Staying Healthy in Bella Italia
Italian pharmacies: much more than a drugstore
Look for the glowing green cross — that’s your sign. Italy’s farmacie are everywhere, independently owned, and staffed by pharmacists who hold doctoral degrees in pharmacy. In the tourist centers of Rome, Florence, and Milan, most speak conversational English and are genuinely happy to help.
One thing that surprises many visitors: almost nothing is on open shelves. You describe your symptoms to the pharmacist and they retrieve what you need from behind the counter. Think of them as your first stop for any minor ailment — a scratchy throat, an upset stomach, a headache, sunburn, a UTI — before seeking out a doctor.
✈ Pro tip
Italian pharmacists can legally dispense certain non-abusive medications — including some antibiotics — at their own discretion, though they may ask for a prescription. For any ongoing medication, have your doctor write a travel letter listing your condition, drug name, generic equivalent, and dosage. Carry a paper copy and save one to the cloud.
Hours: Most pharmacies open around 8:30–9:00 AM and close between 7:30–8:00 PM, sometimes with a midday break from 1:00–3:30 PM. After-hours pharmacies rotate duty; a posted notice on any closed farmacia’s door will direct you to the nearest one that’s open.
Useful Phrases
What to say at the pharmacy
Ho mal di testa.
I have a headache.
Ho mal di stomaco.
I have a stomachache.
Ho la febbre.
I have a fever.
Ho bisogno di antidolorifici.
I need a painkiller.
Parla inglese?
Do you speak English?
Ho una ricetta.
I have a prescription.
Emergency
112
All emergencies (EU standard)
Ambulance
118
Medical emergency only
Police
113
Polizia di Stato
Medical Care
How to see a doctor in Italy as a tourist
Italy’s public healthcare system — the Servizio Sanitario Nazionale (SSN) — is available to tourists, and costs are remarkably low by American standards. A private consultation typically runs €20–€150 depending on specialty; even a “high” Italian hospital bill rarely exceeds €1,000. Ambulances and emergency services are free of charge.
Your options, from easiest to most urgent
① Farmacia first. For minor symptoms, start here. Pharmacists can recommend treatment, and in many cases that’s all you need.
② Guardia Medica Turistica. Major tourist destinations have clinics specifically for travelers, staffed with English-speaking doctors. Search for one near your location at gov.it.
③ Private clinic. Faster appointments, usually English-speaking staff. Services like Doctors in Italy (doctorsinitaly.com) match you with an English-speaking physician for in-person or video consultations, often same-day.
④ Public hospital (Pronto Soccorso). The emergency department. Free for urgent care, but expect long waits for non-emergencies.
For insurance reimbursement
Most travel insurance plans operate on a pay-and-claim basis in Italy. Always ask the doctor for a receipt and a brief written medical report stating your diagnosis — these two documents are typically sufficient to file a reimbursement claim when you get home.
Travel Insurance
Contacting your insurer from Italy
If you need medical care, contact your insurer as soon as possible — ideally before or right after treatment. Both Allianz and Travel Guard operate 24-hour assistance lines reachable from anywhere in the world. Save these numbers in your phone before you leave home.
Allianz Travel Insurance
Allianz Global Assistance
📞 From US/Canada: 1-800-654-1908
📞 From Italy (collect): +1-804-281-5700
📞 Claims line: 1-888-497-6992
✉ claimsinquiry@allianzassistance.com
📱 App: Allyz® — file claims from your phone
AIG Travel Guard
Travel Guard (AIG)
📞 US toll-free: 1-800-826-4919
📞 From Italy (collect): +1-715-345-0505
📞 Customer service: 1-800-826-5248
🕐 24/7 emergency assistance worldwide
Calling from Italy
To call a US number from Italy, dial 001 + the area code + number. If your insurer has a collect call option (as both Allianz and Travel Guard do), you won’t be charged for the international call. Consider enabling an international plan or using Wi-Fi calling before departure.
Before You Go
Your pre-departure health checklist
- Pack a small travel health kit: ibuprofen, antidiarrheal tablets, antihistamine, bandages, and any prescription medications with extra supply.
- Get a letter from your doctor listing all prescriptions with generic names and dosages — carry a paper copy and save one to cloud storage.
- Save your travel insurance’s 24-hour emergency number in your phone before you leave.
- Take photos of all insurance cards and policy documents; email them to yourself.
- Note the address of the nearest US Embassy or Consulate in each city you’re visiting.
- EU/UK travelers: bring your EHIC or GHIC card for reduced-cost access to Italy’s public health system.
- Check whether your prescription medications are legal in Italy — some common US drugs are controlled or unavailable there.
A note on costs: Italy’s healthcare costs are among the lowest in the Western world for travelers. Even without insurance, a private doctor visit runs roughly €20–€100, and public urgent care is often free or nearly so. That said, travel insurance remains strongly recommended for emergency hospitalization, medical evacuation, and trip interruption coverage. Always keep receipts from any medical visit for reimbursement claims.
2026 guide
Italy healthcare quick-start
Chest pain, trauma, severe breathing — call 112 first.
Triage wait times
Skip the ER
Minor issues (UTI, rash, refill) face 10–14+ hour public ER waits with a €50+ ticket.
Go to a farmacia first
They triage minor issues and refer appropriately
White code ticket
Non-urgent ER wait: 10+ hours
Receive e-prescription PDF
Instantly accepted at any farmacia in Italy
What to bring
Travel insurance
Protect against large costs — ER visit €150–€400+
Keep receipts
Required for reimbursement claims
Non-EU visitors: ER is not free. Private clinic consultation: €150–€250+
