Milan Cortina 2026 Olympics Travel Guide: Safety Tips, Scam Alerts, and Essential Advice for Visitors to Northern Italy
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Rick Steves, drawing from over 50 visits to Italy, warns in his January 2026 9NEWS interview that the Olympics will strain Milan's transportation and infrastructure with massive visitor numbers, yet praises enduring draws like the Duomo's rooftop Alps views, Dolomites events, and cultural rituals such as the evening passeggiata. For everyday safety, Italy boasts Europe's lowest violent crime rates against tourists according to OneVasco's guide, but pickpocketing dominates in hotspots like Rome's Colosseum, Trevi Fountain, Milan's Duomo, Florence, and Venice—use crossbody bags zipped inward, money belts, and avoid backpacks in crowds.
Street scams proliferate with fake police using portable card readers, forced photo schemes, or "gifts" demanding payment; OneVasco and Creative Edge Travel advise firmly declining, walking away, and dialing 112 if pressed, while keeping valuables in inner pockets and photocopies of passports at hotels. Areas to skirt at night include Naples' Scampia, Forcella, and Piazza Garibaldi zones, Milan's Via Padova, Via Giambellino, Viale Monza, and Rome's Termini Station after 10 PM—stick to lit, populated spots, licensed taxis, and groups for nightlife.
Driving demands vigilance with aggressive styles, scooters darting unpredictably, and ZTL restricted zones in cities that trigger fines; speeds cap at 50 km/h urban, 130 km/h highways per OneVasco, and rural roads twist narrowly—rent cars for countryside, not cities. Natural hazards loom: seasonal floods and landslides in northern-central regions, especially fall-winter, Venice's acqua alta tides, summer wildfires near Rome, and rare earthquakes, so track weather, respect restrictions, and note hotel evacuation plans from Canada's advisory.
Entry stays straightforward into early 2026 per Untold Italy's January update: passports valid three months beyond stay, no visa for U.S., UK, Australia, EU citizens up to 90 days in 180, no COVID proof needed—but ETIAS authorization launches late 2026 for visa-free nationalities like Americans, a quick online pre-approval for short trips. Enroll in your embassy's STEP or equivalent, secure travel insurance for medical gaps, download offline maps, and save 112 emergencies to travel confidently amid Italy's safe, vibrant allure.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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