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The Venice Biennale 2026 is best visited over 2 days: one day at the Giardini, one day at the Arsenale. A full-price ticket costs €30 (around £25) for under-26s it’s €16, and tickets must be booked online at labiennale.org — on-site sales no longer exist. The exhibition, titled « In Minor Keys », opens on 9 May and runs until 22 November 2026. For getting around, the 48-hour vaporetto pass at €35 covers all your journeys. Book your tickets at least 48 hours in advance and avoid weekends to keep queues manageable. Direct flights from London (Heathrow with British Airways, Gatwick with easyJet) take around 2h15.

Venice is hosting its 61st International Art Exhibition this summer — one of the most anticipated editions in years. Titled « In Minor Keys », this edition pays tribute to Koyo Kouoh, the appointed curator who passed away in May 2025 before seeing her vision realised — her team carried through the exhibition exactly as she had conceived it. One hundred and eleven artists, one hundred national participations, seven countries taking part for the first time, and the Central Pavilion in the Giardini reopening after a €31 million renovation: the 2026 Biennale marks a genuine turning point. For UK visitors, this is also the edition in which Lubaina Himid — Turner Prize winner 2017 — represents the British Pavilion with Predicting History: Testing Translation. This guide gives you everything you need to plan a two-day visit, from your vaporetto pass to the best restaurants in the Castello sestiere.

1. The Giardini della Biennale: Central Pavilion and national pavilions

View of the Giardini della Biennale in Venice: tree-lined paths leading to the national pavilions
Photo by Florin Gorgan on Unsplash

Giardini della Biennale, Castello sestiere

€30 full price / €16 under-26s 3 to 5 hours recommended 20–24 °C in May–June 9 May – 22 November 2026

The Giardini are home to the renovated Central Pavilion (€31 million of PNRR-funded works, 16 months of construction) and 29 permanent national pavilions built since 1907. According to labiennale.org, the Sala Chini becomes the main circulation hub of the route, surrounded by a ring of public amenities (bookshop, café with an altane terrace, education room). The roof now incorporates photovoltaic cells and motorised blinds to regulate natural light. Getting there: vaporetto stop « Giardini Biennale » (lines 1, 2, 4.1, 5.1), entrance via Viale Trento 1260. Opening hours: 11am–7pm from May to late September, 10am–6pm in October–November. Closed on Mondays (except 11 May, 1 June, 7 September, 16 November 2026).

Highlights

  • British Pavilion: Lubaina Himid (Turner Prize 2017), « Predicting History: Testing Translation » — large multipanel paintings on identity and migration, touring to Coventry, Belfast and Swansea from 2027
  • French Pavilion: Yto Barrada, « Comme Saturne » — textile installation on memory, melancholy and cyclical time
  • Austrian Pavilion: Florentina Holzinger, « Seaworld Venice » — immersive aquatic performance imagining Venice as a submerged metropolis
Pixidia tip: Arrive at opening time (11am) for the most popular pavilions. On weekdays in May, queues form quickly in front of the British, French and Austrian Pavilions. Bring a water bottle — drinking fountains are scarce in the Giardini. The free cloakroom accepts small bags but not large suitcases (drop your luggage at your hotel or in the left-luggage lockers at Santa Lucia station before your visit).
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2. The Arsenale: the international exhibition in the Corderie

Contemporary light installation inside the red-brick naves of the Arsenale di Venezia during a Venice Biennale art exhibition
Photo by Rui Alves on Unsplash

Arsenale di Venezia, Castello sestiere

Included in the Biennale ticket 3 to 5 hours recommended Temperate interior Open until 8pm Fri & Sat (May–Sept)

The Arsenale, the former 14th-century state shipyard, has hosted the Biennale since 1980. Its vast vaulted warehouses — the corderie, artiglierie and gaggiandre — create an architecture that amplifies the installations. According to labiennale.org, two entrances are available: Campo della Tana 2169/F (main) and Ponte dei Pensieri (Salizada Streta). Getting there: vaporetto stop « Arsenale » (lines 1 and 4.1). On Fridays and Saturdays from May to September, the Arsenale stays open until 8pm — a prime slot for light-based works.

Highlights

  • Canadian Pavilion: Abbas Akhavan, « Between Dog and Wolf » — contemplative greenhouse with giant Victoria amazonica water lilies and a reflective pool
  • Saudi Arabia Pavilion: Dana Awartani — 23 mosaic floors destroyed in Palestine, Syria and Lebanon recreated in Saudi clay, deliberately left unfired
  • Australian Pavilion: Khaled Sabsabi — a double presence (national pavilion + central exhibition), a historic first at the Biennale
Pixidia tip: Enter via Campo della Tana in the morning (quieter) and exit via Ponte dei Pensieri in the afternoon to walk to Tana Art Space (San Marino and Kosovo pavilions) along Fondamenta de la Tana — these off-site pavilions offer a more intimate encounter with the works, and are often much less crowded.

3. Vaporetto pass and transport logistics

ACTV vaporetto on the Grand Canal in Venice, the essential way to reach the Giardini della Biennale
Photo by Intrepid on Unsplash

ACTV — Venice vaporetto network

48h pass €35 (approx. £30) Unlimited journeys for 48h from first validation All year round Buy online at actv.it

A single vaporetto ticket costs €9.50 — only worth it for one or two journeys. For a two-day Biennale visit, the 48-hour pass at €35 is the best-value option: it covers all your journeys (airport/station → hotel → Giardini → Arsenale → dinner → hotel). Lines for the Giardini: 1, 2, 4.1, 5.1, 6 (stop: « Giardini Biennale »). Lines for the Arsenale: 1 and 4.1 (stop: « Arsenale »). Line 1 runs the entire length of the Grand Canal (scenic, 45 minutes from the station), line 2 is faster. Important note: the ACTV pass is not valid on Alilaguna water buses (airport → Venice, €18 one way). From the UK, direct flights to Venice Marco Polo take around 2h15 from London Heathrow (British Airways) or London Gatwick (easyJet), 2h25 from Manchester (Jet2, easyJet, Ryanair) — book early for May fares from around £50 return.

Highlights

  • Rolling Venice Card (€6) for under-30s: 72h pass at €27 instead of €45
  • The countdown starts from your first validation (not when you buy it) — buying the evening before is risk-free
  • Validate at the yellow ACTV terminal at the airport, Santa Lucia station, or at the vaporetto stops
Venice Access Contribution 2026: If you are not staying overnight in Venice (day-tripper), you must pay €5 online at cda.ve.it (or €10 if booked within 4 days) on peak days (8:30am–4pm). Exemption: anyone with a hotel booking in Venice, Mestre, Murano, Burano or the Lido. Tip: staying in Venice or Mestre is financially sensible.

4. Tickets and online booking

Entrance to the Venice Biennale Arte 2026, ticket desk and access to the Giardini
Photo on Unsplash

Official pricing — labiennale.org

€30 adult full price (approx. £25) 3-day pass €40 €16 for under-26s Online booking only

According to the official labiennale.org information page, on-site ticket sales no longer exist as of 2026. All tickets must be purchased online only. The standard €30 ticket gives access to both sites (Giardini + Arsenale), one entry each. The 3-day pass at €40 allows multiple entries — recommended if you want to come back or didn’t see everything on the first day. The weekly pass at €50 is worth it from four visits. Early-bird tickets (€25 adult, €30 for 3-day) are available for pre-booked visits.

Ticket typePrice
Adult full price€30 (approx. £25)
Student / under-26€16
Senior 65+ / Venice resident€20
Child 0–6 yearsFree
Disabled€20
3-day pass€40
Weekly pass€50
Fixed guided tour (excl. ticket)€10 / site

Highlights

  • Book at least 48 hours ahead — popular pavilion slots sell out during the opening week
  • Never buy from third-party resellers (risk of overcharging or fraud)
  • Bloomberg Connects app (free from 9 May): the official audio guide in real time, with pavilion maps
Pixidia tip: If you visit on a regular weekday from May to September, queues are far shorter than at weekends. Fridays and Saturdays are the busiest days at the Arsenale (open until 8pm — a real advantage if you take the 5pm–7pm slot).

5. Where to stay: Castello on foot or Mestre on a budget

Quiet backstreets of the Castello sestiere in Venice, close to the Giardini della Biennale
Photo by Denis Denis on Unsplash

Castello / Mestre — two strategies depending on your budget

Mestre: €60–90 / night (approx. £50–75) Castello: 15 min walk to the Giardini Mestre: 10-min train ride Advance booking essential in May

Three-star hotels in central Venice (Castello, Cannaregio) typically run at €140–242 per night during the Biennale. The Via Garibaldi — Venice’s widest street — is the heart of the Castello sestiere: 15 minutes on foot from the Giardini and 20 minutes from the Arsenale, lined with authentic bacari and low-key trattorias that the tourist trail bypasses. In Mestre on the mainland, budget hotels start from €60 (MEININGER Venezia Mestre, dorms from €30, doubles from €120). The Mestre–Venezia Santa Lucia train takes 10–12 minutes and runs every 10–15 minutes for €1–2. Strategic advantage: any hotel booking in Venice or Mestre exempts you from the day-tripper access contribution (€5–10/day).

Highlights

  • Castello: Osteria Alle Testiere (seafood, €40–60/person), Osteria Alla Rampa (family-run, €20–35/person) and the bacari along Via Garibaldi
  • Mestre: 30–40% cheaper than central Venice — ideal for cutting overall trip costs
  • Local aperitivo: the bacari on Via Garibaldi serve cicchetti for €2.50–4 each, genuine local atmosphere guaranteed at 7pm
Pixidia tip: For a stay in May (opening week), Castello hotels book up weeks in advance. If your budget is tight, Mestre is an excellent base — the train frequency is ideal for fitting around the Biennale programme. In September–October, prices drop and queues ease: that’s the best time to visit Venice.

6. Not to miss: collateral events and off-site pavilions

Venetian canal in the Castello sestiere, close to the Giardini della Biennale
Photo by Habib Beaini on Unsplash

31 collateral events — free or with separate admission

€0–20 depending on the event 46 off-site pavilions Throughout the city May – November 2026

The 61st Biennale Arte extends well beyond the Giardini and the Arsenale. According to Venice Insider Guide, 31 official collateral events are programmed across the city — many with free entry or a separate ticket from €5 to €20. Among the most notable: the Marina Abramović retrospective « Transforming Energy » at the Gallerie dell’Accademia (6 May – 19 October, the first solo show by a living female artist in this museum), and the Holy See Pavilion « The Ear is the Eye of the Soul » (Hans Ulrich Obrist + Ben Vickers) — a « sonic prayer » inspired by Hildegard of Bingen, featuring Patti Smith, Brian Eno and Jim Jarmusch in a mystical garden in Cannaregio. These pavilions scattered across the city often deliver the most memorable encounters, far from the bustle of the two main sites.

Highlights

  • Kosovo Pavilion (Brilant Milazimi, « Hard Teeth ») at the Chiesa di Santa Maria del Pianto, Castello: a 17-metre immersive painting
  • Jenny Saville at Ca’ Pesaro: over 30 works from 1990 to today, plus a new cycle created specifically for Venice
  • Forte Marghera (Mestre): three open-air special projects, accessible by bus from Piazzale Roma
Pixidia tip: Don’t try to see everything in two days — a curated selection of 10 to 15 pavilions is far more satisfying than an exhausting sprint. Check opening hours for off-site pavilions before heading out (some close on Mondays or have specific time slots).

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Frequently asked questions — Venice Biennale 2026

How much do tickets cost for the Venice Biennale Arte 2026?

The adult full-price ticket costs €30 (approximately £25). Students and under-26s pay €16. Seniors aged 65 and over, as well as Venice residents, get a reduced price of €20. Children under 6 enter free. The 3-day pass is €40 and the weekly pass €50. All tickets must be purchased exclusively online at labiennale.org — on-site sales no longer exist from 2026. Book at least 48 hours in advance. Early-bird tickets (€25 adult) are available if booked ahead.

Does my ticket cover both sites — the Giardini and the Arsenale?

Yes. Each ticket (full price €30, reduced €16–20) gives access to both main sites for one entry each. The 3-day pass (€40) allows multiple entries across both sites. However, the 46 national pavilions located around the city (outside the Giardini and Arsenale) and the collateral events are generally free or require a separate ticket of €5 to €20.

Which vaporetto pass should I get for 2 days at the Venice Biennale?

The 48-hour pass at €35 (approximately £30) is the recommended option for a two-day stay. It covers all vaporetto journeys (hotel, Giardini, Arsenale, restaurants) without having to buy individual tickets at €9.50 each. For under-30s, the Rolling Venice Card (€6) gives access to the 72h pass at €27 instead of €45. Note: the ACTV pass is not valid on Alilaguna water buses (airport transfer, €18 one way). Buy online at actv.it.

What is the difference between the Venice Biennale Arte and the Biennale Architettura?

The Biennale Arte is held in even years (2024, 2026, 2028) and the Biennale Architettura in odd years (2025, 2027). They are two separate exhibitions even though they share the same venues (Giardini and Arsenale). The 61st Arte edition of 2026, « In Minor Keys », follows the 60th art edition of 2024 curated by Adriano Pedrosa. The 2025 Architecture Biennale took place at these same locations in autumn 2025.

When is the best time to visit the Biennale Arte 2026?

September and October offer the best compromise: mild temperatures (15–24 °C), much shorter queues, cheaper accommodation and beautiful autumnal light. May is spectacular (pavilions at their freshest, extensive media coverage) but busy — especially the opening week of 9–17 May. Whatever the season, opt for weekdays and arrive at opening time. In October–November, check the acqua alta forecast at areavenezia.it. UK visitors: half-term in late May/early June can make midweek visits in the second week of May a sweet spot.

Is the Russian Pavilion open to the public in 2026?

No. Following geopolitical controversies, the Russian Pavilion in the Giardini remains closed to the general public for the entire duration of the 2026 Biennale. It was accessible only to media and professionals during the pre-opening week (5–8 May). It can be seen from the outside through the windows. Russia’s participation cost the Biennale €2 million in European funding, according to Euronews.

Can I leave my luggage at the Venice Biennale?

A free cloakroom is available at the Giardini for small items. Large suitcases are not accepted at either site. Drop your luggage at your hotel or at the left-luggage lockers at Santa Lucia station before your visit. The same applies to the Arsenale — no storage for large bags. Wear comfortable footwear: a full visit to both sites covers 5 to 8 km on Venetian cobblestones.

Sources

Information verified on 7 May 2026. Prices and opening hours may change — check labiennale.org before your visit.

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