Burano
Burano is the lagoon island where every fisherman's house is painted a different bold color, and yes, it is as photogenic as the pictures suggest. It is about 40 minutes out by vaporetto, far enough that it stays calmer than central Venice if you go early. Come for the colors and the old lace tradition, but know the trip eats a chunk of your day, so pair it with Murano or Torcello rather than treating it as a quick hop.
Photos: Ermell (CC BY-SA 4.0), Didier Descouens (CC BY-SA 4.0), Didier Descouens (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons
Worth it for the color if you go early and pair it with Murano. The 40-minute-each-way trip is the catch, and midday crowds can ruin the calm, so time it right. Go for the morning light, the leaning tower and a bussolai biscuit, not to shop for lace you cannot verify.
Worth it for
- Photographers and anyone who loves the painted-house look
- Travelers wanting a slower, quieter lagoon escape
- People already heading to Murano or Torcello on the same line
You can skip if
- Your Venice time is very short and the long round trip would cost too much of it
- You dislike crowds and can only go at midday, when the lanes jam up
Tickets & tours for Burano
Which ticket should you buy?
What it is
Burano is a small fishing island in the northern lagoon, famous for two things: the candy-colored houses and a centuries-old lace-making craft. The story goes that fishermen painted their homes in bright, distinct colors so they could spot them from the water in fog, and the tradition stuck. Today it is one of the most photographed corners of the entire lagoon.
It is also home to a leaning bell tower (the campanile of the San Martino church tilts visibly) and a quieter, slower pace than the main city. The lace was once a serious cottage industry; far less of it is still handmade locally now, but the Lace Museum (Museo del Merletto) keeps the history alive.
What to see and do
Walk the canals and back lanes for the color. The main drag near the boat stop gets busy, but step a few streets off and you get the same painted houses with far fewer people in the shot. Find the leaning campanile of San Martino, and seek out the small painted house known for the most extreme color, which locals will point you to.
If lace interests you, visit the Museo del Merletto to see genuine handmade work and understand why real Burano lace costs what it does. Most lace in the shops is imported and machine-made, so do not assume a cheap doily is local. And eat: the island is known for fish dishes and for 'bussolai', the buttery S-shaped or ring biscuits sold in the bakeries.
Getting there and tickets
Vaporetto line 12 runs to Burano, most commonly from Fondamente Nove on Venice's north shore, taking around 40 minutes and stopping at Murano (and near Mazzorbo and Torcello) along the way. That makes the natural plan a loop: Murano, then Burano, then back, or add Torcello which is a short hop or bridge walk from Burano.
The island is free to wander. You only pay the ACTV vaporetto fare to reach it, plus the Lace Museum and anything you buy. Because the round trip is long, a day or multi-day vaporetto pass is the sensible buy if you are seeing more than one island.
When to go
Go early or go late. Burano is small, and the day-tripper and tour-boat crowds pile in around midday, clogging the main lanes and the best photo spots. The first couple of boats in the morning, or the later afternoon once the tours have left, give you the calm, colorful island people imagine. The light is also kinder on the painted facades early and late.
Burano: FAQs
Roughly 40 minutes on vaporetto line 12, most easily from Fondamente Nove. It stops at Murano on the way, which is why people combine the two. Factor the travel time both ways into your day.
Take vaporetto line 12 from Fondamente Nove on Venice's north shore. The same line links Murano, Mazzorbo and Torcello, so you can chain the islands together on one trip.
If you like color, photography or a slower-paced island, yes. If your Venice time is very short, the long round trip is a real cost. The honest answer: worth it when paired with Murano, harder to justify as a standalone quick visit.
A couple of hours covers the colored houses, the leaning tower, a lace-museum stop and lunch. It is a small island, so you do not need a full day there, especially if you are also doing Murano or Torcello.
Often not. Much of the lace sold on Burano is imported and machine-made. Genuine handmade Burano lace is rare and pricey. If you want the real thing, the Lace Museum and trusted sellers are your best reference points.
Early morning or late afternoon, before the tour crowds arrive or after they leave around midday. The main lanes get congested in the middle of the day, and the light on the houses is best at the edges of the day.
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