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Venice 2-day itinerary

Venice 2-day itinerary

2 days in Venice, planned the tabi way — one neighbourhood per day, gapless timing, every stop chosen from 36 human-verified places across 6 curated neighbourhoods. Open it offline and follow it street by street, or make it the starting point for your own plan.

2-day plan · generated from the verified catalog · regenerated with every release

Venice travel

Venice Venezia

City

A city built on water and still run by it — golden mosaics in San Marco, cicchetti counters along quiet canals, and lagoon islands of glass and colour, all car-free by definition.

RomanceArtHistoryFoodPhotography

Where to stay

San Marco — The postcard address — worth the premium if you want the piazza before the crowds arrive; expect tourist-kitchen restaurants at your doorstep, so plan meals a sestiere away. Hotels on Klook ↗

Stay near San Marco Hotels on Klook ↗

Get an eSIM before you landAiralo ↗Yesim ↗
Day 1Full day

San Marco & nearby — a sights day

The ceremonial heart — Byzantine gold inside the basilica, the Doge's palace of pink marble, and the piazza Napoleon called Europe's drawing room. Dazzling at 8am, dense by 11.

Stops6
At stops5h 25m
Moving30m
Window08:00–18:45

San Marco

Area

The ceremonial heart — Byzantine gold inside the basilica, the Doge's palace of pink marble, and the piazza Napoleon called Europe's drawing room. Dazzling at 8am, dense by 11.

Must seeByzantineLandmarkMuseums
  1. 08:0008:30
    BreakfastSuggested

    Pasticceria Rizzardini

    Food¥~20 min8/10Vegetarian optionsAlcohol-free

    Venice's oldest working pastry shop, baking from this tiny corner of Campiello dei Meloni since 1742 (a stone's throw off Campo San Polo) and having survived, per its own tagline, "many an acqua alta." The counter is best known for its castagnole (fried, sugar-dusted dough balls, a Carnevale specialty served here year-round) and a widely praised tiramisù, alongside classic Venetian biscuits and a proper espresso or hot chocolate to go with them. Open daily 8:00-18:00 except Tuesday, when it's closed entirely -- a useful fallback for a mid-morning pastry stop between the Frari and the Rialto Market since it sits almost exactly between the two. There's a handful of stand-up counter space rather than seating, so plan to eat on the move; no reservations needed for a shop this size.

    Cuisine
    Venetian pastry & bakery
    Reservations
    No
    High chair
    No

    Hours

    Mon
    08:00–18:00
    Tue
    Closed
    Wed
    08:00–18:00
    Thu
    08:00–18:00
    Fri
    08:00–18:00
    Sat
    08:00–18:00
    Sun
    08:00–18:00

    Campiello dei Meloni, San Polo, 1415, 30125 Venezia

  2. 08:3009:30
    St Mark's Basilica, San Marco, Venezia
    Church
    St Mark's Basilica, San Marco, Venezia

    St Mark's Basilica Basilica di San Marco

    Attraction¥¥~60 min10/10Cards OKStep-free

    Venice's Byzantine-domed cathedral on Piazza San Marco ended nearly a millennium of free entry in 2023 — a basic ticket to the nave, its shimmering gold-ground mosaics overhead, now costs €10, booked in a timed slot on the basilica's own site (on-site ticket counters closed for good on 1 July 2025, so buy online in advance). Two paid add-ons layer on top: the Pala d'Oro, a jewel-encrusted gold altarpiece behind the high altar, and the Loggia dei Cavalli museum and terrace with its close-up view of the bronze horses looted from Constantinople and a rare vantage over the piazza — each adds around €10 to a combined ticket, or pay €30 for everything at once. A ramped entrance at Porta dei Fiori on the left flank gives wheelchair access to the nave, though the upper museum and terrace involve stairs. St Mark's Square is the lowest point in the city and the basilica's narthex floods before almost anywhere else — glass barriers installed in 2022 now keep the interior dry up to about 110cm of tide, but the square outside can still submerge under raised walkways during autumn and winter acqua alta. Dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered) and expect bag checks at the door; free admission does not extend to general skip-the-line entry, so budget queue time even with a booked slot.

    Type
    Church
    Setting
    Mixed
    Ticket needed
    Yes

    Hours

    Mon
    09:30–17:15
    Tue
    09:30–17:15
    Wed
    09:30–17:15
    Thu
    09:30–17:15
    Fri
    09:30–17:15
    Sat
    09:30–17:15
    Sun
    14:00–17:00

    Piazza San Marco, 328, 30124 Venezia VE

    Basilica di San Marco60 min

    Venice's Byzantine-domed cathedral on Piazza San Marco ended nearly a millennium of free entry in 2023 — a basic ticket to the nave, its shimmering gold-ground mosaics overhead, now costs €10, booked in a timed slot on the basilica's own site (on-site ticket counters closed for good on 1 July 2025, so buy online in advance). Two paid add-ons layer on top: the Pala d'Oro, a jewel-encrusted gold altarpiece behind the high altar, and the Loggia dei Cavalli museum and terrace with its close-up view of the bronze horses looted from Constantinople and a rare vantage over the piazza — each adds around €10 to a combined ticket, or pay €30 for everything at once. A ramped entrance at Porta dei Fiori on the left flank gives wheelchair access to the nave, though the upper museum and terrace involve stairs. St Mark's Square is the lowest point in the city and the basilica's narthex floods before almost anywhere else — glass barriers installed in 2022 now keep the interior dry up to about 110cm of tide, but the square outside can still submerge under raised walkways during autumn and winter acqua alta. Dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered) and expect bag checks at the door; free admission does not extend to general skip-the-line entry, so budget queue time even with a booked slot.

    Cards OKStep-freechurchmust seeverify opening hours
  3. 09:30~5 min walkroute
  4. 09:4511:45
    Doge's Palace, San Marco, Venezia
    Historic site
    Doge's Palace, San Marco, Venezia

    Doge's Palace Palazzo Ducale

    Attraction¥¥¥~120 min9/10Cards OKStep-free

    The doges' seat of power for seven centuries, its Gothic lace facade opening onto grand council chambers, the Bridge of Sighs and the cells where prisoners once crossed from courtroom to jail. Entry is via the single Musei di Piazza San Marco ticket (€35 full price, €30 if booked at least 30 days ahead online, €15 reduced), which also covers the Museo Correr, the Archaeological Museum and the Marciana Library's monumental rooms in the same square — plan a half-day if you want all four. Open daily 9:00-19:00 (last entry 18:00) year-round, with an extra treat from 1 May to 26 September: the palace and Correr stay open until 23:00 every Friday and Saturday, a good way to see the Golden Staircase and the Salone del Maggior Consiglio without the daytime crush. Wheelchair users can use a dedicated step-free entrance near the exit with staff assistance and a lift to the upper floors, though the old prisons and armoury remain inaccessible; entry is free for disabled visitors and one companion. Occasional evening closures for state events do happen so a quick hours check is worth it if your visit falls on a weekend evening.

    Type
    Historical
    Setting
    Mixed
    Ticket needed
    Yes

    Hours

    Mon
    09:00–19:00
    Tue
    09:00–19:00
    Wed
    09:00–19:00
    Thu
    09:00–19:00
    Fri
    09:00–19:00
    Sat
    09:00–19:00
    Sun
    09:00–19:00

    Piazza San Marco, 1, 30124 Venezia VE

    Palazzo Ducale120 min

    The doges' seat of power for seven centuries, its Gothic lace facade opening onto grand council chambers, the Bridge of Sighs and the cells where prisoners once crossed from courtroom to jail. Entry is via the single Musei di Piazza San Marco ticket (€35 full price, €30 if booked at least 30 days ahead online, €15 reduced), which also covers the Museo Correr, the Archaeological Museum and the Marciana Library's monumental rooms in the same square — plan a half-day if you want all four. Open daily 9:00-19:00 (last entry 18:00) year-round, with an extra treat from 1 May to 26 September: the palace and Correr stay open until 23:00 every Friday and Saturday, a good way to see the Golden Staircase and the Salone del Maggior Consiglio without the daytime crush. Wheelchair users can use a dedicated step-free entrance near the exit with staff assistance and a lift to the upper floors, though the old prisons and armoury remain inaccessible; entry is free for disabled visitors and one companion. Occasional evening closures for state events do happen so a quick hours check is worth it if your visit falls on a weekend evening.

    Cards OKStep-freehistoricallandmarkverify opening hours
  5. 11:45~5 min walkroute
  6. 12:0013:00
    LunchSuggested

    Cantina Do Mori

    Food¥~25 min9/10

    Venice's oldest bacaro, pouring wine on this spot since 1462 and a reputed favourite of Casanova -- a narrow, standing-room cantina with a double entrance from two hidden calli, hanging copper pots overhead, and a wooden counter serving cicchetti and the tiny francobolli ("stamp") sandwiches it's known for. Open Monday-Friday roughly 8:00-19:30 and Saturday 8:00-15:00, closed Sunday -- the longest weekday hours of the classic Rialto bacari, useful if an evening glass of wine near the market is the goal, though it's still a stand-and-go format, not a sit-down meal. No chairs, no table service, no reservations; order at the counter and eat standing, as generations of market workers have. Reviews are more mixed here than at neighbouring All'Arco -- some find the food inconsistent day to day -- but the 560-year-old room itself, unchanged in spirit, is as much the draw as what's on the counter.

    Cuisine
    Venetian cicchetti bacaro
    Reservations
    No
    High chair
    No

    Hours

    Mon
    08:00–19:30
    Tue
    08:00–19:30
    Wed
    08:00–19:30
    Thu
    08:00–19:30
    Fri
    08:00–19:30
    Sat
    08:00–15:00
    Sun
    Closed

    Calle dei Do Mori, San Polo, 429, 30125 Venezia

  7. 13:0013:40
    St Mark's Campanile (Bell Tower), San Marco, Venezia
    Landmark
    St Mark's Campanile (Bell Tower), San Marco, Venezia

    St Mark's Campanile (Bell Tower) Campanile di San Marco

    Attraction¥¥~40 min8/10Cards OKStep-free

    The freestanding red-brick bell tower on Piazza San Marco, rebuilt in 1912 after the original collapsed overnight in 1902 (no injuries, on the exact spot it had stood since the 12th century), topped with an open-air belfry giving the best panoramic view over Venice's rooftops, the lagoon and, on a clear day, the distant Dolomites. Tickets cost €15 for anyone over age 6 (free under 6) and, unlike the basilica, an elevator does the climbing for you — no stairs, just a short wait for the lift, making it one of the more wheelchair- and stroller-friendly viewpoints in the city. Open daily 9:30-21:15 from April to October and 9:30-17:30 the rest of the year, with last entry 15 minutes before closing; the tower occasionally closes on short notice in high wind or lightning, since it's the tallest structure in Venice. Buy tickets online or at the counter in the piazza — queues build fast by mid-morning, so an early visit, or a slot booked alongside the basilica, avoids the worst of it.

    Type
    Landmark
    Setting
    Outdoor
    Ticket needed
    Yes

    Hours

    Mon
    09:30–21:15
    Tue
    09:30–21:15
    Wed
    09:30–21:15
    Thu
    09:30–21:15
    Fri
    09:30–21:15
    Sat
    09:30–21:15
    Sun
    09:30–21:15

    Piazza San Marco, 30124 Venezia VE

    Campanile di San Marco40 min

    The freestanding red-brick bell tower on Piazza San Marco, rebuilt in 1912 after the original collapsed overnight in 1902 (no injuries, on the exact spot it had stood since the 12th century), topped with an open-air belfry giving the best panoramic view over Venice's rooftops, the lagoon and, on a clear day, the distant Dolomites. Tickets cost €15 for anyone over age 6 (free under 6) and, unlike the basilica, an elevator does the climbing for you — no stairs, just a short wait for the lift, making it one of the more wheelchair- and stroller-friendly viewpoints in the city. Open daily 9:30-21:15 from April to October and 9:30-17:30 the rest of the year, with last entry 15 minutes before closing; the tower occasionally closes on short notice in high wind or lightning, since it's the tallest structure in Venice. Buy tickets online or at the counter in the piazza — queues build fast by mid-morning, so an early visit, or a slot booked alongside the basilica, avoids the worst of it.

    Cards OKStep-freelandmarkviewpointverify opening hours
  8. 13:40~5 min walkroute
  9. 13:5514:35
    Landmark

    St Mark's Square Piazza San Marco

    Attraction¥~40 min9/10Step-free

    Napoleon's 'finest drawing room in Europe' is free, open around the clock, and the one square every Venice itinerary passes through — the Basilica's domes and the Campanile on one side, the arcaded Procuratie wrapping the other three, and pigeons that have thinned out considerably since the city banned feeding them in 2008. Since 2026, day-trippers arriving without an overnight stay may need to register and pay Venice's Contributo di Accesso (€5 if booked by the Wednesday before a Sunday visit, €10 if booked later) on around 60 marked dates between early April and late July, enforced 8:30-16:00 in the historic centre — overnight guests, residents and under-14s are exempt, and only the city's own cda.ve.it portal carries the current calendar. As the lowest-lying point in Venice, the piazza is first to flood in autumn and winter acqua alta; raised wooden passerelle walkways go up within the hour when the tide rises, and the MoSE flood barriers only engage above about 110cm, so smaller floods here are still normal even with MoSE working. Café tables at Florian and its neighbours ringing the square charge several times a standing-bar coffee for the seat and the view — budget for it as a deliberate choice, and come at dawn or after 21:00 for a version of the square without the day's crowds.

    Type
    Landmark
    Setting
    Outdoor
    Ticket needed
    No

    Hours

    Mon
    Open 24h
    Tue
    Open 24h
    Wed
    Open 24h
    Thu
    Open 24h
    Fri
    Open 24h
    Sat
    Open 24h
    Sun
    Open 24h

    Piazza San Marco, 30124 Venezia VE

    Piazza San Marco40 min

    Napoleon's 'finest drawing room in Europe' is free, open around the clock, and the one square every Venice itinerary passes through — the Basilica's domes and the Campanile on one side, the arcaded Procuratie wrapping the other three, and pigeons that have thinned out considerably since the city banned feeding them in 2008. Since 2026, day-trippers arriving without an overnight stay may need to register and pay Venice's Contributo di Accesso (€5 if booked by the Wednesday before a Sunday visit, €10 if booked later) on around 60 marked dates between early April and late July, enforced 8:30-16:00 in the historic centre — overnight guests, residents and under-14s are exempt, and only the city's own cda.ve.it portal carries the current calendar. As the lowest-lying point in Venice, the piazza is first to flood in autumn and winter acqua alta; raised wooden passerelle walkways go up within the hour when the tide rises, and the MoSE flood barriers only engage above about 110cm, so smaller floods here are still normal even with MoSE working. Café tables at Florian and its neighbours ringing the square charge several times a standing-bar coffee for the seat and the view — budget for it as a deliberate choice, and come at dawn or after 21:00 for a version of the square without the day's crowds.

    Step-freepiazzalandmarkfreeverify opening hours
  10. 14:35~10 min walkroute
  11. 14:5015:10
    Rialto Bridge, San Polo Rialto, Venezia
    Landmark
    Rialto Bridge, San Polo Rialto, Venezia

    Rialto Bridge Ponte di Rialto

    Attraction¥~20 min9/10

    Venice's most famous crossing over the Grand Canal, a single stone arch built 1588-1591 by Antonio da Ponte (chosen over a rejected design once floated to Michelangelo), lined with two rows of shops selling jewelry and souvenirs and packed with visitors most of the day. Free and open around the clock, no ticket, but the shallow stepped ramps on both approaches make it not wheelchair accessible -- an inclined side ramp exists but is steep and narrow. The view up and down the Grand Canal from the top is the reason to linger: come at sunrise (before 8:00) or after 22:00 for a clear shot without the crowd wall, and note the bridge sits directly between the Rialto Market (San Polo side) and the fish/vegetable stalls -- a natural hinge point for a morning market walk. Pickpocket density is high on the bridge itself given the crowding; keep bags zipped and to the front.

    Type
    Landmark
    Setting
    Outdoor
    Ticket needed
    No

    Hours

    Mon
    Open 24h
    Tue
    Open 24h
    Wed
    Open 24h
    Thu
    Open 24h
    Fri
    Open 24h
    Sat
    Open 24h
    Sun
    Open 24h

    Ponte di Rialto, 30125 Venezia

    Ponte di Rialto20 min

    Venice's most famous crossing over the Grand Canal, a single stone arch built 1588-1591 by Antonio da Ponte (chosen over a rejected design once floated to Michelangelo), lined with two rows of shops selling jewelry and souvenirs and packed with visitors most of the day. Free and open around the clock, no ticket, but the shallow stepped ramps on both approaches make it not wheelchair accessible -- an inclined side ramp exists but is steep and narrow. The view up and down the Grand Canal from the top is the reason to linger: come at sunrise (before 8:00) or after 22:00 for a clear shot without the crowd wall, and note the bridge sits directly between the Rialto Market (San Polo side) and the fish/vegetable stalls -- a natural hinge point for a morning market walk. Pickpocket density is high on the bridge itself given the crowding; keep bags zipped and to the front.

    landmarkmust seefreeverify opening hours
  12. 15:10~5 min walkroute
  13. 15:2516:10
    Market

    Rialto Market Mercato di Rialto

    Attraction¥~45 min8/10Step-free

    Venice's working market for eight centuries, split across two adjoining campi right at the foot of the Rialto Bridge on the San Polo side. The erberia (fruit and vegetable stalls, spilling onto Campo Cesare Battisti and along the Grand Canal) runs Monday-Saturday roughly 7:30-13:30; the pescheria (fish market, under a distinctive early-1900s neo-Gothic loggia on Campo della Pescaria) keeps shorter hours, Tuesday-Saturday 7:30-12:00, and is closed both Sunday and Monday -- plan a Tuesday-to-Saturday morning visit if the fish stalls are the draw. Come before 10:00 for the market at its most active, when boats are still unloading crates lagoon-side and stallholders outnumber tour groups; by early afternoon most stalls have packed up regardless of posted hours. It's free to wander -- budget only for what you buy -- and the surrounding calli hold the handful of bacari (All'Arco, Cantina Do Mori) built to feed the market's own workers, still the best reason to time a visit for the morning.

    Type
    Market
    Setting
    Mixed
    Ticket needed
    No

    Hours

    Mon
    07:30–13:30
    Tue
    07:30–13:30
    Wed
    07:30–13:30
    Thu
    07:30–13:30
    Fri
    07:30–13:30
    Sat
    07:30–13:30
    Sun
    Closed

    Campo della Pescaria, San Polo, 30125 Venezia

    Mercato di Rialto45 min

    Venice's working market for eight centuries, split across two adjoining campi right at the foot of the Rialto Bridge on the San Polo side. The erberia (fruit and vegetable stalls, spilling onto Campo Cesare Battisti and along the Grand Canal) runs Monday-Saturday roughly 7:30-13:30; the pescheria (fish market, under a distinctive early-1900s neo-Gothic loggia on Campo della Pescaria) keeps shorter hours, Tuesday-Saturday 7:30-12:00, and is closed both Sunday and Monday -- plan a Tuesday-to-Saturday morning visit if the fish stalls are the draw. Come before 10:00 for the market at its most active, when boats are still unloading crates lagoon-side and stallholders outnumber tour groups; by early afternoon most stalls have packed up regardless of posted hours. It's free to wander -- budget only for what you buy -- and the surrounding calli hold the handful of bacari (All'Arco, Cantina Do Mori) built to feed the market's own workers, still the best reason to time a visit for the morning.

    Step-freemarketfood halllocal institutionverify opening hours
  14. 17:3018:45
    DinnerSuggested

    Antiche Carampane

    Food¥¥¥~90 min9/10

    Tucked into the former red-light district the restaurant is named for, a sign at the door reading "no pizza, no lasagne, no menù turistico" sets the tone -- a serious, locals-favoured seafood kitchen with no concessions to the tourist trade despite being a five-minute walk from the Rialto Bridge. The menu runs through raw and cooked lagoon seafood, squid cooked in its own ink, and pasta with crab or scampi; there's no fixed menu, so expect a la carte pricing (roughly €22-27 per course). Open Tuesday-Saturday, lunch 12:30-14:00 and dinner in two seatings (19:30 and 21:30), closed Monday and Sunday, and closed for its full summer break from 21 July to 17 August. Reservations are essential -- call or book directly, since the room is genuinely cramped and always full -- and note the venue's own cancellation policy: free until midnight the day of the booking, a €35-per-person charge for a no-show or late cancellation after that.

    Cuisine
    Venetian seafood trattoria
    Reservations
    Yes
    High chair
    No

    Hours

    Mon
    Closed
    Tue
    12:30–14:00, 19:30–23:00
    Wed
    12:30–14:00, 19:30–23:00
    Thu
    12:30–14:00, 19:30–23:00
    Fri
    12:30–14:00, 19:30–23:00
    Sat
    12:30–14:00, 19:30–23:00
    Sun
    Closed

    Rio Terà delle Carampane, San Polo, 1911, 30125 Venezia

Day 2Full day

Murano, Burano & Torcello & nearby — a sights day

A full lagoon day by vaporetto — furnace-blown glass on Murano, Burano's crayon-box houses and handmade lace, and Torcello's thousand-year mosaics where Venice began.

Stops5
At stops4h 45m
Moving1h 7m
Window07:40–18:45

Murano, Burano & Torcello Murano e Burano

Area

A full lagoon day by vaporetto — furnace-blown glass on Murano, Burano's crayon-box houses and handmade lace, and Torcello's thousand-year mosaics where Venice began.

IslandsArtisanPhoto spotDay trip
  1. 07:4008:00Check out of your stayUsually due by 10:00–12:00 — most stays hold your bags if you ask.
  2. 08:0008:30
    BreakfastPick a spot nearby — not booked yet
  3. 08:3010:00
    Burano, Isole, Venezia
    Landmark
    Burano, Isole, Venezia

    Burano

    Attraction¥~90 min9/10Step-free

    Every house on this fishing island is painted a different saturated colour under a municipal permit system said to trace back to helping fishermen spot home through lagoon fog — the free, wander-and-photograph anchor of the lagoon day, best worked as a loop past Via Baldassare Galuppi's shopfronts and the smaller side canals a few streets back from the main drag. The leaning bell tower of the Chiesa di San Martino, tilted enough to earn comparisons to Pisa, rises over the main square (Piazza Baldassare Galuppi). Folded into the same stop: the Museo del Merletto (lace museum), on the same piazza, tells the story of the handmade needle-lace tradition that made Burano famous — €5 full / €3.50 reduced (ages 6-14, students 15-25, over-65s, ISIC/Rolling Venice), open Tuesday-Sunday 10:00-16:00 (last entry 15:30, extending to 17:00 on Friday/Saturday from 1 May to 26 September 2026), closed Mondays plus 25 December/1 January/1 May; note the museum's own interior is not wheelchair accessible even though the island streets largely are. Getting here: vaporetto line 12 from Fondamente Nove runs roughly every 20 minutes in the day (every 30 minutes early/late), reaching Murano in 10-15 minutes and Burano in about 45; a single 75-minute ticket is €9.50 but only covers one direction within that window — re-boarding at Murano, Burano and Torcello on the same day easily needs three or more separate rides, which already costs more than the €25 24-hour pass, making the pass the better buy for a full island day. For photos without the crowds, day-trip boats bunch arrivals between roughly 11:00 and 16:00 — come on an early boat or linger past 17:00 once the tour groups have thinned out. The island itself is mostly flat and stroller/wheelchair-friendly; where the main canal bridge has steps, a flat wooden ramp alternative sits alongside it.

    Type
    Landmark
    Setting
    Outdoor
    Ticket needed
    No

    Hours

    Mon
    Open 24h
    Tue
    Open 24h
    Wed
    Open 24h
    Thu
    Open 24h
    Fri
    Open 24h
    Sat
    Open 24h
    Sun
    Open 24h

    Piazza Baldassare Galuppi, 30142 Venezia VE

    90 min

    Every house on this fishing island is painted a different saturated colour under a municipal permit system said to trace back to helping fishermen spot home through lagoon fog — the free, wander-and-photograph anchor of the lagoon day, best worked as a loop past Via Baldassare Galuppi's shopfronts and the smaller side canals a few streets back from the main drag. The leaning bell tower of the Chiesa di San Martino, tilted enough to earn comparisons to Pisa, rises over the main square (Piazza Baldassare Galuppi). Folded into the same stop: the Museo del Merletto (lace museum), on the same piazza, tells the story of the handmade needle-lace tradition that made Burano famous — €5 full / €3.50 reduced (ages 6-14, students 15-25, over-65s, ISIC/Rolling Venice), open Tuesday-Sunday 10:00-16:00 (last entry 15:30, extending to 17:00 on Friday/Saturday from 1 May to 26 September 2026), closed Mondays plus 25 December/1 January/1 May; note the museum's own interior is not wheelchair accessible even though the island streets largely are. Getting here: vaporetto line 12 from Fondamente Nove runs roughly every 20 minutes in the day (every 30 minutes early/late), reaching Murano in 10-15 minutes and Burano in about 45; a single 75-minute ticket is €9.50 but only covers one direction within that window — re-boarding at Murano, Burano and Torcello on the same day easily needs three or more separate rides, which already costs more than the €25 24-hour pass, making the pass the better buy for a full island day. For photos without the crowds, day-trip boats bunch arrivals between roughly 11:00 and 16:00 — come on an early boat or linger past 17:00 once the tour groups have thinned out. The island itself is mostly flat and stroller/wheelchair-friendly; where the main canal bridge has steps, a flat wooden ramp alternative sits alongside it.

    Step-freeislandphoto spotmust seeverify opening hours
  4. 10:00Transit ~15–25 minroute
  5. 10:1511:00
    Church

    Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta, Torcello Basilica di Santa Maria Assunta

    Attraction¥¥~45 min9/10Cards OK

    Founded in 639 AD by the Byzantine exarch Isaac of Ravenna, this is the oldest standing building in the Venetian lagoon — predating Venice itself as a settlement, from the centuries when Torcello, not Venice, was the region's leading town. The mosaics are the reason to come: an 11th-century Virgin Hodegetria stands alone against gold leaf in the apse, and the entire west wall is covered by a mid-12th-century Last Judgement in tiers — Christ harrowing hell to free Adam and Eve, angels waking the dead with trumpets, and the Virgin flanked by the Archangel Michael weighing souls. A 2026 ticket costs €5 for the basilica alone, €5 for the campanile (bell tower, stairs only, no lift) alone, or €9 combined with an audioguide (reduced tickets €4/€4/€8); free for children under 10, clergy and Patriarchate residents. Open 10:30-18:00 (last entry 17:30 for the basilica, 17:00 for the tower) from March to October, and 10:00-17:00 (last entry 16:30/16:00) November to February; closed only 25 December and 1 January. Getting here from Burano: in the main season a dedicated line 9 shuttle makes the Burano-Torcello hop roughly every 15-20 minutes in about 5 minutes; off-season Torcello is served directly by line 12, whose stop here is request-only, so flag the crew or call ahead. Don't expect a 5-minute stroll from the dock to the basilica — it's a genuinely peaceful 10-minute walk along the island's single canalside path, passing the legendary stone 'Throne of Attila' and the old stone bridge nicknamed the Devil's Bridge.

    Type
    Church
    Setting
    Mixed
    Ticket needed
    Yes

    Hours

    Mon
    10:30–18:00
    Tue
    10:30–18:00
    Wed
    10:30–18:00
    Thu
    10:30–18:00
    Fri
    10:30–18:00
    Sat
    10:30–18:00
    Sun
    10:30–18:00

    Piazza Santa Fosca, 35, 30142 Venezia VE

    Basilica di Santa Maria Assunta45 min

    Founded in 639 AD by the Byzantine exarch Isaac of Ravenna, this is the oldest standing building in the Venetian lagoon — predating Venice itself as a settlement, from the centuries when Torcello, not Venice, was the region's leading town. The mosaics are the reason to come: an 11th-century Virgin Hodegetria stands alone against gold leaf in the apse, and the entire west wall is covered by a mid-12th-century Last Judgement in tiers — Christ harrowing hell to free Adam and Eve, angels waking the dead with trumpets, and the Virgin flanked by the Archangel Michael weighing souls. A 2026 ticket costs €5 for the basilica alone, €5 for the campanile (bell tower, stairs only, no lift) alone, or €9 combined with an audioguide (reduced tickets €4/€4/€8); free for children under 10, clergy and Patriarchate residents. Open 10:30-18:00 (last entry 17:30 for the basilica, 17:00 for the tower) from March to October, and 10:00-17:00 (last entry 16:30/16:00) November to February; closed only 25 December and 1 January. Getting here from Burano: in the main season a dedicated line 9 shuttle makes the Burano-Torcello hop roughly every 15-20 minutes in about 5 minutes; off-season Torcello is served directly by line 12, whose stop here is request-only, so flag the crew or call ahead. Don't expect a 5-minute stroll from the dock to the basilica — it's a genuinely peaceful 10-minute walk along the island's single canalside path, passing the legendary stone 'Throne of Attila' and the old stone bridge nicknamed the Devil's Bridge.

    Cards OKchurchbyzantinemosaicsverify opening hours
  6. 11:00Transit ~27–37 minroute
  7. 12:0013:00
    LunchSuggested

    Osteria alla Vedova Osteria Ca' d'Oro (Alla Vedova)

    Food¥¥~75 min8/10Vegetarian optionsCards OK

    Open since 1891 and run by the same family for generations, this old-school osteria a few steps from the Ca' d'Oro vaporetto stop is built around one dish above all: deep-fried polpette (meatballs), crisp outside and soft within, cited by the Michelin Guide among Venice's essential bites. A standing bacaro counter at the front serves cicchetti and a glass of wine for a quick stop, while a small dining room behind seats sit-down lunch and dinner off a broader Venetian menu, including a vegetarian lasagna and other pasta options beyond the seafood classics. Open Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday 11:30-14:30 and 18:30-22:30, and Sunday 12:00-14:30 and 18:30-22:30; closed all day Thursday. Dinner tables fill up most evenings, so book ahead if you want to sit down rather than eat standing at the counter — lunch is more forgiving of a walk-in, especially right at opening or close to 14:00. Card and cash are both accepted.

    Cuisine
    Traditional Venetian osteria (cicchetti and trattoria)
    Reservations
    Yes
    High chair
    No

    Hours

    Mon
    11:30–14:30, 18:30–22:30
    Tue
    11:30–14:30, 18:30–22:30
    Wed
    11:30–14:30, 18:30–22:30
    Thu
    Closed
    Fri
    11:30–14:30, 18:30–22:30
    Sat
    11:30–14:30, 18:30–22:30
    Sun
    12:00–14:30, 18:30–22:30

    Calle del Pistor, Cannaregio 3912, 30121 Venezia VE

  8. 13:0014:15
    Museum

    Murano Glass Museum Museo del Vetro

    Attraction¥¥~75 min8/10Cards OKStep-free

    Housed in the former Palazzo Giustinian on Murano's Grand Canal, a millennium of the island's own glassmaking laid out chronologically from medieval beads to 20th-century Venini pieces — the honest, no-sales-pitch way to understand the craft before shopping for it. A standard ticket is €15 (reduced €7.50 for ages 6-14, students 15-25, over-65s and Rolling Venice cardholders; free under 6, Venice residents and disabled visitors plus one companion). If Burano's lace museum and Torcello's basilica are also on the day's route, the combined Island Museums ticket (€20 full, €10 reduced, valid 3 months) covers all three and is cheaper than paying separately. Open every day of the year except 25 December, 1 January and 1 May: 10:00-18:00 April-October (last entry 17:00), 10:00-17:00 November-March (last entry 16:00), with Friday/Saturday hours stretching to 20:00 from 1 May to 26 September 2026. A lift connects the floors, so it's wheelchair accessible despite the historic building. Be honest with yourself about the 'free furnace tour' touts working the vaporetto stop outside: the boat and the glass-blowing demo really are free, but the visit is structured to end in a showroom with heavy sales pressure, and some of what's on sale is mass-produced glass from China or the Czech Republic rather than Murano work. This museum is the reliable way to see real historic pieces with no pitch attached; if you also want to watch a furnace in action without the funnel, Vetreria Murano Arte (VMA) on Calle San Cipriano runs a genuine working furnace with masters at work, charges a token €3 entry (deducted from any purchase, no obligation to buy), needs no advance booking, and is consistently described as pressure-free.

    Tickets on Klook ↗

    Type
    Museum
    Setting
    Indoor
    Ticket needed
    Yes

    Hours

    Mon
    10:00–18:00
    Tue
    10:00–18:00
    Wed
    10:00–18:00
    Thu
    10:00–18:00
    Fri
    10:00–18:00
    Sat
    10:00–18:00
    Sun
    10:00–18:00

    Fondamenta Marco Giustinian, 8, 30141 Venezia VE

    Museo del Vetro75 min

    Housed in the former Palazzo Giustinian on Murano's Grand Canal, a millennium of the island's own glassmaking laid out chronologically from medieval beads to 20th-century Venini pieces — the honest, no-sales-pitch way to understand the craft before shopping for it. A standard ticket is €15 (reduced €7.50 for ages 6-14, students 15-25, over-65s and Rolling Venice cardholders; free under 6, Venice residents and disabled visitors plus one companion). If Burano's lace museum and Torcello's basilica are also on the day's route, the combined Island Museums ticket (€20 full, €10 reduced, valid 3 months) covers all three and is cheaper than paying separately. Open every day of the year except 25 December, 1 January and 1 May: 10:00-18:00 April-October (last entry 17:00), 10:00-17:00 November-March (last entry 16:00), with Friday/Saturday hours stretching to 20:00 from 1 May to 26 September 2026. A lift connects the floors, so it's wheelchair accessible despite the historic building. Be honest with yourself about the 'free furnace tour' touts working the vaporetto stop outside: the boat and the glass-blowing demo really are free, but the visit is structured to end in a showroom with heavy sales pressure, and some of what's on sale is mass-produced glass from China or the Czech Republic rather than Murano work. This museum is the reliable way to see real historic pieces with no pitch attached; if you also want to watch a furnace in action without the funnel, Vetreria Murano Arte (VMA) on Calle San Cipriano runs a genuine working furnace with masters at work, charges a token €3 entry (deducted from any purchase, no obligation to buy), needs no advance booking, and is consistently described as pressure-free.

    Cards OKStep-freemuseumglassverify opening hours
  9. 14:15Transit ~15–25 minroute
  10. 14:3015:00
    Church

    Madonna dell'Orto Chiesa della Madonna dell'Orto

    Attraction¥~30 min9/10Cards OK

    Tintoretto's own parish church for roughly thirty years, its Gothic brick facade opening onto a quiet campo at the northern edge of Cannaregio, well off the route most day-trippers ever walk. Inside, several of his major canvases remain exactly where he painted them for the space — including the towering Last Judgement and Worship of the Golden Calf flanking the choir — and the artist himself is buried in the chapel to the right of the high altar alongside his father-in-law and two of his children. Part of the Chorus circuit, a single ticket is €3.50 (or use a Chorus Pass, €14 full/€10 reduced, if combining with other churches); open for visits Monday to Saturday 10:30-17:00, with the ticket office and last admission ten minutes before closing. As with the other Chorus churches, Sunday is reserved for Mass (11:30) rather than tourist visits, so plan a weekday morning if this is on the itinerary. It pairs naturally with a wander down the Fondamenta della Misericordia or Ormesini afterward, both a few minutes' walk south.

    Type
    Church
    Setting
    Indoor
    Ticket needed
    Yes

    Hours

    Mon
    10:30–17:00
    Tue
    10:30–17:00
    Wed
    10:30–17:00
    Thu
    10:30–17:00
    Fri
    10:30–17:00
    Sat
    10:30–17:00
    Sun
    Closed

    Campo Madonna dell'Orto, Cannaregio 3512, 30121 Venezia VE

    Chiesa della Madonna dell'Orto30 min

    Tintoretto's own parish church for roughly thirty years, its Gothic brick facade opening onto a quiet campo at the northern edge of Cannaregio, well off the route most day-trippers ever walk. Inside, several of his major canvases remain exactly where he painted them for the space — including the towering Last Judgement and Worship of the Golden Calf flanking the choir — and the artist himself is buried in the chapel to the right of the high altar alongside his father-in-law and two of his children. Part of the Chorus circuit, a single ticket is €3.50 (or use a Chorus Pass, €14 full/€10 reduced, if combining with other churches); open for visits Monday to Saturday 10:30-17:00, with the ticket office and last admission ten minutes before closing. As with the other Chorus churches, Sunday is reserved for Mass (11:30) rather than tourist visits, so plan a weekday morning if this is on the itinerary. It pairs naturally with a wander down the Fondamenta della Misericordia or Ormesini afterward, both a few minutes' walk south.

    Cards OKchurchrenaissancehistoricverify opening hours
  11. 15:00~10 min walkroute
  12. 15:1516:00
    Landmark

    Jewish Ghetto (Campo del Ghetto Nuovo) Campo del Ghetto Nuovo

    Attraction¥~45 min8/10

    Established in 1516 on the site of a former foundry — a geto in Venetian dialect, the origin of the word 'ghetto' worldwide — this was Europe's first Jewish ghetto, and the six- and seven-storey buildings ringing the campo, the tallest in the city, still trace that history of a walled community forced to grow upward rather than outward. The historic Museo Ebraico building on the square remains closed for a multi-year renovation, but a temporary museum and ticket office has reopened a short walk away at Calle del Forno 1107 in the Ghetto Vecchio, running guided tours into the historic synagogues — the Levantine and Spanish schools Sunday through Thursday, the Spanish synagogue and Cohanim prayer room on Fridays — for around €10 (reduced €8, Venetians €7); it's closed Saturdays for Shabbat. Even without booking a synagogue tour, the campo itself is free and open around the clock: two bronze relief panels by Arbit Blatas memorialise the roughly 200 Venetian Jews deported in 1943-44, and the German and Canton synagogues' unadorned facades face directly onto the square. Because it's a five-minute walk from Venezia Santa Lucia station, day-trippers without an overnight stay should check whether their visit date falls on one of Venice's Contributo di Accesso registration days each spring, since the fee applies to entry into the historic centre generally, not just the marquee sights. Book the synagogue tour a day or two ahead in high season — English tours run on a fixed hourly schedule and group slots are limited.

    Type
    Landmark
    Setting
    Mixed
    Ticket needed
    No

    Hours

    Mon
    Open 24h
    Tue
    Open 24h
    Wed
    Open 24h
    Thu
    Open 24h
    Fri
    Open 24h
    Sat
    Open 24h
    Sun
    Open 24h

    Campo del Ghetto Nuovo, Cannaregio 2902/b, 30121 Venezia VE

    Campo del Ghetto Nuovo45 min

    Established in 1516 on the site of a former foundry — a geto in Venetian dialect, the origin of the word 'ghetto' worldwide — this was Europe's first Jewish ghetto, and the six- and seven-storey buildings ringing the campo, the tallest in the city, still trace that history of a walled community forced to grow upward rather than outward. The historic Museo Ebraico building on the square remains closed for a multi-year renovation, but a temporary museum and ticket office has reopened a short walk away at Calle del Forno 1107 in the Ghetto Vecchio, running guided tours into the historic synagogues — the Levantine and Spanish schools Sunday through Thursday, the Spanish synagogue and Cohanim prayer room on Fridays — for around €10 (reduced €8, Venetians €7); it's closed Saturdays for Shabbat. Even without booking a synagogue tour, the campo itself is free and open around the clock: two bronze relief panels by Arbit Blatas memorialise the roughly 200 Venetian Jews deported in 1943-44, and the German and Canton synagogues' unadorned facades face directly onto the square. Because it's a five-minute walk from Venezia Santa Lucia station, day-trippers without an overnight stay should check whether their visit date falls on one of Venice's Contributo di Accesso registration days each spring, since the fee applies to entry into the historic centre generally, not just the marquee sights. Book the synagogue tour a day or two ahead in high season — English tours run on a fixed hourly schedule and group slots are limited.

    historiclandmarkfreeverify opening hours
  13. 17:3018:45
    DinnerSuggested

    Trattoria al Gatto Nero

    Food¥¥¥~90 min9/10Vegetarian optionsCards OK

    Founded in 1965 by chef Ruggero Bovo and now run by his son Massimiliano, a family-run canalside institution that's the reason many visitors plan a Burano stop around lunch. The dish to book a table for is risotto di gò (also called risotto alla buranella) — a lagoon goby-based risotto unique to Burano and rarely done this well elsewhere; tagliolini with spider crab and a mixed grilled-fish plate are the other regulars order. It's genuinely reservation-only with no walk-ins accepted, so call ahead (+39 041 730120) — days or weeks in advance in peak season — rather than turning up and hoping. Closed every Monday; open Tuesday-Sunday for lunch (12:30-15:00) and dinner (19:30-22:30). Be honest about the cost before booking: this sits toward the top of what the lagoon islands charge — fish is often priced by weight (roughly €12 per 100g) and some first courses are portioned for two sharing at around €30, so a full meal with wine can run €70-90+ per person. Reviewers overwhelmingly say it's worth the splurge for the setting and the risotto, but come with that budget in mind rather than casual-trattoria expectations. The menu does list non-seafood dishes, so vegetarian diners can eat here, though the whole point of the destination is the lagoon fish.

    Cuisine
    Venetian lagoon seafood trattoria
    Reservations
    Yes
    High chair
    No

    Hours

    Mon
    Closed
    Tue
    12:30–15:00, 19:30–22:30
    Wed
    12:30–15:00, 19:30–22:30
    Thu
    12:30–15:00, 19:30–22:30
    Fri
    12:30–15:00, 19:30–22:30
    Sat
    12:30–15:00, 19:30–22:30
    Sun
    12:30–15:00, 19:30–22:30

    Fondamenta della Giudecca, 88, 30142 Venezia VE

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