Rome's history, Milan's style, Venice's canals, Florence's art, Naples' pizza, and the Amalfi Coast's cliffs. Few countries give you so many entirely different holidays in one flag.
Italy is the UK's third-favourite European destination — more than 5 million Brits fly in each year. The draw is the depth: Rome, Florence and Venice hold more UNESCO-listed art between them than entire continents, and the food rivals France on every budget.
The regions feel genuinely different. Milan and the lakes for style and scenery. Tuscany and Umbria for food, wine and hill towns. The Amalfi Coast and Puglia for summer beaches. Sicily for a wilder, more North African-influenced Italy. Even the Dolomites for skiing that's cheaper than the French Alps.
Italy is surprisingly affordable outside the tourist hotspots — a pizza in Naples is €6, a primo in Bologna €10, and a cappuccino standing at the bar is rarely over €1.50. Rail (Trenitalia/Italo) is fast and cheap — Rome to Florence in 1h 30m.
Daily direct flights to Italy leave from most UK airports.
| Visa (UK passport) | No visa required. Schengen — up to 90 days in any 180-day period. |
|---|---|
| Currency | Euro (EUR, €). Cards widely accepted; small trattorias and markets often prefer cash. |
| Time zone | CET (UTC+1) / CEST (UTC+2 summer) — one hour ahead of the UK. |
| Language | Italian. English common in tourist cities but basic Italian phrases go a long way in the south. |
| Best months | April–June and September–October. Avoid August (hot, locals on holiday, many places close). |
| Flight times from UK | FCO 2h 45m · MXP 2h 0m · VCE 2h 20m · NAP 2h 55m · PMO 3h 20m |
| Plug type | Type C/F/L (European two-pin or three-pin). UK adaptor needed. |
| Getting around | Trenitalia + Italo high-speed rail between major cities. Driving in historic centres is banned (ZTL zones). |
April–June and September–October deliver the best mix of weather and crowds. August is brutal in the cities (35°C+) and many Italians vacate to the coast — small restaurants and shops close for "ferragosto". Winter (Dec–Feb) is brilliant for Rome, Florence and museum visits — low prices and no queues.
Warm, manageable crowds, peak food season.
Cool but quiet. Perfect for city breaks without queues.
Hot, empty cities, ferragosto closures, resort crowds.
No. UK passport holders get visa-free entry to Italy for up to 90 days in any 180-day period as part of the Schengen zone. Passports must be valid for 3+ months after return and issued within the last 10 years.
The euro (€). Cards are widely accepted but small trattorias, market stalls and rural bars sometimes prefer cash. ATMs ("bancomat") are everywhere.
April–June and September–October for most of Italy. Cities like Rome and Florence are best in spring and autumn. Avoid August — it's hot, crowded at the coast and half-empty in the cities as locals take ferragosto.
London to Rome is 2h 45m. Milan 2h 0m, Venice 2h 20m, Naples 2h 55m, Palermo 3h 20m, Florence 2h 35m.
London's five airports (Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted, Luton, City), plus Manchester, Birmingham, Edinburgh, Bristol, Glasgow, Newcastle, Liverpool, Leeds and East Midlands all operate direct flights to at least one Italian airport.
Yes, Italy is safe. Pickpocketing is the main tourist risk — Rome's Termini station, Spanish Steps, and Venice San Marco area are hotspots. Watch for "friendship bracelet" scammers near Rome landmarks. UK travellers should carry a GHIC card for reciprocal state healthcare.