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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Paolo Santalucia and Nicole Winfield

Rome brings in €2 tourist charge to see well known tourist attraction

Tourists hoping to get close to the Trevi Fountain will have to pay €2 as the city of Rome works to control crowds at one of the world’s most celebrated sites.

The first tourists to pass through the new ticket check seemed unbothered by the tariff, noting it was a small price to pay for quality access to a fountain made famous by Federico Fellini’s movie La Dolce Vita.

“Before, there were problems accessing the fountain. There were a lot of people. Now, it’s very easy,” said Ilhan Musbah, a tourist from Morocco.

“You can take photos, you feel good, you’re comfortable, and on top of that, €2 is not much.”

The tourist fee was rolled out with a new €5 (£4.30) tourist ticket fee for some city museums. In both cases, Rome residents are exempt from the fees and the extra revenue will actually expand the number of city-run museums that are free for registered Roman residents.

It’s all part of the Eternal City’s efforts to manage tourist flows in a particularly congested part of town, improve the experience and offset the maintenance costs of preserving all of Rome’s cultural heritage. Officials estimate it could net the city €6.5m (£5.6m) extra a year.

The fee enables tourists to get close to the fountain during prime daylight hours (AFP/Getty)

The city decided to impose the Trevi Fountain fee after seeing positive results already from a year-long experiment to stagger and limit the number of visitors who can reach the front edge of the basin by imposing lines and pathways for entrance and exit.

“I think tourists were shocked by the fact that the city of Rome is only asking for €2m for a site of this level,” Alessandro Onorato, Rome’s assessor of tourism, said Monday. “I believe that if the Trevi Fountain were in New York, they would have charged at least $100.”

The move is part of an attempt to curb overtourism at the 18th-century monument (AFP/Getty)

The fee follows a similar ticketing system at Rome’s Pantheon monument and the more complicated tourist day-tripper tax that the lagoon city of Venice imposed last year in a bid to ease overtourism and make the city more livable for residents.

The Italian fees still pale in comparison to the 45 per cent price hike that French authorities announced for the Louvre Museum for most non-European visitors, where tickets can now run to €32 ($37) from €22 (£18).

The Trevi fee, which can be paid in advance online, enables tourists to get close to the fountain during prime-time daylight hours. The view for those admiring the late Baroque masterpiece from the piazza above remains free, as it is up close after hours.

The towering fountain features the Titan god Oceanus flanked by falls cascading down the travertine rocks into a shallow turquoise pool, where Marcello Mastroianni and Anita Ekberg famously took their nighttime dip in La Dolce Vita.

While bathing is prohibited nowadays, legend has it that visitors who toss a coin over their shoulders and make a wish will return to Rome.

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