Coperto Italy 2026: The Cover Charge Is Legal If Listed on the Menu Outside the Restaurant, You Can Legally Refuse It If It Was Not on the External Menu, and Rome Restaurants Average 2-3 Euros Per Person While Venetian Tourist Restaurants Charge Up to 8 Euros

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026. Verified by the editorial team of www.tourleaderpro.com.

The coperto (the Italian restaurant table cover charge — the specific per-person charge (the pane e coperto or the diritto di copertura) that the Italian restaurant adds to the bill in addition to the food and drink prices) is the single most specifically confusing Italian restaurant billing element for the international visitor and the one whose specific legal status (the coperto is legal IF it is displayed on the printed menu that is posted on the restaurant exterior — the standard Italian consumer protection requirement (the AGCM (Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato) regulation that all Italian restaurant prices including the coperto must be displayed on the accessible menu (the menù affisso all'esterno — the menu posted on the outside wall or the window of the restaurant) before the visitor enters the premises)) creates the most specifically legally actionable single Italian restaurant billing situation. The coperto Italy guide provides the specific legal framework, the specific amounts by city, and the specific consumer rights that allow the visitor to understand, budget for, and when appropriate refuse the Italian restaurant cover charge.

Coperto Italy: The Legal Framework, the Amounts, the Rights

What Is the Coperto and What Is It For

The specific Italian coperto legal definition: the coperto (the "cover charge" — literally the "covered" (the covered table, the set table) charge) is the specific Italian restaurant charge (the importo per persona aggiunto al conto — the per-person amount added to the bill) that purports to cover the specific cost of the table setting (the mise en place — the specific bread service (the pane), the olive oil, the table linen, and the specific water if included). The legal basis: the coperto is a legitimate Italian restaurant charge under the specific Italian consumer law IF (and only if) the specific amount (the importo preciso del coperto) is explicitly stated on the menu displayed at the restaurant exterior (the AGCM Circolare del 25 settembre 2002 (the Italian Consumer Protection Authority circular) and the specific D.Lgs. 206/2005 (the Italian Consumer Code) Article 3 (the requirement for the complete price disclosure before the consumer enters the commercial premises)). The specific Italian regional variation: the coperto has been specifically banned (the coperto vietato by regional regulation) in the specific Lazio region (the Regione Lazio ordinance of 2006 that replaced the coperto with the specific "Pane e coperto esplicitato nella lista" requirement — the specific rule that the coperto can only be charged if each individual component (the bread price, the water price, the table service price) is separately listed)); and in the specific Toscana region (where the specific 2005 Tuscan regional regulation similarly banned the undisclosed coperto).

The Specific Amounts by City

The specific Italian coperto amount by city (the verified 2026 range): Rome — 1-3 euros per person at the standard trattoria; 3-5 euros per person at the tourist-facing centre restaurant; 5-8 euros per person at the luxury restaurant; Venice — 3-8 euros per person (the highest single Italian tourist-restaurant coperto range — the specific Venice restaurant coperto is the most specifically extreme single Italian coperto amount in the major tourist cities); Florence — 1.50-3 euros per person at the standard Florentine restaurant; Milan — 1-2.50 euros per person (the lowest single major Italian tourist city coperto amount — the Milan coperto reflects the specific Milan restaurant competitive market pressure to keep the coperto below the Rome and Venice equivalents); Naples — 1-2 euros per person (the second lowest single major Italian city coperto); Amalfi Coast — 3-7 euros per person (the highest single Italian coastal resort coperto range — the specific Positano, Ravello, and Amalfi restaurant coperto reflects the specific tourist-captive pricing of the cliff-side restaurant).

When You Can Legally Refuse the Coperto

The specific Italian legal situations in which the visitor can legitimately refuse the coperto: (1) the coperto was NOT listed on the menu posted on the restaurant exterior (the menu affisso all'esterno): the most common single coperto refusal justification and the most legally robust (the specific Italian consumer protection: the AGCM enforcement records show the specific refusal of the undisclosed coperto as the most consistently upheld single Italian consumer complaint category in the restaurant sector); (2) the coperto is listed in the menu interior but NOT in the exterior menu (the distinction between the interno and the esterno menu visibility: only the exterior menu is legally required for the coperto disclosure — the interior-only coperto disclosure is not sufficient); (3) the coperto was charged but the service did not include the specific items listed (the bread was not served, the water was not provided): the specific itemised coperto (the coperto dettagliato) that is not delivered provides the specific non-delivery grounds for the refusal. The specific practical coperto refusal procedure: politely tell the waiter (the cameriere) that the coperto was not on the exterior menu and that you prefer not to pay it — the legally aware Italian restaurateur will accept the objection; the tourist-facing Italian restaurateur who insists can be reminded that the AGCM consumer protection line (+39 06 85821 or agcm.it) accepts complaints about the undisclosed coperto.

Q&A: Coperto Italy

Is the coperto the same as a service charge?

No — the specific Italian coperto vs the service charge distinction: the coperto is the specific cover charge (the table setting, the bread, the water service): the visitor pays it regardless of the service quality. The servizio (the service charge — the specific additional charge for the table service (the cameriere's service (the waiter service) as distinct from the table setting)): NOT standard in Italy (the specific Italian restaurant billing convention does not include the automatic service charge (the servizio aggiunto) that the UK, US, and Australian restaurants automatically add to the bill (the UK 10-12.5% discretionary service charge and the US 15-20% expected tip are not the Italian standard)). The specific Italian tip expectation: the mancia (the tip — the voluntary gratuity for the waiter): not expected in the Italian restaurant (the coperto covers the table service cost in the Italian restaurant billing convention — the additional mancia is the entirely voluntary expression of the exceptional service satisfaction, not the mandatory component of the Italian restaurant cost structure). The practical tipping guide: the satisfied Italian restaurant customer rounds the bill to the nearest 5 euros or leaves 1-3 euros per person as the mancia — the American 15-20% tip is not expected and is occasionally embarrassing to the Italian waiter who associates the outsized tip with the implication that the Italian payment is inadequate.

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