Campo Santa Margherita
Campo Santa Margherita stretches like a long oval through Dorsoduro, serving as the neighborhood's genuine social center where Venetians actually live their daily lives.
About Campo Santa Margherita
Campo Santa Margherita stretches like a long oval through Dorsoduro, serving as the neighborhood's genuine social center where Venetians actually live their daily lives. You'll find elderly locals chatting on benches, university students from nearby Ca' Foscari sprawled on steps with books, and kids kicking footballs between the wellheads. The morning market sets up along one side with produce stalls, fish vendors, and a tiny flower stand that's been run by the same family for decades.
The square feels refreshingly normal after Venice's tourist circus. Laundry hangs from windows above while locals wheel shopping carts across the stones, stopping to gossip with neighbors. Students nurse single espressos for hours at outdoor tables while older Venetians play cards in the shade. The 14th century church of Santa Margherita anchors one end, though it's been converted into an auditorium and rarely opens. The whole scene has an easy, unhurried rhythm that tourist squares lost long ago.
Most guides oversell this as some authentic discovery, but it's simply a functioning neighborhood square that happens to welcome visitors. The aperitivo scene is genuinely good value: spritz cost 3-4 EUR with decent snacks included, compared to 8-12 EUR near San Marco. Skip the overhyped Il Doge gelato (tourist trap with long lines) and head to Il Caffe Rosso instead for proper local atmosphere. Come in late afternoon when university classes end and the square fills with actual Venetian energy.
Skip the Queue
Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.
Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.







