landscape photo of a Venice canal
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Visiting Venice in July

Visiting Venice in July

# Venice in July: Beautiful Chaos in a Sauna

Let’s be straight with you. Venice in July is hot, crowded, and occasionally smells like the canal system is making its feelings known. Temperatures regularly push into the low-to-mid thirties Celsius, and the humidity wraps around you like a damp blanket the moment you step outside. Rainfall is genuinely unpredictable – you might get thunderstorms that roll through fast and hard, or you might bake for ten straight days without a drop. Pack a light rain layer anyway and don’t think about it again.

The crowds are real. This isn’t a scare tactic. The main routes between San Marco, the Rialto, and the Accademia become genuinely unpleasant by mid-morning – slow-moving rivers of people with rolling suitcases and gelato. You’re not experiencing something other tourists have missed. You are the crowd.

That said, everything is open. Restaurants, museums, smaller churches, the islands – Murano, Burano, Torcello – all fully operational. The city performs its best version of itself in terms of sheer availability. Sunsets over the lagoon in July are genuinely ridiculous in the best way, all orange and pink and embarrassingly romantic.

Is it worth it? Honestly, it depends on you. If you’re someone who rises early, doesn’t mind sweating, and can find humor in being slightly uncomfortable, yes. Venice before 8am in July belongs almost to you. The light is extraordinary, the streets are quiet, and you’ll understand what everyone is actually chasing. If you wilt in heat or crowds genuinely stress you out, September is your month and this is me telling you firmly.

It’s worth it for: photographers, early risers, people on a fixed itinerary who can’t move dates, anyone who’s going island-hopping.

It’s not worth it for: families with small kids who need midday naps and patience, anyone who hates sweat.

**Practical tip:** Book accommodation away from San Marco – Cannaregio or Castello neighborhoods. You’ll sleep better, pay less, and actually see a city where people live.

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