Can an Italy citizen travel to San Marino?
Travel from Italy to San Marino is conditional — see requirements below
This is the generic answer for any Italy citizen. Not legal or medical advice — verify with your airline and destination authorities before travel.
Italy passport holders can travel to San Marino without a visa.
This is the generic case for any Italy citizen. Sign in (free) to personalize this San Marino analysis for your passport, vaccinations & connecting flights.Personalize →Quick summary
- Visa requirement
- Visa-freeHome country
- Official source
- esteri.sm
Generic country-level guidance for San Marino. Verify against the official source before you travel.
Connecting through another country?
This page covers a direct flight to San Marino. If your route connects through a third country, that country may require its own transit visa — sometimes even for a short stop inside the airport between flights (a layover). Transit rules depend on your specific routing, so check the country you connect through separately, or analyse your full itinerary.
What to know before you go
San Marino has no airport — reached overland via Italy
INFOSan Marino has no airport. Travellers arrive via Italy (Rimini or Bologna) and continue overland. Because you enter via Italy, the binding entry requirement is Italy's (Schengen Area) — reflected in the visa verdict below — not San Marino's own, which is an open border with no separate immigration control.
Home country for San Marino
INFONo visa required for entry to San Marino. Confirm the latest allowed-stay duration with the destination's official source before travel.
Cash declaration threshold: EUR 10,000 for Italy (IT)
INFODeclare EUR 10,000 or equivalent when entering or leaving Italy (IT). Form: Cash declaration form. EU-wide: declare €10,000+ when entering/leaving the EU. Individual member states may have additional rules.
EU/EEA free movement - reside, work, and study, not just visit
INFOYour IT citizenship gives you freedom of movement to this destination under EU Treaty rights and the EEA Agreement (Directive 2004/38/EC). This is more than visa-free entry: you may enter with a valid passport or national ID card, stay without a visa, and take up residence, employment, self-employment, or study with no permit. After three months you register with local authorities if the country requires it: automatic if you're working or self-employed, but if you're economically inactive (retired, studying, or otherwise not working) you must also hold comprehensive sickness insurance and sufficient resources so you don't become a burden on the host state (Directive 2004/38/EC, Article 7). Your spouse/registered partner and dependent family members can accompany or join you, including non-EU/EEA family members (who may need an entry visa but cannot be charged for the residence right itself). No onward or return ticket is required.
Carry your passport or national ID - agents may apply generic rules
WARNEU/EEA free movement is your right, but on mixed itineraries (a leg outside the area, a codeshare, or a non-EU carrier) check-in agents sometimes apply generic third-country rules and ask for a return ticket or proof of funds you do not need. Carry a valid passport or EU/EEA national ID card; if questioned, reference your EU/EEA citizenship and the right of free movement (Directive 2004/38/EC).
Common questions
- Do Italy citizens need a visa to visit San Marino?
- No. Italy passport holders can enter San Marino without a visa.
Personalize this San Marino analysis for your trip
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