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TOURISM

FACT CHECK: Is Como really bringing in a Venice-style ‘tourist tax’?

As Venice prepares to trial a €5 fee for daytrippers, international news outlets report that Lake Como now plans to do the same. Are these rumours true?

FACT CHECK: Is Como really bringing in a Venice-style ‘tourist tax’?
Is Como preparing to introduce a Venice-style 'tourist tax'? Photo by Babak Habibi on Unsplash

‘Lake Como is adopting a ‘tourist fee’ like Venice – but is it justified?’ asked UK outlet Metro on Thursday.

‘Lake Como to introduce daytripper fee to curb visitor numbers,’ ran a headline on English-language site Euronews the following day.

‘After Venice, this popular Italian destination plans to charge a tourist fee,’ declared Indian outlet The Economic Times on Sunday.

Over the past couple of weeks, multiple international news outlets have run a series of stories breathlessly announcing the imminent arrival of a Venice-style tourist entry fee on Italy’s most famous lake – but are the reports based in fact?

Venice is set to trial its long-awaited €5 charge for day-trippers for the first time this week, beginning on Italy’s Liberation Day weekend from Thursday, April 25th.

City authorities say the charge, which will be charged over 29 of the busiest tourist days in 2024, is designed to crack down on ‘hit and run’ tourism, and there was much excitement in international media at the suggestion Como was set to follow suit.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: How will Venice’s ‘tourist tax’ work?

On closer inspection, however, the reports seem to originate from a single and fairly non-committal quote that has been blown out of proportion.

The source is an interview Como Mayor Alessandro Rapinese gave to UK-based newspaper The Times earlier this month – and for amount of hype the story has generated, the interview itself is sparse on details.

“We are already discussing the idea,” Rapinese tells The Times, when asked about a €5 charge. “Revolutions begin with concrete measures and we are ready for this long journey.”

Residents say Italy’s scenic Lake Como is becoming overrun with tourists. Photo by Jesper Brouwers on Unsplash

Rapinese then goes on to list a series of proposals that have nothing to do with the fee – which never comes up again – including introducing a €50 charge for tour coaches and harvesting visitors’ phone and credit card data to implement traffic-calming measures.

According to Italian news site Fanpage, a daytripper charge is unpopular with other members of the town’s administration, with the city’s former chief engineer describing it as a “limitation on the freedom to experience the beauty of our areas”.

READ ALSO: What’s the difference between Italy’s city taxes and new ‘tourist tax’?

Venice’s city authorities have faced their own share of criticism for the fee, with the centre-left opposition slamming the charge as a money-making scheme that is of “no use in any way to manage tourist flows.”

The measure “unfortunately goes in the direction of making [Venice] a kind of large theme park rather than a city in which to live and build a future,” argued Democratic Party MP Rachele Scarpa last September.

The lagoon’s inhabitants have also raised questions about where the funds will go. 

“What happens to all this money? Will it be spent on improving Venice’s public transportation? Will it remain on the mainland? There has been no mention of what will happen,” local resident Gillian Longworth McGuire asked The Local.

At this point, it seems unlikely that Como’s city council will trial a similar tourist tax before seeing how the scheme plays out in Venice – and it’s at the least premature to announce that such a charge is imminent.

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TOURISM

‘Not even that ancient’: The harshest TripAdvisor comments about Italy’s sights

From Roman ruins to grand Gothic palaces, Italy’s most popular tourist attractions welcome hundreds of thousands of visitors every year – but not everyone leaves satisfied.

'Not even that ancient': The harshest TripAdvisor comments about Italy's sights

With its rich cultural heritage and plenty of art and architecture wonders, Italy draws hundreds of thousands of visitors from all corners of the world every year. 

But a quick scroll through the review section of travel website TripAdvisor will be enough to show that some of the country’s most famous attractions aren’t to everyone’s taste.

Colosseum, Rome

It may be Italy’s biggest tourist attraction, but even the Colosseum – the largest ancient amphitheatre ever built, dating back to 80 AD – fails to impress some.

“I came. I saw. I left,” wrote one reviewer, saying that looking at pictures of the building and reading about its history will spare you from “a long wait line, a port a john [sic] bathroom, and a big disappointment”.

READ ALSO: Nine tips for making the most of a Rome city break

Others were seemingly not so happy with the overall state of the attraction.

“[It] was a lot more broken than I thought it would be, at £15 a pop you’d think they’d invest in repairing it,” one wrote. 

“Not even got a roof? When they finishing it [sic]?” asked another. 

Milan, Duomo 

Though it is often regarded as one of, if not the greatest example of Italian Gothic architecture, not everyone seems to be impressed by Milan’s Duomo cathedral. 

“The outside is gaudy and tacky as the worst of Las Vegas,” while “the inside is as bad taste as the outside” and not worth the wait, “even if they paid you”, one reviewer wrote.

READ ALSO: Stay away! How Europe’s most popular spots are fighting overtourism

Another said the Duomo was no different than any “old cathedral” found in every European city, claiming that “pigeons watching [sic] is more exciting than this building”.

Speaking of pigeons, one tourist warned future visitors about the aggressiveness of the local bird population, saying that the area surrounding the Duomo is “swarming with thousands of pigeons that have long ago lost any fear of humans” and will “fly directly at your head”, forcing you to “take evasive action”.

Just another cathedral? The famed Duomo in Milan. Photo by Martin Anselmo on Unsplash

Doge’s Palace, Venice

Venice’s Palazzo Ducale is the third most-visited tourist attraction in the country and arguably one of the best-preserved traces of the ancient Venetian Republic’s power. 

But the palace isn’t everyone’s cup of tea – at least judging from its reviews.

“When you go inside, there’s nothing to see except a lot of paintings on the ceilings and high on the walls. The paintings are impressive but very samey,” one reviewer wrote.

READ ALSO: What’s the difference between Italy’s city taxes and new ‘tourist tax’?

“Really boring,” complained another, saying that the rooms were “bland” and “the view never got any better”. 

Other visitors said they were disappointed with some of their tour guides’ choices.

One wrote: “Our guide took pleasure in telling about people being tortured here. It was a bit grizzly [sic]. Personally I would give the place a miss.” 

Tourists sit under the archway of the Doge's Palace in Venice

The Doge’s Palace in Venice, which some visitors found abit “samey”. Photo by Marco BERTORELLO / AFP

Pompeii 

Even the Pompeii archaeological site, which consists of the ruins of a city buried under volcanic ash following the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD, has its fair share of detractors.

A reviewer described the site as being “poorly paved street after poorly paved street of pretty much the same old same old terraced house over and over and over and over”.

Another said: “I really don’t get what the hype is about.

“It’s not even that ancient since they had to build so many structures around it to keep it standing. Even the freaking pillars didn’t make it (some barely did I guess).”

One reviewer even went as far as saying it was the “worst place” he’d ever visited, mentioning he had “too much ground to cover in sweltering heat” and he “should have stayed at the nice beaches of Vico Equense”. 

Trevi Fountain, Rome

A prime example of Italian Baroque aesthetics, the Trevi fountain is one of Rome’s most widely recognised symbols worldwide, but not all visitors are impressed by it.

“It splashes and splashes. It spurtles and flows. It fountains and gurgles and is as romantic as my oldest pairs of smelly socks,” wrote one reviewer, who concluded they felt “let down”.

Tourists around Rome's Trevi Fountain

Tourists around Rome’s Trevi Fountain in March 2024. Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP

That said, many reviewers expressed appreciation for the fountain’s architecture, but complained that their visit was ruined by hordes of fellow tourists. These complaints are far from unjustified given the attraction’s long-standing overcrowding issues

One reviewer suggested that “packing a pair of 8 foot stilts” may be the only way to “ensure a satisfying visit to the Trevi”.

Another called the attraction a “claustrophobia mecca” that’s “nearly impossible to deal with because of the thousands of pushy, sweaty, rude and large tourists”.

Have you seen a surprising review of an Italian landmark? Are there any Italian sights you think are overrated? Let us know in the comments section below.

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