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Baggage Porters

Hiring porter service in Venice is like buying a yacht: If you need to ask the price, you can't afford it.

Venice baggage porter photo.

ABOVE: Travel light (or store unneeded luggage at a deposito bagagli office), and you won't need to pay painfully high rates for porter service.


Venice porter trolley photoNot too many years ago, luggage porters or portabagagli were almost impossible to find in Venice. Today, they're in generous supply, but with a catch: Rates for hauling your bags are stratospheric, in part because getting from point A to point B in Venice is a slow, painful process for the men who wrestle luggage trolleys down narrow streets and over the steps of Venice's 400+ bridges.

Where to find porters:

Porter at Venice train station photoDuring the main tourist season or on busy weekends, it's easy to find baggage porters in front of the Santa Lucia Railroad Station (near the water) or in Piazzale Roma, where airport buses and land taxis arrive and depart.

Depending on the day and time of year, you may also find porters in other busy locations such as the San Marco Giardinetti waterbus stop (where Alilaguna airport boats arrive and depart near St. Mark's Square).

What you'll pay:

Venice luggage porter photoPorters in Venice's historic center aren't regulated as they once were, and you'll need to confirm a price from the porter before handing over your bags.

Depending on distance, you could easily pay 50 euros or more to have a stack of luggage hauled to your hotel. The table below shows rates from the San Marco Giardinetti waterbus stop near the Piazza San Marco in 2024. "Venezia Città" refers to the main tourist areas in the city center:

Baggage porter rates in Venice.

Our advice: Avoid the need for porters.

A little advance planning can save you a great deal of money and hassle. Here are some tips:

1. Stay at a hotel near your point of arrival or departure.

2. Travel light, or park unneeded luggage at a deposito bagagli office.

  • Limit yourself to a rolling suitcase of moderate size (preferably a two-wheeled model, for easier handling on bridge steps) and a small backpack.

  • If you can't avoid traveling with multiple bags or large suitcases, pack what you need for Venice in a small bag and park your bigger cases at a "left luggage" office.

A final warning:

If you arrive at the railroad station, please be aware that the porters by the water are not official station porters (a.k.a. "redcaps," as we used to say in the U.S.). And while most are just honest porters looking for work, you may encounter scumbags who take advantage of unwary visitors.

We received this e-mail from a reader, and we thought we'd share it with you:

"I would like to recommend that you include something regarding the unscrupulous porters at Santa Lucia train station. They cleverly position themselves at the water taxi jetties / piers and 'discuss' a price with a water taxi driver 'on your behalf,' cleverly fooling you into thinking that both they and the water taxi are all part of the same service. They then offer you a price to your hotel, commonly €60 and then offer to collect your luggage, in our case this was at the station with family members.

"What they don't tell you is that the collection of your luggage is not included in the water taxi fare. They charge €15 for the first piece and then €5 for each additional piece. This only becomes apparent after they have dropped it off at the water taxi.

"When we refused to pay, as they had not informed us of this or quoted a price to us, they threatened to transport all our luggage back to the train station. We had a number of large bags with us having traveled to the Tuscan region for a wedding. After much haggling we agreed to pay half of what they wanted to avoid an increasingly nasty situation from escalating any further."


Related article:
Venice Left Luggage (Deposito Bagagli)

About the author:

Durant Imboden photo.Durant Imboden has written about Venice, Italy since 1996. He covered Venice and European travel at About.com for 4-1/2 years before launching Europe for Visitors (including Venice for Visitors) with Cheryl Imboden in 2001.

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