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Murano and Burano Islands, Italy
Murano and Burano Islands

Veneto

Murano and Burano Islands

How to do the Murano and Burano day trip on the vaporetto: which line, how long it really takes, the glass-tour trap to avoid, and whether both islands are worth it.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Where

Venice, Italy

Opening hours

The islands themselves are open all the time — vaporetto line 12 runs roughly 06:00 to past midnight. The Murano Glass Museum (Museo del Vetro) opens about 10:00–17:00, last admission one hour before close; on Fridays and Saturdays from early May to late September it stays open to 20:00. Burano's churches and Lace Museum keep similar daytime hours.

Tickets

Vaporetto single €9.50 (about £8), valid 75 minutes; a 24-hour ACTV pass is €25 (about £21) and is the sensible buy for a day's hopping. Murano Glass Museum entry is €15 (about £13), under-6s free.

Time needed

Half a day to a full day: around 1 hour on Murano, 1.5–2 hours on Burano, plus 1.5–2 hours of boat time across the round trip.

In short

Visiting Murano and Burano Islands

Skip the 'free' glass tour touts on the quayside and go independently on the ACTV vaporetto — a day pass (about €25 / roughly £21) pays for itself the moment you island-hop. Take line 12 from Fondamente Nove: Murano is 10–15 minutes out, Burano about 45. Murano is the glass island and gets a quick hour; Burano's painted houses are the real reason to go and deserve longer. Do both in one half-day rather than building a full itinerary around them.

How to visit without getting roped into a sales pitch

The first thing to do is walk past anyone offering a “free tour of a Murano glass factory.” It is not really free: the tout is paid by a single factory to deliver you to its showroom, you get a few minutes of glassblowing, and then comes the hard sell on overpriced glass — there are repeated accounts of the card charge coming in well above the quoted price. Go on your own instead and you keep control of your day.

Independent is easy. Take ACTV vaporetto line 12 from Fondamente Nove, the quay on the northern edge of the main island. Murano is the first stop, only 10–15 minutes out; Burano is roughly 45 minutes further across the lagoon. Buy a 24-hour ACTV pass (about €25 / roughly £21) rather than €9.50 singles — once you’ve hopped to Murano, on to Burano, and back, the pass has already paid for itself. Murano is where the glass furnaces are, and the Museo del Vetro (about €15 / £13) tells the proper history if you want it; an hour covers the island comfortably.

Half a day or a whole one?

Give Burano the larger slice of your time. Its terraces of fishermen’s houses — painted in deep blues, greens and reds, by local tradition so each could be picked out from the water — are the real reason to make the trip, and they photograph best in morning or late-afternoon light rather than flat midday sun. Allow an hour and a half to two hours to wander, find the leaning campanile and have lunch, then catch line 12 back.

Worth it as a half-day, not a full one. Murano on its own is a slightly workaday glass-shopping island and underwhelms people who build a whole day around it; Burano is genuinely lovely and the round trip makes a fine break from the crowds around St Mark’s. Pair the two, skip the factory touts, and treat the boat ride across the lagoon as part of the experience rather than dead time.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Venice city guide.

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Murano and Burano Islands FAQs

How do you get to Murano and Burano from Venice?
Take ACTV vaporetto line 12 from Fondamente Nove (the lagoon-side quay on the north of the main island). Murano is the first stop at 10–15 minutes; Burano is roughly 45 minutes further on. Buy a 24-hour pass (about €25 / £21) rather than singles if you plan to hop between both and back.
Should you take the free Murano glass factory tour?
No. The 'free tour' touted on Venice quaysides is a sales funnel run by one factory — you watch five minutes of glassblowing then face high-pressure selling at inflated prices, with reports of prices quoted being far lower than the card was charged. Go independently on the vaporetto and visit a workshop on your own terms instead.
Is Murano or Burano better?
Burano. Murano is interesting for the glassblowing and the Glass Museum but feels workaday once you've seen a demonstration. Burano's rows of saturated, painted fishermen's houses are the postcard image and reward a slow wander. If you're short on time, give Burano the bigger share.

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