EuroNews (English)

‘An excess of tourism’: Lake Como to introduce daytripper fee to curb visitor numbers

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Rebecca Ann Hughes

Lake Como is glitzy, glamorous and engulfed by tourism.

The third largest lake in Italy, it sees as many as 1.4 million visitors a year descend on its shores.

This Italian lakeside city wants to impose a daily visitor fee.

The tourist numbers are proving overwhelmi­ng for the holiday hotspot in northern Italy, and one city is now considerin­g introducin­g a tourist tax.

Mayor of the lakeside city of Como Alessandro Rapinese says he is mulling a Venice-style daily charge with suggestion­s that it could come into force soon.

Lake Como to introduce a daytripper fee

Rapinese has lambasted Lake Como’s overtouris­m saying it is "di cult to be mayor when you are ghting tourism".

“We are already discussing the idea [of a tourist tax]. Revolution­s begin with concrete measures and we are ready for this long journey," he told UK newspaper The Times.

The fee would apply to daily visitors to the city of Como.

The mayor has not shared any further details about how much the fee will be, who will have to pay and when it will come into force.

If he uses the Venice model, the charge will apply to daytripper­s (not those who have booked overnight accommodat­ion in the city) and may be levied only on busy days like weekends and public holidays.

Lake Como battles overtouris­m

The chic lake has been struggling with soaring tourist numbers in recent years.

Crowds have boomed since several celebritie­s including George Clooney purchased multimilli­on euro properties along the shoreline and the lake provided a backdrop for lms including Casino Royale and House of Gucci.

“I visited Lake Como last year and said I would never go back.

Standards had dropped. Restaurant­s were disappoint­ing in quality and price. Too many people to enjoy anything about the resort,” one visitor wrote on X.

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Last summer, one lakeside villa which appeared in James Bond and Star Wars lms was forced to limit visitor numbers.

Villa del Balbianell­o cut daily entries from 2,000 to a maximum of 1,200 to protect the historic house.

The Italian Fund for the Environmen­t (FAI), which runs the property, called it “a drastic decision” but essential to counter the e ect of “an excess of tourism that has an ever greater impact on Lake Como”.

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