Milan
Venice
Italy · Multi-city itinerary
Northern Italy itinerary — August 2026
By Tripsapien Research · Updated May 20, 2026
August 2026 is a good time for the Northern Italy trip (Milan & Venice). Daytime highs run from about 29°C / 84°F to 30°C / 86°F across the stops. Plan around 5–7 days for the full Milan & Venice loop. Tripsapien checks every place on your list against your exact dates — hours, closures and booking pressure at each stop.
The route
About 5–7 days · 2 cities
Italy's north beyond the classic loop: fashion-and-design Milan, with the Duomo and Leonardo's Last Supper, and the canals of Venice two and a half hours east by high-speed train. A design-led pairing for a long weekend or a slower week.
Milan
Milan in August
Temperature
85°F / 68°F
29.2°C / 20°C
Precipitation
16d
4.4in · 111.7mm
Daylight
13.9h
August is hot and many small restaurants close around Ferragosto on 15 August; confirm bookings.
August is hot and many small restaurants close around Ferragosto on 15 August; confirm bookings.
City overview
Milan is a Po Valley city where medieval gates, Renaissance churches, fashion streets, and postwar design districts sit on a flat tram-and-metro grid. First-time visitors move between Centro Storico, Brera, Navigli, Porta Nuova-Isola, Porta Venezia, and the Last Supper corridor near Santa Maria delle Grazie.
Food & drink
Milan food means risotto alla milanese, cotoletta alla milanese, ossobuco, mondeghili, panettone, and aperitivo plates. Brera, Navigli, Porta Romana, and the Mercato Centrale near Centrale station are practical food anchors. Prices run higher than Naples or Bologna, especially near the Duomo and Quadrilatero della Moda.
Top sights
Ranked for August suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II
- 2Teatro alla Scala
- 3Pinacoteca di Brera
- 4Santa Maria delle Grazie and The Last Supper
- 5Fondazione Prada
- 6San Siro Stadium
- 7Duomo di Milano
- 8Cimitero Monumentale
- 9Sforza Castle
- 10Navigli canals
1Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II
4.7★ · 113,388indoorOpen dailyGlass-roofed shopping arcade opened in 1867 between the Duomo and La Scala. The mosaic bull and cafe terraces make it more than a shortcut.
Wikipedia
2Teatro alla Scala
4.7★ · 33,897indoorOpera house opened in 1778, with a museum showing costumes, instruments, and portraits tied to Verdi and Toscanini. It sits on Piazza della Scala behind the Galleria.
Wikipedia
3Pinacoteca di Brera
4.7★ · 34,399indoorClosed MonBrera gallery with works by Mantegna, Raphael, Caravaggio, Hayez, and Bellini inside a former Jesuit college. It anchors the cobbled Brera art district.
Wikipedia
Show 7 more sights
- 4Santa Maria delle Grazie and The Last Supper
- 5Fondazione Prada
- 6San Siro Stadium
- 7Duomo di Milano
- 8Cimitero Monumentale
- 9Sforza Castle
- 10Navigli canals
Neighborhoods
1Centro Storico
Duomo, Galleria, La Scala, Palazzo Reale, and luxury streets sit in the dense central core. It is expensive but efficient for a first visit.
2Brera
Art-school and gallery district with Pinacoteca di Brera, Via Fiori Chiari, small boutiques, and aperitivo bars. It feels polished without the Duomo crowds.
3Navigli and Ticinese
Canals, Colonne di San Lorenzo, vintage shops, and late bars make this Milan's easiest evening district. Tram links are better than metro coverage.
4Porta Nuova and Isola
New Milan of Piazza Gae Aulenti, Bosco Verticale, Corso Como, and Isola restaurants. It contrasts sharply with Sforza Castle and Brera.
5Porta Venezia
Liberty buildings, Corso Buenos Aires shops, Giardini Pubblici, and LGBTQ nightlife around Via Lecco. It is a strong hotel area on Metro Line 1.
6Chinatown and Monumentale
Via Paolo Sarpi food counters, design shops, and Cimitero Monumentale cluster northwest of Brera. It is compact and good for a low-key afternoon.
Getting around
ATM runs Metro lines M1-M5, trams, buses, and suburban links with contactless bank-card taps and app tickets. Metro M1 handles Duomo-Cadorna-Porta Venezia, M2 handles Centrale-Brera-Navigli approaches, and Malpensa Express links the airport with Cadorna and Centrale.
Venice
Venice in August
Temperature
84°F / 66°F
28.8°C / 19°C
Precipitation
6d
2.6in · 65mm
Daylight
13.9h
Sea
80.4°F
26.9°C
August remains hot, with Lido beach plans and Biennale pavilions working better than packed San Marco afternoons.
August remains hot, with Lido beach plans and Biennale pavilions working better than packed San Marco afternoons.
City overview
Venice is a lagoon city of six sestieri, where the Grand Canal, smaller rii, footbridges, and vaporetti replace normal streets. San Marco holds the republic's power symbols, Dorsoduro and Cannaregio give calmer art-and-food bases, and the islands of Murano, Burano, Torcello, Giudecca, and Lido explain the lagoon beyond the postcard core.
Food & drink
Venice food is lagoon-and-bacaro specific: cicchetti are small bar snacks eaten standing with ombra wine, sarde in saor marinates sardines with onion, vinegar, raisins, and pine nuts, baccala mantecato whips salted cod into a creamy spread, and risotto al nero di seppia gets its black color from cuttlefish ink. Rialto Market, Cannaregio's Fondamenta della Misericordia, Dorsoduro's Campo Santa Margherita, and San Polo bacari are better anchors than Piazza San Marco restaurants for bigoli in salsa, fritto misto, spritz, and seafood.
Top sights
Ranked for August suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Grand Canal and Rialto Bridge
- 2Arsenale and Giardini della Biennale
- 3Piazza San Marco and Saint Mark's Basilica
- 4Doge's Palace
- 5Santa Maria della Salute
- 6Gallerie dell'Accademia
- 7Peggy Guggenheim Collection
- 8Cannaregio Jewish Ghetto
- 9Burano and the Lace Museum
- 10Murano Glass Museum
1Grand Canal and Rialto Bridge
4.7★ · 192,115outdoorThe Grand Canal curves through Venice past palaces, traghetto crossings, and vaporetto stops, with the stone Rialto Bridge spanning the commercial center since the late 16th century. Rialto Market still anchors the San Polo side.
2Arsenale and Giardini della Biennale
4.5★ · 12,380outdoorClosed MonThe Arsenale was the Venetian Republic's shipbuilding engine, and the nearby Giardini now hold national pavilions for La Biennale di Venezia. Art Biennale runs in even years and Architecture Biennale in odd years.
3Piazza San Marco and Saint Mark's Basilica
4.7★ · 28,607indoorOpen dailyThe basilica grew from the 11th century around Byzantine mosaics, marble floors, and relics of Saint Mark brought from Alexandria. The square also holds the Campanile, Procuratie arcades, and the main approach to the Doge's Palace.
Reserve timed basilica entry in busy months and use dawn or winter for uncrowded square photos.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Doge's Palace
- 5Santa Maria della Salute
- 6Gallerie dell'Accademia
- 7Peggy Guggenheim Collection
- 8Cannaregio Jewish Ghetto
- 9Burano and the Lace Museum
- 10Murano Glass Museum
Neighborhoods
1San Marco
San Marco is dense and ceremonial, with the basilica, Doge's Palace, La Fenice, luxury hotels, and the tightest crowd pressure around Piazza San Marco.
2San Polo
San Polo is merchant Venice, with Rialto Bridge, Rialto Market, bacari, Frari church nearby, and narrow lanes between the Grand Canal and Santa Croce.
3Dorsoduro
Dorsoduro feels artier and student-heavy, with Accademia, Peggy Guggenheim, Zattere, Campo Santa Margherita, and views across Giudecca Canal.
4Cannaregio
Cannaregio is the north-side base, with the Jewish Ghetto, Fondamenta della Misericordia bars, Strada Nova, and quieter canal edges near Madonna dell'Orto.
5
Castello
Castello stretches from San Marco crowds to local streets around San Giovanni e Paolo, the Arsenale, Via Garibaldi, and Biennale gardens.
6Giudecca and Lido
Giudecca gives wide canal views and hotel terraces across from Dorsoduro, while Lido has beaches, bikes, Art Deco hotels, and the Venice Film Festival.
Getting around
ACTV vaporetti and buses use time-based Venezia Unica tickets, and Line 1 is the slow Grand Canal sightseeing route while Line 2 is faster for Rialto, San Marco, Giudecca, and Piazzale Roma. Walking is fastest inside each sestiere, traghetti cross the Grand Canal at selected points, and airport access uses bus 5 to Piazzale Roma or Alilaguna boats from Marco Polo.
Best time to do the Northern Italy trip
In August, the Northern Italy trip runs daytime highs from 29°C / 84°F to 30°C / 86°F, with nights down to about 19°C / 66°F at the coolest stop. Expect only a few wet days — up to 7 at the rainiest stop. Weighed across both stops, August is a good time to travel.
The most comfortable months across Milan & Venice are September, October and May, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at every stop. August 2026 is a good time to go.
Check this route against your dates
Tripsapien starts with the sights on this page or places you paste, then checks hours, closures, booking pressure and neighborhoods for your exact August dates — across every city on the Northern Italy trip.
Plan this Northern Italy tripCommon questions about the Northern Italy trip
- When is the best time to do the Northern Italy trip?
- The most comfortable months across Milan, Venice are September, October and May, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at each stop. August is a good time — see the per-stop weather below for the exact picture in August 2026.
- How many days do you need for the Northern Italy trip?
- A comfortable Northern Italy trip runs about 5–7 days, allowing roughly Milan 2, Venice 3 nights plus travel between stops. Add a day if you want a slower pace or extra day trips.
- What's the route for the Northern Italy trip?
- The classic order is Milan & Venice. Each city below has its own August weather, events and top-sights list.
- Will the sights be open during my August Northern Italy trip?
- Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season and public holiday, and they differ from city to city on a multi-stop trip. Paste your Northern Italy list into Tripsapien and it checks every place in Milan, Venice against your exact dates, flagging closures and what needs booking ahead before you go.