VVerde Wave Travel
Paisagem de Italy

eSIM Italy

For those coming to visit you

Family or friends coming to visit? Give them an eSIM so they're connected the moment they land in Europe.

Destination guide

Last updated: June 15, 2026

Open-air history — Rome, Florence, Venice — coast, mountains and the best food in the world, the Italians say (and almost have a point). Here is the essential to enter and get around, verified.

Travel essentials

This destination is part of the Schengen area, and entry rules depend on your passport. EU/EEA and Swiss citizens move freely. Brazilians enter visa-free for up to 90 days per 180 — and, from the last quarter of 2026, will need the ETIAS electronic authorisation (see below). Passports from Angola, Guinea-Bissau, Nigeria, Ghana and Senegal need a Schengen short-stay (Type C) visa; Cape Verde does too, but under the EU Visa Facilitation Agreement (simpler and cheaper). Important note: since 10 April 2026, the new Entry/Exit System (EES) records biometric data at the border — allow some extra time on arrival. Always confirm at the official source before travelling.

PassportEntry rule
EU / EEA / SwitzerlandFree movement (no visa)
BrazilVisa-free; ETIAS from Q4 2026
Cabo VerdeSchengen Type C visa — EU Facilitation Agreement (~€35 fee, simplified)
Angola · Guinea-Bissau · Nigeria · Ghana · SenegalSchengen Type C visa (short stay, ~€90)

⚠️ Border rules change without notice. Always confirm with the official source (consulate, immigration, travel.state.gov, gov.uk, Portal das Comunidades) before travelling.

ETIAS is an electronic travel authorisation (not a visa) for nationals of visa-exempt countries — such as Brazil. It is expected to start in the last quarter of 2026; it costs about €20 (free for under-18s and over-70s), is valid for 3 years (or until the passport expires) and allows multiple entries for stays of up to 90 days per 180. The Q4 2026 start is followed by a transitional grace period, with ETIAS becoming mandatory in 2027. Those who need a Schengen visa (most African passports in the corridor) do not use ETIAS — they use the visa. Apply online, well ahead, before travelling.

Health

No vaccinations are required. EU residents should carry the European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) for necessary healthcare during the stay. Those travelling on a Schengen visa must show travel insurance with minimum medical cover of €30,000, valid across the Schengen area. Health, drinking-water and medical standards are high.

Passport

For third-country nationals, the passport must have been issued within the last 10 years and be valid for at least 3 months beyond the intended departure date from the Schengen area. EU/EEA citizens may travel with a valid national ID card.

Arrival & Safety

Airport

Rome-Fiumicino (FCO) is the big hub, linked to the centre by the Leonardo Express train; Milan has Malpensa (MXP) and Linate (LIN). Venice (VCE), Naples (NAP), Bologna (BLQ) and Catania (CTA) serve the regions. High-speed trains (Frecciarossa, Italo) connect cities in a few hours.

Getting in

The official taxi (white, metered) dominates — Uber exists only as Uber Black in a few cities; FreeNow and itTaxi aggregate taxis. Always use the official rank at airports and check the meter is on. The train is the best way to cross the country; metros serve Rome, Milan and Naples.

Safety

Level 2 — Exercise increased caution (US)

Italy is at Level 2 (US), mainly due to the diffuse terrorism risk common to Europe. For travellers, the real issue is pickpockets, very active in Rome (Termini, metro B, the Colosseum), Milan and Naples, and street scams. There’s no significant violent crime against tourists; watch your wallet and phone in crowds and on transport.

⚠️ Border rules change without notice. Always confirm with the official source (consulate, immigration, travel.state.gov, gov.uk, Portal das Comunidades) before travelling.

Money

Currency: euro (€). Cards and contactless payments are accepted almost everywhere — transport, restaurants and small shops — and cash is increasingly optional. ATMs are plentiful; Apple Pay and Google Pay work widely. Avoid airport currency-exchange desks (poorer rates).

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Connectivity

Four operators with good 4G/5G coverage: TIM (the historic one), Vodafone Italia, WindTre and Iliad (cheap, popular). For travellers from Brazil or Africa, the Verde Wave eSIM avoids expensive roaming and activates on arrival. EU citizens have free roaming.

Arriving with data on lets you buy train tickets, open the map in the alleys of Venice or Naples and reach your contacts without hunting for Wi-Fi. An eSIM activated before departure saves time and roaming.

Coverage is excellent in Rome, Milan, Florence and most cities, and good on the coast and islands (Sicily, Sardinia); it can drop in rural and mountain areas. WhatsApp is universal. Free Wi-Fi is common in hotels and cafés.

See eSIM plans →

Practical tips

Best time

Spring (April–June) and autumn (September–October) are ideal: mild weather, less stifled cities. Summer is hot and very crowded (and in August many Italians close shops for holidays). Winter suits art cities and the Alps/Dolomites.

Languages

Italian is the official language; English is spoken in tourist areas but less so beyond them. A “buongiorno”, “grazie” and “per favore” make a difference. Strong regional dialects (Neapolitan, Sicilian) appear in daily life.

Etiquette

Coffee has rules: cappuccino only in the morning, and standing at the bar costs less than sitting. Meals have set hours (lunch 1pm, dinner from 8pm) and a long rhythm. Dress well — “bella figura” matters. Cover shoulders and knees to enter churches (St Peter’s, the Duomo).

What to see & culture

Places

The Colosseum and the Forum in Rome, the Vatican and the Sistine Chapel; the canals of Venice; Renaissance Florence (Duomo, Uffizi, David); the Tower of Pisa; the Amalfi Coast and Pompeii; and Sicily with Taormina and Etna.

Culture

The cradle of the Roman Empire and the Renaissance, with more UNESCO World Heritage than any country. Art, opera, cinema (Fellini), fashion (Milan) and design define the identity — as does regional pride, from north to south.

Food

Neapolitan pizza, pasta in a thousand shapes (each region its own), northern risotto, gelato and espresso. Eat where the locals eat, follow the season and region, and finish with a limoncello or an amaro. Italian cuisine is UNESCO heritage.

Sources

  1. União Europeia — ETIAS oficial (travel-europe.europa.eu)
  2. União Europeia — Sistema de Entradas/Saídas (EES), operacional desde 10 Abr 2026
  3. Comissão Europeia — Política de vistos Schengen (quem precisa de visto)
  4. UE–Cabo Verde — Acordo de Facilitação de Vistos de curta duração
  5. US State Department — Italy Travel Advisory (Nível 2)
  6. Governo italiano — Vistos (vistoperitalia.esteri.it)