Naples Scams 2026: What's Real, What's Myth, and How to Visit the Best City in Italy Without Being Robbed
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
Naples has the most unfair reputation in Italian tourism. The city is genuinely one of the most complex, most culturally rich, and most gastronomically extraordinary in Italy; it is also genuinely a city with higher petty crime rates than Rome or Florence, specific tourist-targeting behaviors in certain areas, and infrastructure challenges that can produce unpleasant experiences for unprepared visitors. The gap between "Naples is incredibly dangerous and no one should go there" (a position held by many northern Italians and many tourists who have heard this opinion from northern Italians) and the reality (a navigable city where millions of tourists visit annually without incident, where the social fabric is warmer and more immediate than any other Italian city, and where the pizza, the street food, the archaeological museums, and the cultural life represent the best-value major tourist destination in Italy) is large enough to warrant an honest guide to both the genuine risks and the exaggerated ones.
The Genuine Risks in Naples
Scooter Theft and Bag Snatching
The specific Naples crime risk that is genuinely higher than in other major Italian cities: bag snatching from moving scooters (the "scippo"). The targets are bags carried over one shoulder or hanging from a wrist — a scooter rider passes at speed, grabs the bag, and accelerates before the victim can react. The mitigation: carry bags across the body (cross-body strap rather than shoulder), keep the bag on the building side of the pavement (away from the road), and do not carry cameras, phones, or other valuables in easily snatched bags. This is a real risk in specific areas (the waterfront Via Caracciolo, the tourist zones around the historic center, the Spaccanapoli tourist street) and a negligible risk if the physical precautions are taken.
Restaurant Overcharging
The tourist restaurant overcharging problem in Naples is specific and preventable: menus near major tourist sights (the National Archaeological Museum, Piazza del Gesù, Spaccanapoli) sometimes lack prices, add coperto (cover charges) that exceed the legally required disclosure, or present bills that do not match the ordered menu prices. Mitigation: always ask for the menu with prices before ordering, check the bill item by item before paying, and if the bill does not match the menu prices, politely request an itemized explanation. The restaurants that do this are a minority of Naples's enormous restaurant stock; the majority are completely honest.
Fake Tickets and "Guides"
Around the Museo Nazionale Archaeologico, the Piazza del Gesù Nuovo, and the major church entrances, unofficial individuals offer "guided entry" or sell what appear to be tickets at below-standard prices. These are scams: the tickets are fake or for different services, the guides are unlicensed and typically lead to a souvenir shop or private business. Buy tickets exclusively at official windows or through museum websites.
The Exaggerated Naples Risks
The Camorra (Neapolitan organized crime) does not target tourists — the Camorra's economic activities (drug distribution, extortion of local businesses, construction contracts) have no intersection with foreign visitors. The specific neighborhood violence associated with Camorra activity occurs in peripheral areas (Scampia, Secondigliano, specific parts of the northern suburbs) that tourists never visit. Spaccanapoli, the historic center, the Chiaia neighborhood, and the Posillipo waterfront are unrelated to organized crime risk for visitors. The idea that Naples is "controlled by the Camorra" in a way that affects tourist safety is an exaggeration that primarily reflects northern Italian class prejudice about the south.
Q&A: Naples Safety
Is Naples safe to visit in 2026?
Yes, with the same awareness you would apply in any large Italian or European city. Standard precautions: cross-body bags, no obvious display of expensive cameras or phones while walking in crowded areas, avoid deserted streets late at night in areas you don't know. Applying these precautions, the probability of a negative incident in Naples is low; the probability of extraordinary food, extraordinary art, extraordinary street life, and an encounter with Italian urban culture in its most vivid form is high.
What neighborhoods are safest for tourists in Naples?
The Chiaia and Posillipo neighborhoods on the western waterfront: the most residential and least criminally active zones, with excellent restaurants and direct access to the Castel dell'Ovo waterfront. The historic center (Spaccanapoli, Via Dei Tribunali): busy, crowded, the highest concentration of street life and street food — normal urban awareness applies. The area around the train station (Piazza Garibaldi): apply heightened attention; this is the most transient zone with the highest density of petty crime.