Florence in August 2026: Ferragosto and the city half-empty of Florentines, the peak heat, museums with shorter lines than July, and closed restaurants.
August in Florence is paradoxical: the hottest month, with high prices and many Florentine shops and restaurants closed for the holidays, but also the month when the city partly goes back to tourists, the Florentines have left for the sea. The result is a strange Florence: some museums oddly less crowded than the summer norm (visitors pick July or September), the monuments are open, but the authentic neighborhood atmosphere is that of a city on pause.
| Category | Situation Aug 15 | Situation Aug 16-31 |
|---|---|---|
| State museums (Uffizi, Accademia) | Open as usual | Open |
| Churches | Open (holiday Masses) | Open as usual |
| Florentine restaurants and trattorias | Many closed | Gradual reopening |
| Supermarkets | Reduced hours | Normal from the 16th |
| On-duty pharmacies | One open per neighborhood | Normal rotation |
| Taxis and transport | Reduced service | Normal from the 16th |
| Hotels | All open | All open |
August temperatures in Florence reach 35-38°C on the worst days, with high humidity. The survival strategies: (1) Visit the museums in the middle of the day (10:00-17:00), they're air-conditioned; (2) The open-air squares and streets: visit them at 7:00-9:00 and after 18:30; (3) The Arno riverside is breezy even in August, the evening walk from the Ponte Vecchio toward San Niccolò is one of the coolest in the city; (4) The Oltrarno in August is cooler than the center, the narrower, shadier streets stay 2-3°C lower; (5) Fiesole (bus 7, 20 minutes) is always 3-4°C cooler than Florence, the ideal alternative for unbearable afternoons.
August beats July slightly for the crowd at the Uffizi, especially in the second week of August (11-20), when many Europeans are already on holiday but the first wave of US and Asian tourists has already seen the Uffizi. In the first week of August (1-10) and the third (21-25) the crowd is comparable to July. Ferragosto (14-16 August): an unexpected window of relative calm, many European tourists choose to stay at the sea in this specific stretch, and the Uffizi can be visited with short lines. Always book online anyway, even for August, the booking gives you priority access even when the crowd is smaller.
The historic Florentine trattorias close for the holidays for 2-3 weeks in August (usually from the 5th-10th to the 20th-25th). The places that stay open: (1) The tourist-oriented restaurants (always open but of variable quality); (2) The big trattorias with a large staff (Trattoria Mario, Trattoria da Ruggero, check their sites); (3) Pizza by the slice and delis almost never close; (4) The Mercato Centrale (the upper floor with the Tuscan food stalls): open every day including August; (5) McDonald's, malls, chains, open but not the authentic Florentine choice. Strategy: always check with a Google search "restaurant name August 2026" before booking, or use TheFork, which shows availability in real time.
Trenitalia (www.trenitalia.com) and Italo NTV (www.italotreno.it) cover the major routes with high-speed service. To book: pick the station, date, time, and class. Trenitalia's Super Economy and Italo's Low Cost fares start from €9.90-19 for routes like Rome-Florence or Milan-Venice: they sell out weeks ahead on high-season dates. Last-minute the same route can cost €65-90. For regional trains: cheap tickets (€3-12 for 1-2 hour routes) always available, but you must validate the paper ticket before boarding. The digital ticket (app or PDF) didn't need validating: the QR code is what counts. Third-party resale sites add 30-100% margins without adding value.
Italian taxis are white with a lit sign on the roof and are the only authorized ones. The flat airport-center fares: Rome Fiumicino €50 flat rate; Milan Malpensa €95-110 flat rate; Venice Marco Polo airport, there's no wheeled taxi, you use the bus or the water taxi (€70-100). For urban trips the meter starts at €3-4 (daytime base). The Itaxi and Free Now apps book official taxis at a fixed fare with no surprises. Uber in Italy works only as Uber Black (NCC) at prices above taxis in normal hours. Always avoid unofficial cars outside the airports.
The ZTL (Zona a Traffico Limitato, limited-traffic zone) is the access-control system for historic centers using OCR cameras. Each city has different rules: Rome, the Centro Storico ZTL is active Monday-Friday 6:30-18:00, Saturday 14:00-18:00; Florence, 7:30-20:00, some zones 24/7; Bologna, 7:00-20:00; Naples, varies by zone. The fine (€65-150) arrives at home via the rental agency (which adds €25-50 of fees) 2-4 months after the offense. Solution: never drive a rental car into the historic center of the big Italian cities. Park at the park-and-ride lots and use public transport.
Since 2022 there's a legal requirement to accept electronic payments for any amount. In practice cash is still needed for: open-air market stalls, street vendors, church offerings, some small village trattorias. The best ATMs: those of the main Italian banks (Intesa Sanpaolo, UniCredit) apply no fee of their own, the fee (0-3%) is applied by your own bank. Avoid the independent Euronet and Cardpoint ATMs in tourist areas: they apply €3-5 of their own fee. Always keep €50-100 in cash for small expenses.
TheFork (www.thefork.it) is the most-used restaurant booking platform in Italy, it often offers 20-50% discounts. For Michelin-starred restaurants: book 4-8 weeks ahead via the official website. For neighborhood trattorias: a walk-in is possible if you arrive at 12:00-12:30 (lunch) or 19:45-20:00 (dinner). Friday and Saturday evening always book 1-2 weeks ahead. If you cancel: always give notice. A no-show without warning is considered rude in Italy.
The Vatican Museums in high season have lines of 90-150 minutes without booking. The effective methods: (1) Online booking at www.museivaticani.va (€20 + €4 booking) with a reserved lane; (2) A guided tour (GetYourGuide, €35-60), the guide already has the ticket; (3) Opening at 8:00 on weekdays in low season (November-February) with 15-20 minutes of line; (4) Thursday evening in summer (special entry until 22:00). Note: the Vatican Museums do NOT take part in the state's free first Sunday, the only free Vatican Sunday is the last of the month, with lines of 2-3 hours.
The coperto (€1.50-3 per person) is legally allowed and isn't a tip, it covers bread and the seat at the table. Don't pay it if the place doesn't display it on the menu. The tip is completely voluntary: rounding up by €2-5 on a €40-60 bill is appreciated but not required. To pay, say "Il conto, per favore": don't make hand signals. Splitting the bill evenly (alla romana) is perfectly normal in Italy, there's no awkwardness in asking for it.
Romans, Florentines, and Venetians don't go out in the central hours (12:00-17:00) of July-August. The strategies: visit the open-air sites (Colosseum, Forums, Valley of the Temples) only early morning (9:00-11:30) or late afternoon (17:30-closing); the churches are the best natural Italian air conditioning, always open and cool; artisanal gelato every 90 minutes lowers your body temperature; linen or 100% cotton clothing, light colors, a hat mandatory for open-air sites; always fill a bottle at Rome's nasoni or the public fountains of Italian cities.
Public toilets in Italy are rare and often paid (€0.50-1 in stations). The Italian strategy: go into a bar, order a coffee or a water (€1-2) and ask where the restrooms are. Free toilets available: in McDonald's, Burger King, Starbucks; in the main stations (often paid €0.80-1); in airports (free); in museums (almost always free at the entrance). The bidet in Italian bathrooms: present in almost all hotels and B&Bs of any category, it's used for personal hygiene after the toilet, not for your feet.
(1) Booking the hotel far from the center to save €30/night, you lose 10 hours of transport over 7 days; (2) Going to the Colosseum without booking, a 45-90 minute line in July-August; (3) Taking unlicensed taxis outside Rome's airport, double the price of the official white taxis; (4) Drinking a cappuccino after 11:00 isn't banned, but the locals look at it with affectionate curiosity; (5) Ordering a coffee expecting a large cup, coffee in Italy means a 25 ml espresso; (6) Bringing wheeled suitcases into the historic center of Rome and the calli of Venice, the cobbles and the Venetian bridges destroy them; (7) Changing money at the airport, 5-15% margins; (8) Blindly trusting the 5 stars on TripAdvisor for restaurants near the monuments; (9) Not bringing an adapter for the Italian type L/F sockets; (10) Planning the first day full of museums, ignoring jet lag, the first day is for settling in.
The signs of the tourist restaurant to avoid: (1) a menu with photos of the dishes, serious Italian restaurants never use them; (2) a menu in 6-8 languages with staff who don't speak those languages; (3) a waiter who calls you in from the doorway; (4) a spot immediately next to the main monument (within 50 meters of the Colosseum, Piazza San Marco, the Trevi Fountain); (5) a margherita priced under €6 in the center, it's either industrial or has poor ingredients; (6) no local customers sitting at the tables; (7) a menu with a "Tourist Menu" at €12 with pasta + pizza + wine. The signs of the authentic restaurant: a chalkboard with the day's dishes written by hand; local customers; the menu in Italian first; the owner present in the room; the coperto declared on the menu (not "service charge 15%").
The coperto (pane e coperto, servizio coperto) is a legally allowed item in Italy that covers the cost of bread, the tablecloth, the cutlery, and the seat. The range: €1-3 per person in normal restaurants; €4-8 in luxury restaurants. It isn't a tip, it isn't a service charge, it isn't a tax, it's a menu item you must find written in the price list before you sit. If it isn't on the menu and they charge it: you can dispute it. The "service charge" of 10-15% you see in tourist restaurants is instead almost always added illegally or for large groups, in Italy it isn't a standard practice in normal restaurants.
The official platforms for tickets to Italian events: TicketOne (www.ticketone.it), the largest Italian platform, covering concerts, theater, opera, sport; Vivaticket (www.vivaticket.com), an alternative for many regional theaters; the official theater websites (Teatro alla Scala www.teatroallascala.org, Opera di Roma www.operaroma.it, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino www.operadifirenze.it). Beware the secondary resale sites: Viagogo, StubHub, Ticketmaster (some sections) resell tickets at 2-5x the price with high fees, use them only if the official ticket is sold out and the event is unmissable. Teatro alla Scala has loggione tickets (the cheapest seats) at €15-25: available by phone or online booking 2 months before the event.
The Italian emergency numbers: 112 (the single European number, works across the EU, answers in Italian but with automatic translation available in many languages); 113 (State Police); 115 (Fire Brigade); 118 (medical emergencies and ambulance); 1515 (Forestry Corps for emergencies in nature). For non-urgent emergencies: 116117 (the on-call doctor, active at night and on weekends). For theft with a report: the Carabinieri (the number is 112 or the local barracks) or the police Questura, the report is needed for insurance reimbursements. If your passport is stolen: contact your country's consulate immediately in the city you're in (the main consulates are in Rome, Milan, Naples, Florence, Venice).
The traps of Italian souvenirs and how to avoid them: (1) The ceramics of Deruta, Vietri, or Caltagirone: buy only from workshops with the "Ceramica Artigianale" mark and the ceramist's name on the base, the Chinese ceramics sold as Italian have no mark on the base; (2) DOP products: always read the label, real Parmigiano Reggiano has the fire-branded mark on the rind; DOP oil has the yellow-red European symbol; (3) Florentine leather: real quality Italian leather starts at €80-100 for a wallet, below this threshold it's almost always faux leather or low-quality Asian hide; (4) Wine: buy at a specialized wine shop or directly at the winery, the wines in the souvenir shops in the center have 50-100% markups; (5) Murano glass: real Venetian glass has the "Vetro Artistico Murano" mark guaranteed by the Consorzio Promovetro, buy only from shops displaying this mark.
The suitcase for Italy in summer (June-August): linen or 100% cotton clothing (never synthetics, the Italian mugginess is merciless with fabrics that don't breathe); comfortable sandals with a sturdy sole for Rome's cobbles; a light scarf for the churches (covered shoulders mandatory); SPF50 sunscreen and sunglasses; closed shoes for hikes and excavation sites. The suitcase for Italy in autumn-winter (October-March): a medium-heavy coat (the damp cold of Florence and Venice is penetrating); boots or waterproof shoes (for the Acqua Alta in Venice and the winter rains); a compact umbrella (not the big golf umbrellas, in the tight spaces of medieval cities they're very awkward). In every season: an adapter for the Italian type L sockets (the three-pin 10A sockets) if you come from the UK, USA, Australia; a power bank for your phone (intensive sightseeing days drain any battery); a reusable steel bottle (the water from Italian nasoni and public fountains is drinkable everywhere).
If you miss the train in Italy the procedure depends on the ticket type: (1) Base or Flex Trenitalia ticket (changeable): change the booking free on the app or at the platform before the train departs; if you're already aboard the next train without a booking, show the original ticket to the conductor and pay only the price difference if there is one; (2) Super Economy Trenitalia (non-refundable, non-changeable): there's no refund or change, the ticket is lost; (3) Italo Low Cost: same logic as Super Economy, no refund. Special case: if the train is over 60 minutes late at the final destination you're entitled to a refund of 25% of the ticket price (European rules). The refund form is filled out at www.trenitalia.com within 1 year of the trip. For regional trains with an unvalidated paper ticket: the conductor will have you validate on the spot with a €5 penalty.
Every Italian city has a different system: Rome (ATAC), metro lines A and B (+C expanding), city buses, trams; integrated BIT ticket €1.50 valid 100 minutes on all transport; day pass €7. Milan (ATM), metro M1-M5, historic trams, buses; ticket €2 valid 90 minutes; Day Pass €7.60. Florence (ATAF/Gestione Reti), buses and trams only (T1, T2); ticket €1.70 valid 90 minutes; no metro. Venice (ACTV), vaporetti (waterbuses); single ticket €9.50 valid 75 minutes (the most expensive in Italy); Day Pass €7.50. Naples (ANM + metro), metro lines 1 and 6, funiculars, buses; ticket €1.60 valid 100 minutes. The ticket is always bought before boarding (at the machines in the station, in the tobacconists, on the transport company's app), in almost no Italian city do you buy it on board.
The Italian cities most suited to children: (1) Rome, children love the Colosseum (free under 18 for EU), the catacombs, the nasoni where they can play with the water; avoid the art museums with children under 6 in August; (2) Florence, the Museo Galileo (Piazza dei Giudici, original scientific instruments of the 16th-17th centuries, €12 adults, children €6) is much more suited to children than the Uffizi; the Boboli Garden with its fountains and open spaces; (3) Venice, children adore the vaporetti and the gondolas; the island of Murano with the glass furnaces at work is hypnotic for children 5+; (4) Naples and around, Pompeii and Herculaneum are great for children 8+ who grasp the historical context. Logistics: reckon that with children under 6 the sightseeing pace halves; book hotels with a triple room or an apartment (not always cheap in Italy); plan plenty of breaks for gelato and play.
The essential apps for Italy in 2026: (1) Trenitalia (schedules, train ticket purchase, regional passes); (2) Itaxi or Free Now (official taxis in the big cities, same fares as a street taxi, no surprises); (3) TheFork (restaurant booking with real discounts); (4) Google Maps with offline maps downloaded before you leave (essential for navigation in areas with no signal); (5) Airalo or Holafly (international eSIM for roaming data); (6) Duolingo or Google Translate with the camera feature (to read menus and signs); (7) XE Currency (a currency converter with real-time rates); (8) Booking.com or Airbnb (always check the free cancellation, since Italian itineraries change often); (9) ACTV (the official Venice vaporetti app); (10) Couchsurfing or Meetup (to meet locals and get first-hand tips).
Holy Week and Easter are the second tourist peak of the year in Italy after August, hotel prices rise 50-100% over the previous week. Rome is the hardest-hit destination: the Vatican, with the Pope's Mass in St. Peter's Square, draws hundreds of thousands of pilgrims from all over the world. The tickets for the Pope's Mass in St. Peter's Square are free but must be requested weeks ahead through the Prefecture of the Papal Household (www.vatican.va). The most spectacular Holy Week processions in Italy: Taranto (Puglia), the nighttime procession of the "perdoni" on Maundy Thursday is considered the most striking in Europe; Trapani (Sicily), the "Misteri" of Good Friday; Assisi (PG), the Via Crucis with the Bishop; Florence, the Scoppio del Carro on Easter Sunday in Piazza del Duomo. Practical tip: if Easter falls late (April) treat it as true high season, book hotels and transport 3-4 months ahead.