🛳️ Venice’s public boats are iconic — here’s how to use them without the confusion (or the crowd stress).
The vaporetto — Venice’s water bus — is the real way locals get around. It’s crowded, chaotic, occasionally late… and absolutely iconic. Here’s how to master it like a seasoned Venetian (or at least not look like a confused tourist).
Get a 24h, 48h, or 72h ACTV pass — online, at vending machines, or from booths at major stops like Piazzale Roma, Ferrovia (train station), or Rialto. Single tickets are €9.50 — a pass saves you money and stress.
Tap your card or ticket at the white ACTV machine before getting on. No beep = no ride. Yes, they do random checks — and fines are steep.
Lines like 1 and 2 circle the Grand Canal, but in opposite directions. Read the signs. Going the wrong way could turn a 15-minute trip into a 45-minute canal cruise. (Fun if unintentional, but still.)
Enter at “ENTRATA”, exit at “USCITA”. Let people off before boarding. Seems obvious… yet chaos says otherwise.
Locals head to the back of the boat or outside at the front — less crowded, better views. Avoid blocking doors or stairways. Bonus tip: the front open-air section on Line 1 is a photographer’s dream.
Schedules are posted, but delays happen. Use Google Maps or the AVM Venezia app for live updates. And if one boat’s full — the next is (probably) coming soon.
✨ Tip from a local (and photographer):
Ride Line 1 at sunrise or twilight for pure magic. It’s the slowest, most scenic route — gliding past palazzos, bridges, and life on the water.
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