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Rome has introduced a €2 entrance charge for non-residents who want to approach the Trevi Fountain’s basin, a move that came into effect in early February 2026.
The token fee applies during peak visiting hours and can be purchased online in advance, at civic museums, tourist info points, authorised retailers or at the fountain’s entrance.
Exemptions include Roman residents, young children (typically under six), people with disabilities and their carers.
The measure complements a new €5 tourist ticket applied to some city museums and follows earlier experiments to stagger access at the monument.
City officials say the fees aim to reduce overcrowding, improve visitor experience and raise funds for maintenance; they estimate the combined measures could generate about €6.5 million a year.
The public piazza around the fountain remains freely viewable from a distance.
The charge forms part of a wider trend in Italy and Europe — including ticketing at the Pantheon and Venice’s day‑tripper tax — where authorities are experimenting with visitor charges to manage overtourism and protect historic sites.
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