Europe · Last reviewed 2026-04-29
Tap water in Italy is safe to drink across the country — Rome has hundreds of public drinking fountains (nasoni) fed by ancient aqueducts.
At a glance
Drink tap water
Yes
Brush teeth
Yes
Ice in drinks
Yes
In more detail
Regional variation
Some southern coastal areas have higher mineral content but remain safe. Public fountains in Rome, Milan, and Florence are drinkable unless marked otherwise.
Traveller notes
Rome nasoni fountains are drinkable unless a sign says "acqua non potabile".
Restaurants may default to bottled still or sparkling water, but tap water itself is safe.
Use cold tap water for drinking; hot taps can pass through building systems and are not intended for drinking.
Practical advice
Tap water in Italy is treated to a high standard. Carry a reusable bottle and refill from public fountains and cafés where available.
Look for "drinking water" or "potable" signs. Many European cities have free public fountains explicitly designed for drinking.
Even in safe-water countries, supply can be temporarily contaminated by storms or maintenance. Local news will flag boil-water notices when they apply.
In older accommodation, run the cold tap for 20 seconds before drinking — particularly in the morning. This flushes any water that has sat in pipes overnight.
FAQ
Sources
Disclaimer: This is general traveller guidance for Italy, not medical advice. Conditions change after infrastructure incidents or boil-water notices — always check official sources before drinking. Last reviewed 2026-04-29.
Nearby
Plan your Italy trip
Visa requirements by passport and destination.
Estimate your total trip budget by destination and travel style.
Daily spend estimates for 50+ cities worldwide.
Quiz-driven destination matcher.
Click-to-toggle world map · share your country count.
Colour-coded world map · 195 countries rated.

%20copy%202.webp&w=384&q=75)
%20copy%203.webp&w=384&q=75)

Turn travel photos into books you'll actually look back on.