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Parking in Italy — historic street with ZTL sign and rental car

Parking in Italy 2026: ZTL Zones, Rates and City Guides

Italian city parking has one rule that catches almost every visitor: the ZTL. Drive into a Zona a Traffico Limitato without a permit and the camera fine arrives months later through your rental company – often more than the parking itself would ever have cost. This hub explains how Italian parking works and links our detailed guides for 59 Italian cities.

✓ UP TO DATELast updated: July 3, 2026
Zone rules, typical rates and city guide links reviewed.

How Parking Works in Italy

Street bays are colour-coded nationwide: blue lines are paid (typically €1–3/hour in centres), white lines are free where permitted, and yellow lines are reserved for residents, disabled permits or loading – never park on yellow.

The ZTL is the real trap. Historic centres in Rome, Florence, Milan, Pisa and most old towns restrict entry with camera-enforced gates. Hotels inside a ZTL can usually register your plate – ask before you arrive, and keep the confirmation.

Machines take coins and increasingly cards, and apps like EasyPark cover most cities. Sundays and evenings are often free, but always check the sign – rules are municipal, not national.

Arriving without a car? If you still need car hire in Italy, compare the companies and prices first – a smaller car makes every parking zone below easier.

Most-Read City Guides

All Our Italy Parking Guides

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a ZTL and how do I avoid fines?+

A camera-enforced restricted traffic zone around historic centres. Only permitted vehicles may enter during active hours. Park outside the ZTL and walk in, or have your hotel register your plate. Fines arrive by post months later, plus a rental-company admin fee.

How much does street parking cost in Italy?+

Blue-line bays typically run €1–3 per hour in city centres, less in smaller towns. Garages in big cities run €2–4/hour or €15–30/day.

Is parking free on Sundays in Italy?+

Often, but not always – it's a municipal decision. Check the sign under the blue P: ‘festivi' means Sundays/holidays, ‘feriali' means working days.

Can I pay by card or app?+

Most machines now accept cards; EasyPark and Telepass Pay cover the majority of paid zones. Keep coins as a backup in smaller towns.

Parking hubs for other countries

Disclosure: Auto Jardim participates in affiliate programs including DiscoverCars and Parclick. Zone rules and rates are municipal and change – always check the sign where you park.

Last updated: July 2026.

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