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Vaporetto fares
Venice Vaporetto Fares
What you'll pay to ride Venice's water buses
this year, and what you
need to do before boarding the boats.
ABOVE: Two ACTV water buses pass each other on
the Grand Canal. (See our article on the Line 1
vaporetto, which is the best tour bargain in Venice.)
(Scroll down for full fare
tables) |
- Adult or child aged 6 or older
|
€9,50 |
|
Free |
- Disabled w/wheelchair (companion travels free)
|
€1,50 |
By Durant
Imboden
Updated October 28, 2024
The ticket prices listed in the
fare tables below are for
Venice's water transit network, which includes the historic center and
islands such as Murano, Burano, and the Lido di Venezia. (Venice also has a
land bus
network that serves car-friendly districts on the mainland and the
Lido.)
For tips on where and how to obtain tickets on Venice's
public transportation, see our
articles about Buying Vaporetto Tickets,
ACTV Ticket Machines, and the new "Tappy"
contactless payment system that lets you pay fares on the spot with your
credit or debit card.
ACTV Waterbus Tickets |
Adult one-way
fare
Biglietto di corsa semplice
Good for 75 minutes after validation on all routes of the Venice
transportation network except the Alilaguna, Fusina, and Clodia lines. You
can use more than one line to reach your destination, but return trips
during the 75 minutes are not allowed.Children's one-way fares: Under 6 free,
full adult price for children 6 and older. |
€9,50 |
Limited non-resident's ferry or "traghetto ordinario" ticket Valid only
for traveling between certain stops: Lido S.M.E.-Sant'Elena-Giardini, San
Marco-San-Zaccaria-San Servolo, San Marco-San Zaccaria-San-Giorgio,
Zattere-Palanca, Murano Colonna-Cimetero-Fondamente Nove.
Important:
This "traghetto" fare applies to ACTV water buses, not the
traghetto gondola ferries that are rowed across
the Grand Canal. |
€5
one-way, €10 roundtrip |
Disabled fare Valid for 75 minutes;
limited to passengers in wheelchairs. A companion may travel free. |
€1,50 |
Roundtrip beach ticket (Lido di Venezia)
This return ticket is valid on Line 14. You can take the motonave
(a large multi-deck waterbus) to the Lido SME station from either Venice San
Zaccaria (above the Piazza San Marco) or Punta Sabbioni. Once you're on the
Lido, you can use the ticket to ride local buses. |
€16 |
Aerobus This ACTV bus connects
Venice Marco Airport and Venice's Piazzale Roma. |
See article |
Multi-Day Passes and Tickets (boats and land buses) |
One-Day
Venezia Daily Pass |
€25 * |
Two-Day
Ticket |
€35 * |
Three-Day
Ticket |
€45 * |
Seven-Day
Ticket |
€65 * |
Three-day Young Person's Ticket
Valid 72 hours after swiping; to buy this card, you'll need a
Rolling Venice Card
for travelers between the ages of 6 and 29, which you can purchase at any
ACTV ticket counter or branch of the Venice Tourist Office for
€6,--. |
€27 |
Venezia Unica Tourist Pass
This pass (formerly the Venice Connected card) offers an a la carte package of
transportation, admissions, and other tourist services with a frustratingly
byzantine pricing scheme. |
See
Venezia Unica Tourist Pass article |
Venezia Unica Card for Regular Users
This stored-value card costs €100 for non-residents, but it's valid for five years and lets you buy
vaporetto tickets at cheap residents' rates. (It also gives you a big
discount on Alilaguna airport-boat fares.) |
See
Venezia Unica for Regular Users article |
* For an
additional fee of €7 (one way) or €13 (roundtrip), you can travel between Venice's
Piazzale Roma and
Marco Polo Airport on the ACTV's No. 5
Aerobus. This bus is less comfortable than the ATVO
airport coach on the same route. |
Important things to
know:
You
must validate tickets before use. Look for an electronic card
reader near the walkway that leads to the floating vaporetto platform.
Hold your ticket
against the card reader for approximately 1.5 seconds, or until a green
light flashes. At some stops, a gate or turnstile will open when you validate
your ticket.
-
If you're at a vaporetto stop without a ticket counter or
machine, buy a ticket from the boat conductor as you board to avoid a fine.
(You'll need to pay with a credit or debit card, since cash is no longer
accepted for on-board ticket purchases.)
-
On land, purchase bus/tram/People Mover tickets at ticket machines, Hellovenezia/ACTV offices,
newsstands, or tobacco shops (look for a blue sign with a white "T").
Warning: We've had reports of ticket inspectors ignoring the ACTV's
published policy and fining tourists who tried to buy tickets upon boarding,
so we strongly recommend going out of your way to buy a ticket on land to
avoid ripoffs.
-
On water buses, you're allowed to carry one piece of luggage
with a combined length, width, and height of 150 cm (60 inches) or less,
plus a smaller backpack, purse, or other personal item.
For
more luggage, or for a bigger bag, you may need to pay a supplement. Ask the
agent in the ticket booth or the boat conductor as you board.
Our best money-saving tip:
- Venice is a compact and walkable city, and you shouldn't need to use the
vaporetto often unless you have trouble walking, are pressed for time, or
are going to an island (such as the Lido or Murano) outside the historic
center. Our advice: Walk when you can, and organize your schedule to make
the most efficient use of a tourist travel card.
For more fare information--including conference cards, football
tickets, and other special fares--please see the
English-language pages at the Web site of ACTV, Venice's transit authority.
If you'll
be using land-based public transportation, see:
About the author:
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.
PC Magazine has called this "the premier visitors'
site for Venice, Italy." Over the years, it has helped more than 30 million
travelers. For more information, see About our site,
our Europe for Visitors
press clippings,
and
our reader testimonials.
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