior is hung exactly as Fortuny left it: his paintings, his lamps, his theatrical sets, the textile workshop where the Delphos was dyed, the photographic archive. Painterly, dim, intentionally moody — bring a phone with a good low-light camera. Closed Tuesdays. The piano nobile is the room.

€101 hrClosed Tuesdays
fortuny.visitmuve.it ↗
01Vaporetto #4.1 / 4.2

Murano — and how to avoid the glass scams

10 min by vaporetto from Fondamente Nove

Glass has been made on Murano since 1291, when the Republic moved the furnaces off the main islands to reduce fire risk. The good furnaces are still here. Skip the "free demonstrations" that hard-sell you afterward — the legitimate showrooms (Venini, Seguso, Berengo) charge nothing and aren't pushy. Walk the Fondamenta dei Vetrai, eat lunch at Trattoria Busa alla Torre, and look for the Vetro Artistico Murano trademark on anything you buy.

Vaporetto included in day passHalf daySkip the free tours
museovetro.visitmuve.it ↗
02Vaporetto #12

Burano — the coloured houses

45 min by vaporetto from Fondamente Nove

A fishing village where every house is painted a different brilliant colour — supposedly so fishermen could find their houses through the lagoon fog. Each colour requires permission from the local government, which keeps the palette honest. The lace tradition is real but mostly displaced by imports now; the Museo del Merletto explains what you're actually looking at. Lunch at Trattoria al Gatto Nero (book ahead) for the risotto di gò. Half a day, easy.

Vaporetto includedHalf dayLunch at Gatto Nero
museomerletto.visitmuve.it ↗
03Vaporetto #12

Torcello — the oldest church in the lagoon

5 min by vaporetto from Burano

The lagoon's first settlement, founded in the 5th century and largely abandoned by the 12th — malaria, silting, then plague. The Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta (founded 639) holds a Byzantine mosaic of the Last Judgement on its west wall that's as terrifying now as it was a thousand years ago. Climb the bell tower for the view across to the Adriatic. The whole island has perhaps thirty residents and one open restaurant. Twenty minutes from Burano on the vaporetto.

€5 basilica + tower2 hrPair with Burano
torcellodipatrimonio.it ↗
04€7 + drinks

Mazzorbo + the Venissa vineyard

Connected to Burano by footbridge

Cross the wooden footbridge from Burano and you're on Mazzorbo, the quietest inhabited island in the lagoon. The Bisol family rescued the Dorona grape here in 2002 — the indigenous Venetian variety nearly extinct after the 1966 flood — and now make about 4,000 bottles a year in this walled vineyard. The Michelin-starred restaurant takes the lunch trade; the casual osteria takes the rest. The vineyard tour is the move if you don't want a tasting menu.

€7 vineyard tourLunch from €95Book ahead
venissa.it ↗
05Vaporetto #2

San Giorgio Maggiore — the bell-tower view

Isola di San Giorgio · 5 min from San Marco

The island-monastery directly opposite San Marco, designed by Palladio in 1566. Climb the bell tower (lift, €8) for the only view of Venice that includes San Marco itself in the frame. The Tintoretto Last Supper inside the basilica is free. The Fondazione Cini takes the rest of the island and rotates contemporary shows — usually free, often the best in the city. Five minutes on the #2 from Piazza San Marco and almost nobody comes.

€8 bell tower1 hrSunset spectacular
abbaziasangiorgio.it ↗
06Free walk

Giudecca — the working island

Across the canal from Dorsoduro · #2 or #4.1

The long, low island across the Giudecca canal, historically the working-class side of Venice — shipyards, factories, the original Stucky flour mill (now a Hilton). Walk the fondamenta from west to east for the best view of Dorsoduro and San Marco from across the water. Palladio's Il Redentore church anchors the middle. Stop at La Palanca for an affordable lunch on the water. The Cipriani lives at the eastern tip if you want to see what €2,000-a-night looks like from outside.

Free walk2 hrLa Palanca for lunch
07€10–15 / bike

Sant'Erasmo by bike — the kitchen garden of Venice

Vaporetto Line 13 · Fondamente Nove

Twenty minutes by vaporetto from Fondamente Nove lands you on a long, flat island where Venice grows its vegetables — castraure (the prized baby artichokes), the local Sant'Erasmo wine, herbs, garlic, asparagus, salad. The whole island is about ten kilometers around, flat, almost no cars, and most of it is farms with stone wells and abandoned watchtowers. Rent a bike at Lato Azzurro (the main inn near the vaporetto stop), pack a picnic from Rialto market the day before, and ride the perimeter in a slow loop. There's a small sandy beach at Punta della Vela on the lagoon side — bring a towel. Few services on the island, almost nobody else doing this. Best from April through October.

€10–15 bikeHalf dayBring food + water
latoazzurro.it ↗
01Free — 7 a.m.

Rialto Market — fish and produce, before the tourists

Mercato di Rialto · San Polo

The fish market (Pescheria) is the oldest food market in continuous operation in Italy — fish has been sold on this exact spot since 1097. The fishmongers shout in Venetian dialect and break apart at 1 p.m. sharp. Closed Sundays and Mondays. The produce market alongside (Erberia) sells the rare lagoon vegetables — castraure (baby artichokes from Sant'Erasmo island), bruscandoli (wild hop shoots), radicchio di Treviso. Go at 7 a.m. for the spectacle, not the shopping.

Free7 a.m.–1 p.m.Closed Sun + Mon
02Free walk

The Cannaregio cicchetti crawl

Fondamenta della Misericordia · Cannaregio

The most local bar-walk in Venice. Start at Al Timon (boat seating on the canal), drift two doors down to Vino Vero (natural wine), back across to Paradiso Perduto for the late shift. The whole strip — about 600 meters — runs along the Fondamenta della Misericordia, where Venetians actually come out to drink. Order a glass of Raboso, a few cicchetti, and move on. The point is to keep walking. Best Thursday to Saturday from 6 p.m.

~€25–40 pp2–3 hrThursday–Saturday best
03€12

St Mark's Campanile — the climb

Piazza San Marco · 99 meters

There is a lift. There is always a queue. The view at the top is exactly the view you've already seen on every postcard, and it is still genuinely worth seeing once: terracotta roofs all the way to the Dolomites on a clear winter day, the entire lagoon mapped out below you. Galileo demonstrated his telescope from this tower in 1609. The bells still ring — wear earplugs if you go on the hour. Book the first slot at 9:30 a.m. and skip the worst of the line.

€1230 min totalFirst slot best
basilicasanmarco.it ↗
04Free

Get genuinely lost in Castello

East of San Marco · all of eastern Castello

East of the Arsenale, Castello stops being a tourist neighborhood and turns back into a working Venetian one — laundry strung between windows, kids playing in campi, residents stopping to talk in the middle of the calle. Walk from San Zaccaria east toward Via Garibaldi and the Giardini. There's nothing to "see." That's the point. Eat at El Refolo or Local. End at the Sant'Elena park for the only real green space in central Venice.

Free2–3 hrNo agenda needed
05Free to browse

Giuliana Longo — handmade hats since 1901

Calle del Lovo 4813 · San Marco

Four generations of Longo women have run this hat shop, one minute from the Rialto bridge, since 1901. Giuliana herself is usually behind the counter — she's the fourth, has been at it since the late 1970s, and travels to Ecuador every year to buy the Cuenca and Montecristi Panama hats by hand. The shop is the size of a closet, walls floor-to-ceiling with hand-blocked felts, woven straws, gondolier caps, fascinators, theatrical Carnival pieces. Pop in for the gondolier hat (the traditional bareteri, woven straw with double satin band) or a foldable Panama you can fit in a suitcase. Closed Sundays.

€60–400Family-run since 1901Closed Sundays
giulianalongo.com ↗
06Free to browse

Drogheria Mascari — the spice merchant near Rialto

Calle degli Spezieri 381 · San Polo

The oldest grocery in central Venice — open since 1948 on the calle that has housed Venetian spice merchants for six hundred years. The Mascari family (now run by Luciano's sons Gabriele and Gino) still trades the trade: 50 kinds of honey, sun-dried tomatoes from southern Italy, truffles, candied fruits, balsamic vinegars aged twenty years, and a separate wine room with 1,000+ Italian labels. The smell when you walk in is the entire memory of Venetian trade routes condensed into a doorway. Edible souvenirs that don't read as souvenirs — the saffron, the dried porcini, the chestnut honey. Closed Sundays.

Since 194850+ honeysClosed Sundays
imascari.com ↗
3 Days

Venice, in three days.

Base in Cannaregio or Dorsoduro. One day in the back canals, one day in Dorsoduro and the south, one day in the lagoon. Cross to San Marco at 7 a.m. or never.

8:30a.m.
MorningEat

Krapfen & espresso at Pasticceria Dal Mas

Rio Terà Lista di Spagna · Cannaregio

A two-minute walk from Santa Lucia station. Stand at the bar (sitting doubles the price) and order a krapfen, an espresso, and one of the small fruit tarts. This is where Venetians arriving from the mainland get their first coffee. Watch the line of suitcases roll past. €4 covers it.

€4Stand at the bar
9:30a.m.
MorningSee

The Jewish Ghetto

Campo del Ghetto Nuovo · Cannaregio

A ten-minute walk from Dal Mas. The Museo Ebraico runs guided synagogue tours on the hour — book the 10 a.m. slot. You'll see three of the five remaining synagogues, hear how the word "ghetto" came from the Venetian for foundry (this was the old copper foundry district before the Republic walled the Jewish community in here in 1516). Buy Volpe's pastries before you leave.

€12 museum + tour1.5 hrClosed Saturdays
12:30p.m.
LunchEat

Cicchetti at Osteria All'Arco

Calle Arco · San Polo · 8 min from Rialto

A 15-minute walk south through Cannaregio, across the Rialto Bridge, to the most respected bacaro in the city. Father and son Pinto have been running it since 1962. Stand at the counter, order two or three cicchetti (the baccalà mantecato, the tuna with leek, the moeche when in season), a small glass of Raboso, and watch lunch happen around you. They close at 2:30 sharp.

€15–25 ppCash preferredClosed Sundays
3:00p.m.
AfternoonSee

Frari Basilica + Scuola Grande di San Rocco

Campo dei Frari · San Polo

Two of the great rooms in Venetian art, two minutes apart, almost no queue. The Frari for Titian's Assumption (1518), his own tomb, and Canova's pyramid. Across the campo, the Scuola Grande di San Rocco is wall-to-ceiling Tintoretto — he spent 24 years painting this single building. The mirrors on the floor are so you can study the ceilings without breaking your neck.

€5 Frari + €10 San Rocco2 hr
6:30p.m.
AperitivoDrink

The Misericordia bacaro crawl

Fondamenta della Misericordia · Cannaregio

Back across the canal to your neighborhood. Start at Al Timon — get a boat seat if one's free. One Spritz Select, two cicchetti, then drift 30 meters east to Vino Vero for a glass of something natural. The strip is six bars long. You don't need to make all of them. Order a Select Spritz, not Aperol — locals will quietly approve.

€15–30 pp2 hrSelect > Aperol
8:30p.m.
DinnerEat

Osteria Anice Stellato

Fondamenta della Sensa · Cannaregio · 10 min walk

A short walk from the Misericordia strip, on a quieter fondamenta. Twenty seats. The kitchen runs on what came off the boat that morning — sarde in saor done correctly, branzino baked in salt, gnocchi with crab. Book three weeks ahead. Sit outside if the weather holds. Walk home through empty calli; Venice belongs to whoever's still awake.

€60–90 ppBook 3 weeks aheadClosed Mon
8:00a.m.
MorningEat

Krapfen at Pasticceria Tonolo

Calle San Pantalon · Dorsoduro

The university pastry shop, open since 1886. The krapfen here is the local benchmark — a Carnival pastry they've stretched into a year-round staple. Order one filled with zabaione cream, one cappuccino, and stand at the marble counter. Closed Mondays, and on weekends the line goes out the door by 9.

€3–5Stand at counterClosed Mondays
9:30a.m.
MorningSee

Gallerie dell'Accademia

Campo della Carità · Dorsoduro

The single greatest collection of Venetian painting in the world. Bellini's Madonnas, Giorgione's Tempest, Titian, Veronese's Feast in the House of Levi (originally a Last Supper before the Inquisition objected to the dwarfs and dogs). Two hours is enough. Free on the first Sunday of the month — avoid that day. Book the 9:30 slot online.

€152 hrBook ahead online
12:30p.m.
LunchEat

Standing cicchetti at Cantine del Vino già Schiavi

Fondamenta Nani · Dorsoduro · 5 min from Accademia

Three minutes from the Accademia, on a small canal opposite the Squero di San Trovaso gondola yard. The Gastaldis run it. The tuna-with-cocoa crostino is the famous one but the entire counter is good — they hand-make 30 varieties a day. Take your plate and ombra outside; locals drink standing on the bridge. Cash only. Closed Sundays.

€15–25 ppCash onlyClosed Sundays
2:30p.m.
AfternoonSee

Peggy Guggenheim Collection

Palazzo Venier dei Leoni · Dorsoduro

Peggy lived in this unfinished one-story palazzo on the Grand Canal until she died in 1979. Her collection — Pollock, Picasso, Magritte, Brancusi, Calder, Ernst (her husband for a while) — hangs in her actual rooms. Marini's bronze horseman points across the canal, anatomically correct. The most personal museum in the city. Walk the terrace, sit a while.

€161.5 hrClosed Tuesdays
5:00p.m.
AfternoonWalk

Zattere walk to Punta della Dogana

Fondamenta Zattere · Dorsoduro

The long sun-lit promenade facing Giudecca — the widest pavement in Venice and the only one made for actual walking. Stop at Nico for a Gianduiotto gelato (they invented it in 1935). Walk east to the tip of Dorsoduro, where the Grand Canal meets the Giudecca canal at Punta della Dogana. Sit on the steps. This is the view.

Free1 hrNico gelato €4
8:30p.m.
DinnerEat

Trattoria Antiche Carampane

San Polo · "no pizza no lasagna"

Famously hidden — there's a sign outside that reads "no pizza no lasagna no tourist menu" — and famously consistent. The Bortoluzzi family runs it. Order the moeche in spring or fall (soft-shell crab from the lagoon, available about six weeks of the year), the spider crab, the cuttlefish in its own ink over polenta. Book a month ahead; they won't lie about availability.

€70–110 ppBook 4 weeks aheadClosed Sun + Mon
8:30a.m.
MorningBoat

Vaporetto #12 to Burano

From Fondamente Nove · 45 min crossing

Walk to the Fondamente Nove stop on the north side of Cannaregio. Catch the 8:40 or 9:10 #12 toward Burano. Forty-five minutes across the open lagoon — sit on the right for the views of San Michele cemetery island and Murano. The day-pass (€25, 24 hours) is the move if you'll repeat. Coffee at the bar on board.

€25 day pass45 minSit on the right
10:00a.m.
MorningSee

Burano + the walk to Mazzorbo

Burano village · then footbridge to Mazzorbo

Walk the painted streets — twenty minutes does it, an hour if you stop. The Museo del Merletto explains what real Burano lace looks like (most of what's sold on the street is imported). Cross the wooden footbridge to Mazzorbo, the quietest inhabited island in the lagoon, for the Venissa walled vineyard — they grow Dorona, the indigenous grape that nearly died in 1966.

€7 vineyard tour1.5 hr
12:30p.m.
LunchEat

Osteria Contemporanea at Venissa

Mazzorbo · the casual side of Venissa

The Michelin-starred restaurant takes lunch reservations months out and costs €180. The osteria next door — same kitchen, same vegetables from the walled garden, less ceremony — does a three-course lunch for around €55. Book a table on the terrace overlooking the vineyard. Glass of Dorona, then the lagoon fish, then a coffee. Boat back at your pace.

€55–80 ppBook aheadTerrace if possible
3:30p.m.
AfternoonSee

Torcello — where Venice started

5 min vaporetto from Burano

The lagoon's first settlement, founded in the 5th century. The Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta (639 AD) holds a Byzantine mosaic of the Last Judgement on its west wall that's still genuinely terrifying. Climb the bell tower for the lagoon view. The island has perhaps thirty residents, one open restaurant, and a strange, melancholy quiet. An hour and a half does it.

€5 basilica + tower1.5 hr
6:30p.m.
SunsetDrink

A Bellini at Harry's Bar

Calle Vallaresso · San Marco

Back to San Marco. The bar Giuseppe Cipriani opened in 1931, where he invented the Bellini in 1948 (white peach purée and Prosecco). Yes it costs €25. Yes it's worth it once. The ground floor only — never the upstairs restaurant. No photos. No jeans. Hemingway drank here, Capote drank here, Orson Welles drank here. You're going for the room, not the cocktail.

€25 / BelliniNo jeansGround floor only
9:30p.m.
LateWalk

San Marco when it's empty

Piazza San Marco · after 9 p.m.

Walk five minutes from Harry's. The piazza after 9 p.m. is the version locals know — almost empty, the basilica lit from below, the orchestras at Florian and Quadri playing competing waltzes across the square. Sit on the steps at Caffè Lavena, or pay for a coffee at Florian's terrace (€16 with the orchestra surcharge — worth it once). This is the Venice you came for.

Free to walk€16 at FlorianAfter 9 p.m.
Only in Venice

Eat like a Venetian.

Cucina veneziana — lagoon cooking, with a long memory for the Levant trade routes. Order these. The fish is always local; the rice is from the Veneto plain; the spices arrived by ship.

01

Cicchetti & un'ombra

Bacari all over · standing only · 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

The Venetian institution. Cicchetti — small bites laid out on the counter of a bacaro — eaten standing, with un'ombra, "a shadow," a small glass of wine (the name supposedly comes from the wine sellers who moved their carts to stay in the shadow of San Marco's campanile). Six or seven cicchetti and three ombre make a meal for about €20. The trick is to keep moving — one bar, two bites, next bar. Sitting is not the move.

02

Sarde in saor

The classic cicchetto · Vino Vero, Anice Stellato, every honest bacaro

Fried fresh sardines marinated in caramelized onions, white wine vinegar, raisins, and pine nuts — sweet, sour, oily, soft. Originally a sailor's dish from the 14th century, when the vinegar and sugar preserved the fish on long Adriatic crossings. The raisins and pine nuts are the giveaway: Venice spent four hundred years trading with the Levant and the cooking remembers. Served cold, on toasted bread, at almost every bacaro counter in the city.

03

Baccalà mantecato

Whipped salt cod · on grilled polenta · every bacaro

Salt cod soaked for three days, then whipped with olive oil until it turns into a pale glossy mousse, spread on a slab of grilled white polenta. The defining cicchetto. Venice has no cod — the fish came from the Lofoten Islands, brought back by Venetian merchant Pietro Querini after a 1432 shipwreck. Six centuries later, baccalà is a Venetian word and a Venetian dish. Order it everywhere. The version at Schiavi is the benchmark; All'Arco runs it close.

04

Risotto al nero di seppia

Lagoon cuttlefish · the inky one · sit-down only

Carnaroli rice cooked slowly with cuttlefish, its ink, white wine, onion, and fish stock — finished off the heat with butter. The result is dense, glossy black, deeply savoury, and it will stain your teeth for the rest of the night. A sit-down dish, not a bacaro one; order it at Alle Testiere, Antiche Carampane, or Al Covo. Eat it while the kitchen still has cuttlefish in season (autumn through spring is when it's at its best).

05

Bigoli in salsa

Whole-wheat pasta · anchovy + onion · the working-class plate

Thick, rough-cut whole-wheat spaghetti — bigoli, made through a hand press called a bigolaro — tossed with a long-cooked sauce of slow-melted onions and salted anchovies. No cheese. No tomato. The Friday dish, historically — meatless, cheap, deeply onion-savoury. The version at Antiche Carampane uses the original recipe; many bacari serve it cold as a cicchetto. The pasta needs the rough surface to hold the sauce; smooth spaghetti will not do.

06

Moeche fritte

Soft-shell crab · ~6 weeks in spring + autumn · Carampane, Al Covo

Lagoon crabs caught the day they molt — when their shell is soft and you eat the whole crab, legs and all. Dipped in beaten egg, dredged in flour, deep-fried, served with polenta. The season is brutal: maybe three weeks in spring (March–April), maybe three in autumn (October–November), depending on the moon and the water temperature. Outside those windows the dish does not exist. If you see it on a menu in July it is not moeche. Order them when they appear.

07

Fegato alla veneziana

Calf liver + onions + polenta · the old-school plate

Calf liver sliced paper-thin, sautéed quickly with mountains of slow-cooked white onions, deglazed with a little vinegar, served over creamy polenta. The combination of liver and sweet onion goes back at least to the 1500s — it appears in Bartolomeo Scappi's Renaissance cookbook. Done badly it is grey and grim; done correctly it is tender, sweet, mineral. Order it at Alle Testiere or Al Covo. Trust the kitchen on the liver; do not order this anywhere with photos on the menu.

08

Tiramisù

Treviso invention · Le Beccherie style · any honest trattoria

Not, strictly, Venetian — it was invented in Treviso, twenty miles inland, at the restaurant Le Beccherie in 1972. But the Veneto claims it and Venetian kitchens make it correctly: mascarpone whipped with egg yolks and sugar, layered over Pavesini biscuits dipped in espresso, dusted with cocoa, served cold. No cream. No alcohol. No fruit. If you see a "tiramisù alla fragola" on the menu you are in the wrong restaurant. The version at Alle Testiere is the cleanest.

The Veneto pour

The wine, briefly.

Most of what fills a Venetian glass comes from the hills an hour north. Order local. The bartender will quietly approve.

The local pour Select Venezia · 17.5% ABV · since 1920

Distilled in Castello a century ago. Darker, more bitter, rhubarb and juniper on the bite. The Venetian default.

"Un Spritz, per favore."

vs
The tourist pour Aperol Padova · 11% ABV · since 1919

Sweeter, brighter, half the alcohol. The global default since Campari Group went all-in. Drink once. Then graduate.

"Order it and you've outed yourself."

3 · 2 · 1 The Venetian Spritz · 1948

3 parts Prosecco · 2 parts Select (or Cynar, or Campari — never Aperol if you can help it) · 1 part soda water. A green olive on a skewer, no orange. Served in a wine glass, not a balloon. Stand at the bar. €4 at a bacaro, €18 at a hotel terrace — the same drink.

The six wines you'll actually be poured. Lightest to heaviest, white to red.

P
Prosecco DOCG Sparkling
Conegliano-Valdobbiadene · Treviso hills

The real one — UNESCO-protected DOCG, drier and more mineral than the supermarket DOC. Cartizze is the single-village micro-cru on top.

With cicchetti, before everything else

S
Soave Still white
Verona · Garganega

The default ombra-bianca. Look for Soave Classico DOCG from Pieropan or Inama — almonds, white peach, a salt finish. Skip the cheap stuff.

With baccalà mantecato, sarde in saor

V
Valpolicella Still red · light
Verona hills · Corvina · Rondinella

The light Veneto red — sour cherry, bitter almond. Classico is everyday; Ripasso is the half-step-up; Amarone is the older brother.

With pasta, grilled fish, roasted vegetables

R
Refosco Still red · medium
Friuli border · Colli Orientali

Two thousand years old — the Romans drank it. Plum, black pepper, a wild herbal edge. On the serious lists at Estro and Wistèria.

With radicchio, venison, aged cheeses

R
Raboso Still red · old-school
Piave plains · indigenous

Nearly-lost Venetian grape, fiercely tannic and high-acid, almost never on a tourist list. Ask for it. The bartender will look at you twice.

With duck, local salumi, the long dinner

A
Amarone Still red · special occasion
Verona hills · dried grapes · 16% ABV

The monumental Veneto red. Grapes dried on bamboo racks for four months before fermentation — fig, leather, tobacco, a finish that holds half a minute. €60–250 a bottle.

With the cuttlefish, the lamb, the cheese

Worth knowing

A few things.

What separates a smooth Venice trip from an expensive one. None of this is in the brochure.

On when to go

April, May, late September, and October are the answer. Warm enough to sit outside, cool enough to walk for hours, the light at its best and the crowds thinned out. June and early September are the shoulder months — manageable, hot, busy. July and August are brutal: 35°C in still air, mosquitoes from the lagoon, every cruise ship in the world. November through January is acqua alta season — atmospheric, often beautiful, often flooded. Carnival (late January–February) and the Biennale (April–November every odd year) are their own calendar.

On acqua alta

The high water — exceptional tides that flood the lower parts of the city, typically October through January. Sirens sound about three hours before, by tone (one tone = 110 cm, four tones = 140+ cm, the bad ones). The city lays out passerelle (raised walkways) along main routes; the locals wear rubber boots and the news shops sell €15 disposable ones at the door. San Marco floods first because it's the lowest point. The MOSE flood barriers, completed in 2020, now block the worst of it — but pack waterproof shoes if you're coming in November.

On the €5 day-tripper fee

Since 2024, Venice charges €5 (sometimes €10 at peak) to enter the historic centre on certain peak-season days — mostly weekends from April through July. Overnight hotel guests are exempt and don't need to register. Day-trippers must register online at cda.ve.it and show a QR code at one of seven checkpoints (Piazzale Roma, Santa Lucia station, Tronchetto, the islands ferry). Children under 14, students, residents, and most workers are also exempt. The system is enforced lightly but the fines are real.

On vaporetto vs gondola

The vaporetto is the local boat-bus and the most useful purchase you'll make: €9.50 for a single ride, €25 for 24 hours, €35 for 48, €45 for 72. The 24-hour pass pays for itself by the third ride. The gondola is €90 for thirty minutes, €110 after 7 p.m., for up to six people — fixed price set by the city. Do the vaporetto every day. Do the gondola once, at dusk, on the small back canals (San Tomà or Santa Sofia stands), not on the Grand Canal. Refuse the singing add-on (€40 extra and aggressively cheesy).

On San Marco timing

The piazza is best before 9 a.m. and after 7 p.m. Between 10 and 5 it is the most crowded public space in Europe — tour groups, cruise day-trippers, selfie sticks, scams. Book the basilica's first slot (9:30) or come back after dinner when the orchestras play to a half-empty square. Doge's Palace works the same way: first slot or last slot, never the middle of the day. The Campanile is bearable at the 9:30 opening, brutal by noon. Plan your San Marco visits around the cruise schedule; cruise ships dump 8,000 people on the piazza between 10 and 4.

On addresses

Venice has six sestieri (districts) and each runs its own numbering — Cannaregio 4710, Castello 5274, San Polo 2168. Numbers run up to 6000+ within a single district and bear no relation to street order. The result: an address alone is useless for finding anywhere. Locals navigate by landmarks (campo, church, bridge) and by hand-painted yellow signs that say "Per San Marco" or "Per Rialto." Google Maps works but routes through closed gates and dead ends. The Citymapper app is better. Best advice: get lost on purpose for one afternoon. The city is small.

On Aperol vs Select

The Spritz was invented in Venice — soda water added to local white wine by occupying Austrian soldiers in the 1800s. The modern version uses Prosecco, soda, and a bitter liqueur. The bitter liqueur is the marker. Tourists order Aperol (sweet, orange, 11% ABV). Venetians order Select (deeper, herbal, 17.5% ABV) — a Venetian product since 1920, made in Castello. Bartenders will quietly raise an eyebrow at a Select order, in approval. Cynar (artichoke) is the third option, for the herbal-bitter end of the spectrum. €4–5 at a bacaro, €18–25 at a hotel terrace.

On the Murano scams

A general rule: glass sold on the streets of central Venice that says "Murano" almost certainly isn't. The real article carries the Vetro Artistico Murano trademark — a holographic sticker with a registered number — applied only by Murano furnaces accredited by the Veneto region. Skip the "free glassblowing demonstrations" that bus you to Murano and hard-sell you afterward; the legitimate furnaces (Venini, Seguso, Berengo, Salviati) charge nothing, aren't pushy, and let you walk out. Buy on the island, not in San Marco, and only with the trademark.

When you go matters

The Venice calendar.

Four events that completely change the city. Tap one to open it.

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Carnevale · 31 Jan – 17 Feb Vogalonga · 24 May Biennale Arte · 9 May – 22 Nov Regata Storica · 6 Sept
What it is Banned by Napoleon in 1797, revived in 1979. Velvet capes, beaked plague-doctor masks, ticketed balls inside palazzi, fireworks over the Bacino. 2026 theme: "Olympus — the origins of the game."
Who comes Costume-society obsessives, photographers, Italians from Milan, design crowd, honeymooners — plus Saturday day-trippers in plastic masks. The first week is the quietest.
The Hala move Come the first weekend, not the last. The Volo dell'Angelo (angel flight over San Marco, opening Sunday) is the spectacle. Skip the €600+ official balls. Better: costume rental at Atelier Marega, aperitivo at Florian in dress, dinner at Local. The midweek between weekends is empty and surreal.
What it is A 32-km non-competitive rowing regatta — no motors anywhere on the lagoon. Started in 1974 as a protest against motorboat wash. Loops from San Marco out to Burano and back through Cannaregio.
Who comes Rowing clubs from across Italy and Europe, Venetian families with three-generation boats, dragon-boat teams, eccentric solo rowers in vintage kit. Almost no tourists.
The Hala move The best free spectacle of the Venetian year. Be on the Fondamenta della Misericordia in Cannaregio between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. when the boats come back through — a wall of oars, no engines, only voices. Coffee at Torrefazione Cannaregio first, ombra at Al Timon after.
What it is The most important contemporary art exhibition on earth. Six months long, two main sites (Giardini for national pavilions, Arsenale for the curator's themed show), plus 30+ collateral shows across the city. 2026 is an Art year.
Who comes Vernissage week (5–9 May): collectors, curators, gallerists, press. Then a long tail of museum-goers, students, design tourists, families through November. Castello fills up.
The Hala move Skip the vernissage unless you're being paid to be there. Go in September — weather's turned, rates have dropped, and most pavilions you'd actually want to see are still up. Stay in Castello (Ca' di Dio is built for this). Three days minimum.
What it is A historic procession of 16th-century boats reenacting Caterina Cornaro's 1489 return to Venice, followed by four genuinely competitive Venetian-style rowing races up and down the Grand Canal. The flagships are the Doge's bucintoro and the men's gondolini final.
Who comes Venetians — this is theirs. Whole families turn out, often booking a balcony or rented riverside seats (palchi) months ahead. Italian press, regional politicians, sports fans. Far fewer foreign tourists than you'd expect.
The Hala move Book a hotel with a Grand Canal balcony (Gritti, Centurion, Nolinski, Aman, Ca Maria Adele) or €25–60 for a seat on the palchi via veneziaunica.it — that's the spend that earns it. Rialto Bridge gets impossible; Accademia Bridge is better. The city is at its annual best this week.
The cheat sheet Carnevale for theatre. Biennale for art. Vogalonga for the most-local morning of the year. Regata Storica for the city's own holiday. You can't do all four in one trip. Pick deliberately.
Upon Request

Want it built around you?

$50, one time.

Tell us you're going to Venice. When, for how long, which sestiere suits you, whether you want a hotel on the Grand Canal or a quiet apartment in Cannaregio, whether you care more about the art or the cicchetti. We send back a custom itinerary in 72 hours — restaurants, hotels, day-by-day flow, the back canals, the boats, all of it. Unlimited revisions until it's right.

Build my Venice itinerary

Delivered within 72 hours · Unlimited revisions included