Venice Doubles Down on Day-Tripper Tax

Critics say move to combat overtourism isn't working
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Oct 24, 2024 3:08 PM CDT
Venice Extends Day-Tripper Tax
Activists gather outside Venice's Santa Lucia train station to protest a day-tripper fee that they say has failed to dissuade visitors from arriving on peak days, as envisioned.   (AP Photo/Colleen Barry, File)

Venice will extend its day-tripper tax through next year, increasing the number of days on which tourists have to pay to enter the city and doubling the fee to $10.80 for last-minute visitors, city officials said on Thursday. Mayor Luigi Brugnaro stressed that the tax aims to help the city and its citizens battle overtourism and avoid huge influxes of visitors during crowded holidays and weekends, the AP reports. The new tax will be applied every Friday through Sunday and on holidays from April 18-July 27 of next year, for a total of 54 days. That's almost double the number of days it was applied this year. Tourists who don't make reservations up to four days in advance will pay $10.80 instead of the usual $5.40.

The tax will be in force during peak hours, from 8.30am to 4pm. Exemptions are granted to residents, Venetian-born visitors, students, and workers, as well as tourists who have hotel or other lodging reservations. At the end of the first test phase, last July, officials said the tax had netted $2.6 million accounting for about 1,000 entrances on each of the test days. Brugnaro on Thursday again responded to critics who have called it a failure and said it did not deter as many arrivals as expected. "Venice is the first city in the world that tries to manage the problem of overtourism. We obtained important results," the mayor said.

But some citizens' groups and opposition councilors claim the access fee completely failed to control overtourism. "Data offered by the control room show that on average during the period of implementation of the fee, we had about 7,000 more tourist entries than in previous years," says Giovanni Andrea Martini, an opposition councilor. "This shows that the access fee is not at all a system able to manage the flows." The city has long grappled with overwhelming influxes of tourists, with estimates based on cellphone data of 25 million to 30 million annual arrivals of day-trippers and overnight guests since 2020. The city's population is only about 50,000, according to the mayor. (Venice is also limiting the size of tour groups.)

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