Venice in 2 days
If I only have two days in Venice, how should I spend them?
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Note: This is the itinerary to follow if you are arriving in Venice in the morning of the first day, either by air or by train. In other words, this is the "day-and-a-half" itinerary because you don't actually have a full first day to spend here.
Much of that first morning will be spent arriving by train or driving into town (or arriving by plane, which also involves clearing customs and passport control then getting into town) and checking into your hotel. Essentially, on Day 1 you only have lunch and the afternoon free.
(On this separate page is the itinerary if Venice is just another stop on your journey and you genuinely have two full days to spend.)
Day 1
tip
If any of your days in Venice happens to be a Sunday, do not miss the 6:345pm mass in the Cathedral of St. Mark's—the only time they throw on all the light switches to illuminate all of those amazing gold mosaics.Check into your hotel as quickly as possible. If it's late morning or midday, grab a quick snack for lunch. If you arrive after about 1:30pm, plan ahead and have already eaten something on the train or plane so you can head right out of your hotel and into the Dorsoduro neighborhood to spend the afternoon engaged in some hardcore art appreciation.
Visit the Accademia Gallery for its stupendous collection of Old Masters paintings, then continue to the nearby Peggy Guggenheim for one of Europe's best galleries of early modern works from the 20th century.
If you find you still have the time (and energy), try to squeeze in a visit to the Ca' Rezzonico, another historic patrician palace restored with a small painting gallery.
Spend the evening before dinner just wandering aimlessly around Venice's labyrinth of alleyways. After dinner, sit on Piazza San Marco to listen to the dueling trios playing for the tables in front of competing chichi cafes.
Oh, and at some point—either when you arrive or as you are preparing to leave—be sure to hop aboard the no. 1 or no. 2 vaporetto line to for a poor man's cruise of the Grand Canal between Piazza San Marco and the Ferrovia (train station) or Piazzale Roma (car park).
Book a gondola ride
• Venice Gondola Ride and Serenade
• Venice Gondola Ride and Serenade with Dinner
• Venice Walking Tour and Gondola RideOr, of course, you can take a gondola ride. Yes, they're touristy, yes they're overpriced, and yes they're hackneyed, but if you can put all that out of your mind, they're also pretty cool, relaxing, and romantic—and who wants to go all the way to Venice and not ride in a gondola anyway?
Day 2
Take a tour
If you prefer an expert guide for your sightseeing in Venice, here are some walking tours from our partners at Viator.com that cover some of these top sights in Venice:
San Marco:
• Skip the Line: Venice Walking Tour with St Mark's Basilica
• Skip the Line: St Mark's Square Highlights Tour
• Skip the Line: Venice in One Day
Palazzo Ducale:
• Skip the Line: Venice Walking Tour with Doges Palace
Kill two birds with one stone by being at the Basilica di San Marco before it opens at 9:45am; that way you (a) get to see its treasures and the thousands of square feet of glittering mosaics swathing its interior, and (b) won't have to wait in a long line, which can stretch the wait to as long as an hour or more later in the day.
Don't dawdle too long, however, because you have to be next door at the Doge's Palace by 11:35pm to take your (pre-booked) "Secret Itineraries" tour for an insider's glimpse into the hidden offices, courtrooms, archives, and prisons from which the true Venetian Republic ruled for 900 years.
Make sure you take the time to ride the elevator up inside the Campanile di San Marco for stupendous city panoramas.
After lunch, tour the Ca' d'Oro, a glorious private palace on the Grand Canal now turned into a museum and art gallery. Cross the Rialto Bridge to see the dozens of Tintoretto paintings in the Scuola Grande di San Rocco.
If you have any time left before evening, spend them simply getting lost in the twisting, confounding, unspeakably beautiful back streets. Honestly; it's one of my favorite things to do in Venice.
Then round off the day with a cicchetti crawl through the bacari bars around the Rialto Market.
Tips
- This is merely a blueprint. You really should spend your time on whatever catches your own interest. Some people would rather get a root canal than spend several hours in the Accademia, but for others an afternoon of Old Masters would rank as the highlight of their trip. Same goes for shopping, or gondola rides, or cramming a dozen churches and museums into a single day: heaven for some, hell on earth for others. For some less-famous sights to visit, check out Reid's List: Venice.
- Keep in mind that you may have to adjust these itineraries in case one of the days you're in town happens to fall on a Monday (when most museums are closed) or a Sunday (when many things are closed, and those that remain open tend to operate on shorter hours).
- Also keep in mind that these are maximal itineraries, designed to cram as much a reasonably possible into the time allotted. There's no down-time built in for relaxation—which you really should have. You're on vacation, after all. I suggest using these but maybe dropping a sight which interests you less (or curtailing your time at a couple of sights) in order to carve out from some free time to just sit at a cafe, writing postcards and watching the carnival of Italian life swirl past.
- Consider daily tours: Prefer to leave some of the planning and information-providing to a professional? Consider signing up for a guided tour—doesn't have to be a standard bus tour; our partners at Viator.com offer loads of neighborhood and thematic walking tours, private guides, and other fun ways to explore the capital as well.

Related pages
- Full-day itineraries for one, two, or three days in Venice
- "Arriving" itineraries for one, two, or three days in Venice
- Top sights in Venice
- Venice layout
- Venice tours
- Italy itineraries
This material was last updated February 2011. All information was accurate at the time.
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Copyright © 2008–2012 by Reid Bramblett. Author: Reid Bramblett





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