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Rome's Trevi Fountain introduces €2 tourist fee

Visitor attraction is managing attendance and raising funds

trevi fountain

Rome has introduced a €2 fee to access the viewing area of its iconic Trevi Fountain in an attempt to manage attendance at the site.

Previously free to visit, the Trevi Fountain welcomed more than 10 million visitors in 2025.


The charge is intended to reduce crowding at the tourist attraction and raise funds for its maintenance.

"The admission ticket helps protect the Trevi Fountain and ensure better maintenance," the website says.

trevi fountain

Residents of Rome are exempt from the Trevi Fountain fee, which was introduced on 2 February, as are people with disabilities and children under the age of six.

Officials estimate the charge could generate an extra €6.5 million (£5.6m) per year for the city.

The fee can be paid on-site, online or at authorised sales points and allows tourists to get close to the fountain during the day and up until 10pm. After visiting hours, the fountain remains visible for free.

The payment is only for visitors who walk down the fountain’s steps to reach the basin, and remains free to view from the piazza above at all times.

Via the Associated Press, Alessandro Onorato, Rome’s assessor of tourism, said: "I think tourists were shocked by the fact that the city of Rome is only asking for €2m for a site of this level.

"I believe that if the Trevi Fountain were in New York, they would have charged at least $100."

Charges to European tourist attractions

Via the Guardian, Onorato said: “Until a year ago, visiting the Trevi fountain was an absurd experience,” referring to the crowds.

Charges to tourist attractions are being introduced across Rome and Europe. Since 2023, a €5 fee has been in place at the Pantheon monument, for example.

These fees look small when compared to the Louvre museum's recent 45 percent ticket price hike for most non-EU visitors.