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MetatlasGlobal mobility data

Venice vs Florence

Living costs & remote-work readiness

Core comparison

Rent band, living-cost index, and broadband median — the baseline most movers check before drilling into visas or neighborhood picks.

VeniceFlorence
Rent (1BR equivalent, USD/mo)
$1,300 – $2,400

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$1,150 – $2,100

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Cost index (NYC = 100)

Directional scalar with New York City = 100; not purchasing-power-parity adjusted. See Methodology (City metrics).

78

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74

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Median fixed broadband (Mbps)
110

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118

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Remote-work fit

Remote score plus practical rows (housing, language, time zones, community, day-to-day friction). For quick comparison only—confirm hiring, visas, and leases with local sources.

VeniceFlorence
Remote-worker score (1–10)

1–10 illustrative score (English-friendly hiring clusters, time-zone overlap, services depth) — not a labor-market survey.

7

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8

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Short-term housing (furnished / serviced)

Directional labels — not survey data.

Mixed

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Mixed

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Language ease for errands (English & more)
Medium

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Medium

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Time-zone fit (video calls)
Europe overlap

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Europe overlap

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Coworking & remote-worker community
Medium

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Medium

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Car dependency (day-to-day)
Low

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Low

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Climate & seasonal comfort stress
Medium

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Medium

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Payments & banking convenience
Medium (mixed)

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Medium (mixed)

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Visa & compliance paperwork load
Medium

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Medium

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Traveler snapshot

Directional visitor lenses (budget bands, crowding, urban transit ease) — not live prices or safety advisories. Pair with official entry rules and your insurer.

VeniceFlorence
Typical visitor daily spend (USD, directional)

Illustrative mid-market trip band (lodging, meals, local hops, one paid activity). Validate against your actual itinerary.

$130 – $220

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$100 – $180

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Landmark / museum density
High

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High

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Peak travel windows
Easter–summer and Carnival concentrate crowds; winter quieter but weather and high-water days matter.

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May–Sep busiest for Uffizi and Duomo climbs; spring and autumn shoulder seasons are milder.

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Peak-season crowding

High means queues at headline sights spike; it is not a crime or safety score.

Expect heavy crowds

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Expect heavy crowds

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Public transit ease (sightseeing)

High means buses, metro, or trains usually cover common visitor hops.

Medium

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Medium

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Sightseeing walk fit

High means walking between headline sights tends to feel smooth; Low often means a more spread-out layout or heavier reliance on a car.

High

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High

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Tap / card payments
Usually easy

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Usually easy

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Safety & norms reminder

Pair with your home-country travel notices and operator briefings—this cell is generic guidance, not incident logs.

Major sights and waterbus hubs attract petty theft — use hotel safes and read local crowd-control notices.

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Dense historic center — watch bags on buses and at ticket barriers; follow civil protection heat advisories in summer.

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Visa & tax — read both

Venice

Visa notes

Same national work authorization routes as Rome; tourist stays follow Schengen rules — verify Questura guidance.

Tax notes

Veneto municipal surcharges apply; visitor-facing prices often include service components.

Florence

Visa notes

Same national visa shell as Rome; seasonal tourism staffing differs from Milan finance cycles.

Tax notes

Tuscany tourist levies and museum ticketing bundles can shift headline trip costs — verify municipality notices.

City metrics

  • Rent band — modeled one-bedroom equivalent in USD/month for inbound professionals; always corroborate with live listings.
  • Cost index — directional scalar with NYC = 100 to communicate relative pressure, not a purchasing-power-parity replacement. Try the cost index compare tool for a quick A/B read.
  • Broadband median — indicative fixed-line speed for remote-work feasibility screening.
  • Remote-worker score — editorial composite (English-friendly hiring clusters, timezone utility, services depth).

Evidence chains & editorial labels

Each city fact-table row carries structured provenance in code (`metricProvenance`): a short source label, optional public URL, ISO check date (`retrieved`), notes, and sometimes an explicit editorial flag. Displayed numbers flow from (1) in-repo baseline rows, (2) optional ingest scripts that emit suggested patches (never silent overwrite), and (3) auxiliary blocks such as Teleport — each path should remain distinguishable in prose.

  • Rent band — editorial USD/month range for a one-bedroom equivalent aimed at inbound professionals; footnotes name the blend of listings surveys / internal calibration used for that city.
  • Cost index — directional scalar with NYC = 100; baseline values are editorially aligned to comparable city tiers unless a cited external pull replaces them via ingest.
  • Broadband median — indicative fixed-line speed for screening; may cite public indices (for example Speedtest Global Index) where licensed; otherwise labeled editorial baseline.
  • Remote-worker score — fully editorial composite (hiring market, time zones, services); always marked as non-model, non-personalized advice.

When no URL is present we still require a label and check date. Treat the figure as directional — not immigration, tax, or financial advice — and validate against live official sources before acting.

Where time-series snapshots exist, each point stores its own provenance snapshot so revisions remain traceable without rewriting history.