Venice invented the modern carnival. From the 12th century, the Republic permitted its citizens to wear masks from December 26 to Shrove Tuesday โ during which period all social distinctions dissolved. A nobleman and a fisherman were equals behind masks. A woman could walk alone. Forbidden conversations became possible. Napoleon killed it in 1797. It was revived in 1979 and is now the world's most visually spectacular public festival: 3 million visitors over 2-3 weeks in February, the city transformed into an open-air theater of baroque costumes, baute masks, and improvised performance. The essential question: how do you actually experience it without being crushed by crowds? Venice guide →
Plan my Venice Carnival trip →Bauta: The traditional Venetian mask โ white, covering the full face, with a protruding chin that allows eating and drinking without removing it. Worn with a black cloak (tabarro) and a tricorn hat. This was the "social equalizer" mask โ required for certain civic functions. Moretta: A small oval black mask held in place by a button gripped between the teeth โ the wearer literally cannot speak. Worn by women. The silence IS the costume. Medico della Peste: The plague doctor's beaked mask โ originally functional (the beak held herbs believed to filter disease), now the most iconic Venice Carnival image. Colombina: Half-face mask, often ornate, revealing the mouth. Full-costume characters in Piazza San Marco wear elaborate 18th-century period costumes with hand-painted masks costing €200-2,000+.
Free events: Piazza San Marco hosts the main stage โ costume parades, the Volo dell'Angelo (a performer descends from the campanile on a wire), mask competitions, live music. The streets and campi throughout Venice fill with costumed figures posing for photos. Just walking through Venice during Carnival IS the experience โ the city becomes a living painting.
Grand balls (paid): Several palazzi host masked balls โ formal events with period costumes, orchestra, dinner. Prices: €200-600 per person. The most famous: Il Ballo del Doge (Palazzo Pisani Moretta, €500+ โ the most exclusive), Carnival at Ca' Vendramin Calergi (the casino palazzo, €200-300). Book months ahead. Mask workshops: Make your own mask at Ca' Macana (camacana.com, €50-80 for a 2h workshop) or Tragicomica (near Rialto). Renting a costume: Atelier Pietro Longhi and others rent full period costumes (€150-500/day). Walking Venice in full 18th-century costume is an unforgettable experience.
Dates 2026: usually 2-3 weeks in February (dates change annually โ check carnevale.venezia.it). The key weekends: the opening weekend and the final weekend (before Shrove Tuesday) are the biggest. Book hotels 3-6 months ahead. Prices double during Carnival. Stay outside Venice (Mestre, Treviso) to save €100-200/night. Transport: vaporetti are packed โ walk everywhere. Buy a mask: avoid the plastic €2 masks from street vendors. Buy from artisan maskmakers โ €30-150 for a hand-painted papier-mâché mask that's actually beautiful. Best viewing: Piazza San Marco (crowds but spectacle), Accademia Bridge (photographers' favorite), Dorsoduro campi (quieter, more authentic costumed figures posing). Combine with: Venice in winter (fewer tourists outside Carnival, beautiful mist and light), Murano and Burano (escape the Carnival crowds for an afternoon).