Italy Travel 2026 Safety Guide: Entry Requirements, Strikes, Crime Risks and Essential Precautions
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Entry rules are simple: ensure your passport has at least three months validity beyond your stay, and no visa is needed for U.S., UK, Australian, Canadian, or EU citizens for up to 90 days in 180. Untold Italy reports no COVID-19 vaccination proof is required, and the Italian government website confirms this for tourists. However, brace for ETIAS, a new electronic travel authorization expected in late 2026 for visa-exempt visitors like Americans—it's not a visa but an online approval, possibly delayed into 2027, per Il Chiostro and EU announcements.
Travel disruptions hit hard this week: VisaHQ details a 24-hour aviation strike on February 26 that canceled around 300 flights, slamming Rome-Fiumicino, Milan, Venice, and Naples airports, with ITA Airways and easyJet most affected. A national rail strike ran from 21:00 on February 27 to 21:00 on February 28, per trade union notices, complicating weekend getaways. The U.S. State Department also noted railway sabotage near Rome on February 14, so monitor airline and Trenitalia apps closely. Australia's Smartraveller adds that the Milan-Cortina Winter Paralympics from March 6-15 will crowd northern Italy, urging early bookings for transport and lodging across Lombardy and Veneto.
Petty crime tops concerns—pickpocketing and scams plague tourist hubs like Rome's Trevi Fountain, Florence's Duomo, and Milan's stations, says Canada's Travel.gc.ca and Creative Edge Travel. Thieves distract in crowds, so keep bags zipped and close, avoid Termini station vicinity at night, and use hotel safes. Violent crime is low, but stay vigilant during festivals or events where terrorists have targeted Europe, as warned by multiple advisories.
Driving demands caution: Italian roads are good but aggressive, with ZTL restricted zones in cities fining unaware drivers heavily—stick to trains or rentals for rural spots, advises Creative Edge Travel. On public transport, masks are required on buses, metros, and trains, though outdoor tourism feels normal, per Intentional Travelers' recent reports from Florence and Tuscany.
Health-wise, pack prescriptions, use insect repellent against mosquitoes, and register with your embassy's program like STEP for U.S. citizens. Carry ID always, especially near Paralympics venues. Italy's free healthcare covers visitors, but pharmacies offer quick antigen tests if needed.
For peace of mind, check your government's site—U.S. at travel.state.gov, Australia at smartraveller.gov.au, Canada at travel.gc.ca—and the Italian Tourist Board. With these precautions, you'll navigate Italy's timeless beauty from Venice canals to Tuscan hills without a hitch. Safe travels, listeners.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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