Venice's secret is hours, not sights. The crowds peak in the middle of the day around San Marco and the Rialto, so the tour-leader move is simple: hit the headline sights at opening or dusk, get deliberately lost in the quiet sestieri the day-trippers never reach, and eat cicchetti standing at a bacaro instead of sitting down to a canal-side tourist menu. Stay overnight - that is how you own the early morning and the evening, when the city is yours.
Practical reality first: there are no cars, so you walk and take the vaporetto (the water bus). Buy a multi-day vaporetto pass if you plan island-hopping, and book skip-the-line entry for the Basilica di San Marco and the Doge's Palace, which both run timed entry in season. A real map or offline maps app saves a lot of frustration - Venice is built to confuse.
3-Day Venice Itinerary
Day 1: San Marco and the Heart
Start in Piazza San Marco at opening, before the cruise crowds: the golden mosaics of the Basilica di San Marco (book skip-the-line), the Doge's Palace and the Bridge of Sighs, and the Campanile for the view over the rooftops. Then stop following the signs and let yourself get lost in the calli toward the Rialto Bridge, which is at its best early or late.
Day 2: The Grand Canal and the Quiet Sestieri
Ride the No. 1 vaporetto the length of the Grand Canal for the cheapest grand tour in Europe. Explore Cannaregio and the original Jewish Ghetto - the place that gave the word to the world - then cross to Dorsoduro for the Gallerie dell'Accademia, the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, and an evening spritz along the Zattere waterfront.
Day 3: The Lagoon Islands
Give a full day to the lagoon. Murano for the glass furnaces, Burano for the candy-colored fishermen's houses and lace, and quiet Torcello, the oldest settlement of all, for a Byzantine cathedral with mosaics that predate almost everything in the city. Take the vaporetto early to have Burano's lanes before the tour groups land.
Q&A: Venice in 3 Days
What should I book ahead?
Skip-the-line entry for the Basilica di San Marco and the Doge's Palace, both of which run timed entry in season. A multi-day vaporetto pass pays off if you are doing the islands. Beyond that, Venice is mostly a walking city, so the big spend is time, not tickets.
Is three days enough?
Yes, and it is the sweet spot: one day for San Marco and the core, one for the Grand Canal and the quieter sestieri, and a full day for the lagoon islands. Anything less and you only see the crowded middle; staying overnight is what unlocks the calm mornings and evenings.
How do I get around?
On foot and by vaporetto - there are no cars in Venice. The No. 1 line down the Grand Canal doubles as a sightseeing cruise, and the lagoon lines reach Murano, Burano, and Torcello. Water taxis are fast but expensive; the vaporetto pass is the sane choice.
What should I eat and drink?
Cicchetti - the small bar snacks you eat standing at a bacaro - plus sarde in saor, baccala mantecato, and fritto misto. Drink an Aperol or Select spritz (a Venetian invention) and house wine by the ombra. Steer clear of the fixed tourist menus right on the busiest canals.
When should I go?
Spring and fall are ideal; Carnival in February is spectacular but mobbed and pricey. Summer is hot, crowded, and can smell of the canals at low tide. Watch for acqua alta (high water) in late fall and winter, when raised walkways appear in the low-lying squares.