Skip to main content
Milan · Porta Venezia

Gelato Giusto

Artisanal gelato made with organic ingredients and no artificial flavors.

Gelato Giusto, Milan · Porta Venezia
Category
Restaurant
Duration
20 minutes
Best Time
Any time
Entry
Rating
4.5 (1,191)
The place

About Gelato Giusto

Artisanal gelato made with organic ingredients and no artificial flavors. The pistachio is legendary, but seasonal flavors like fig or persimmon are worth trying.

Book ahead

Book Tickets

Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.

Search on Viator →Search on GetYourGuide →

Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.

The details

Practical bits

WalkingMinimal walking
The place

Getting there

Address
Via S. Gregorio, 17, 20124 Milano MI, Italy
Neighborhood
Porta Venezia
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

The crema is made with eggs from their family farm - it's the perfect baseline to judge if a gelateria is good.

Plan for about 20 minutes.

Gelato Giusto is in the Porta Venezia neighborhood of Milan. The address is Via S. Gregorio, 17, 20124 Milano MI, Italy. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Closed on Monday. Check the official website for holiday closures and special hours.

Around the corner

Nearby in Porta Venezia

Explore all →
Casa Museo Boschi Di Stefano
Museum

Casa Museo Boschi Di Stefano

Casa Museo Boschi Di Stefano offers something rare in Milan - the chance to see how wealthy collectors actually lived with serious contemporary art. Antonio Boschi and Marieda Di Stefano transformed their elegant 1930s apartment into a showcase for 300 works by Italy's modern masters, including de Chirico's surreal landscapes, Fontana's slashed canvases, and Morandi's contemplative still lifes. You're walking through their actual home, with paintings hanging exactly where the couple placed them for daily enjoyment. The experience feels like visiting sophisticated friends who happen to own museum-quality art. You'll move through period rooms where rationalist furniture sits beneath avant-garde paintings, creating conversations between different artistic movements. The intimate scale means you can study each work closely - Sironi's urban scenes, Campigli's mysterious figures, and rare pieces by artists you've likely never heard of but should know. Nothing feels sterile or overly curated. Most art guides barely mention this place, which works in your favor since it's completely free and genuinely uncrowded. The volunteer guides are passionate and speak decent English, though you can easily appreciate everything on your own. Skip the small temporary exhibitions - the permanent collection in the original apartment layout is the real draw here.

45 minutesExplore
Corso Buenos Aires
Shopping

Corso Buenos Aires

Corso Buenos Aires stretches 1.6 kilometers from Porta Venezia to Piazzale Loreto, packing over 350 shops into what's arguably Europe's longest shopping street. You'll find everything from Zara and H&M to smaller Italian boutiques, electronics stores, and gelato shops lining both sides of this pedestrian-friendly avenue. The street has a distinctly local feel compared to the tourist-heavy Quadrilatero della Moda, with Milanese families doing their weekend shopping alongside visitors hunting for deals. Walking the full length takes about two hours if you're browsing seriously, though you can easily spend half a day ducking into stores. The southern end near Porta Venezia feels more upscale, while the northern stretch toward Piazzale Loreto gets grittier with more electronics shops and casual dining. Metro stations at both ends make it easy to hop on and off, and the wide sidewalks handle crowds well even on busy Saturdays. Street performers and the occasional market stall add energy to the scene. Most guides oversell this as a shopping paradise, but it's really just a very long high street with predictable chain stores. The real advantage is practical: shops stay open until 8pm on weekdays when the rest of Milan shuts down at 7pm, and prices run about 20% cheaper than the designer district. Skip the northern third unless you need electronics, focus on the Porta Venezia end for the best mix of shops and cafes.

2-3 hoursExplore
More on Milan

From the blog

View all →
Ready for Milan?

Let DAIZ plan your Milan days

Tell us how long you've got and what you're into. We'll build a day-by-day plan, with the bookable bits ready to lock in.

Plan my Milan tripFree · no signup to start
Plan your Milan trip