Italy Power Outlets 2026: The Italian Type L Socket Is Specific Enough to Catch Everyone Off Guard — the Complete Guide to Adapters, Voltage, and Why Your US Hairdryer Will Immediately Fail
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
Italian electrical sockets (the Type L plug/socket system — the Italian-specific 3-pin in-line plug (the three round pins arranged in a straight line (not triangular like the Type F Schuko used in Germany and most of continental Europe)) that Italy uses as its primary domestic socket standard): the specific Italian electrical situation for the international visitor is the most practically consequential single Italian infrastructure peculiarity — the visitor who arrives without the correct adapter cannot charge their phone, their laptop, or their camera in any Italian establishment without borrowing or purchasing the specific adapter.
The Italian socket system: Italy uses two primary socket types (the Type L 10A (the standard Italian domestic socket — the three inline round pins, the specific socket that the Italian standard CEI 23-50 defines as the primary domestic format) and the Type L 16A (the heavier-gauge version for high-power appliances — the washing machine, the electric oven, the air conditioner)). The Type F Schuko socket (the common European standard) is also present in Italy in newer buildings and in the majority of hotels, as the Italian standard was partially converged with the European standard in the 1990s — but the specific older Italian buildings (the pre-1990 apartment, the agriturismo, the historic hotel) still have the pure Type L format.
Italy Power Adapters: By Country of Origin
US and Canada Visitors
US/Canada to Italy adapter: the US (the Type A/B plug (the two flat parallel pins or two flat pins + round earth pin)) requires an adapter for the Italian Type L socket. The voltage difference (the US/Canada 110-120V/60Hz versus the Italian 230V/50Hz) is the more important issue than the plug shape: a US-specification appliance (the US hairdryer, the US electric razor, the US curling iron rated for 110V only) will immediately fail and potentially damage itself or the Italian socket when connected to the 230V Italian supply — even with the plug adapter, the voltage mismatch destroys the 110V-only appliance. The specific check: the power supply label on the device (the label on the USB charger, the laptop power brick, or the camera charger): if the label reads "Input: 100-240V, 50-60Hz" (the dual-voltage specification used by all modern USB chargers, most laptop power supplies, and most camera chargers) the device is safe to use in Italy with only the plug adapter. If the label reads "Input: 110-120V, 60Hz only" (the single-voltage specification used by US hairdryers, US electric shavers, and some US kitchen appliances) — do not connect it to the Italian supply: buy the Italian equivalent or use the hotel's hairdryer.
UK Visitors
UK to Italy adapter: the UK (the Type G plug (the three rectangular pins in the specific UK configuration)) requires an adapter for the Italian Type L socket. The voltage (UK 230V/50Hz versus Italian 230V/50Hz) is identical — the UK visitor only needs the plug adapter, not the voltage converter. The specific UK-to-Italy adapter (the small flat adapter that converts the Type G three rectangular pins to the Type L inline round pins): available at the UK airport departures shops, the Italian airport arrivals shops (the €8-15 range at the airport; approximately €3-5 at the Italian hardware store (the ferramenta)), and universally available at the Italian supermarket in the electrical accessories section.
Australian and New Zealand Visitors
Australian/NZ to Italy adapter: the Australian/NZ (the Type I plug (the two angled flat pins in a V configuration)) requires an adapter. Voltage (Australia/NZ 230V/50Hz) is compatible with the Italian 230V/50Hz. The same logic as the UK visitor applies: the plug adapter only, no voltage conversion required. The universal adapter (the specific "world adapter" or "universal travel adapter" that includes the US, UK, European, Australian, and Italian plug configurations in a single device): the most practical purchase for the frequent international traveller — available at the airport departure shops and online (approximately €15-25 for the quality versions that include the USB-A and USB-C charging ports).
Q&A: Italy Power Outlets
Will my US laptop work in Italy?
Yes — virtually all modern laptop power supplies (the MacBook Pro power adapter, the Dell, HP, Lenovo, and ASUS power bricks) are dual-voltage (the "Input: 100-240V, 50-60Hz" specification on the power brick label). You need only the plug adapter (the US Type A/B to Italian Type L adapter, approximately €3-8) and the laptop will charge normally. The specific check before trusting this: read the label on the power supply brick (not the laptop itself, but the black box on the cable) — the "100-240V" specification is the confirmation. The exception: the older (pre-2010) laptop power supplies may be single-voltage — check before plugging in. The Italian USB charger: if you have USB-C devices (the modern iPhone, the modern MacBook, the modern Android phone), the Italian supermarket (the Esselunga, the Conad, the Ipercoop) sells USB-C wall chargers at €15-25 that are Italian-type-L-plugged and dual-voltage — the most practical solution if you forget or lose your adapter.
Internal Links
- Packing Estate: Gli Adattatori Elettrici
- Packing Invernale: Cosa Portare per l'Elettronica
- Italia Pratica: Le Guide Essenziali del Viaggiatore
- Famiglie in Italia: Caricabatterie e Adattatori
- Viaggiare Preparati: La Lista Tecnica
- Sicurezza Elettronica: Proteggere i Dispositivi
- Treni e Prese: Caricare in Viaggio