Capri is taking drastic measures: Anyone who harasses tourists will now face hefty fines
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For many, Capri embodies the perfect Italian vacation: sun, sea, rugged cliffs, elegant hotels, and narrow streets bustling with life. But it is precisely this vacation vibe that has reportedly been disrupted more and more often on the Mediterranean island—not by noise or trash, but by pushy touts. As Stern reports, the local government on Capri is no longer willing to tolerate this and has introduced a clear rule: Anyone who harasses tourists on the street to sell restaurant visits, boat tours, or other services will face fines in the future.
Flyers, solicitations, cold calls: That needs to stop
The new regulation is essentially simple. Business owners, providers of tourist services, and their employees are no longer allowed to approach vacationers using pushy or persistent methods while they are on public property. This refers specifically to what many travelers are familiar with from traditional vacation spots: someone approaching them unsolicited, waving flyers, enticing them with special prices, or trying to pull them directly into a restaurant or onto an excursion boat.
Under the new regulation, anyone who fails to comply risks a fine of between 25 and 500 euros. Capri is thus sending a clear message: the island not only wants to attract visitors, but also to give them some peace and quiet.
Mass tourism is pushing the island to its limits
This decision didn’t come out of nowhere. Capri is one of Italy’s most famous tourist destinations. The island in the Gulf of Naples attracts visitors from all over the world year after year. Only about 13,000 people live on the island itself, but in the summer, tens of thousands of day-trippers flock there every day. As a result, the historic center and the area around the harbor quickly become crowded.
The municipality cites precisely this pressure as the reason for its measure. In areas with large crowds, intrusive advertising becomes not only annoying but can quickly turn into a real public order problem. The issue is therefore not just about annoyed tourists, but also about maintaining a well-kept townscape and ensuring that pedestrian and vehicle traffic are not further obstructed.
Capri is not an isolated case
What’s interesting is that Capri isn’t alone in taking this step. In many Italian resort towns, aggressive solicitation has become almost a common sight on the streets. As a result, other municipalities have also begun to crack down more strictly. On Lake Garda, Torri del Benaco introduced similar rules as early as last summer. There, restaurant and bar staff are also no longer allowed to actively and persistently lure tourists into their establishments with flyers or by directly approaching them.
This shows where things are headed. Italian tourist destinations apparently want to exercise greater control over how businesses publicly solicit customers. For vacationers, this is likely good news. For restaurant owners and service providers, however, the message is clear: advertising yes, harassment no.
But the real issue is something else: such rules make sense because no one wants to be hassled every minute while on vacation. Nevertheless, they don’t solve the actual problem. Capri isn’t suffering because of a few flyers, but because of a tourism model that has long since gotten out of hand on many days. Anyone who truly wants to alleviate the situation must do more than just silence the loudest vendors. Otherwise, all that remains in the end is a nicely packaged regulation for a much greater chaos.
Sources: stern.de
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