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Low-emission zones in Italy — urban environmental restrictions

Umweltzone Genova 2026 — green sticker, fines and map of the low-emission zone

Map of the Genova low-emission zone (Umweltzone) introduced in 2011, the required green Plakette, exemption rules and €100 fine for entry without a valid sticker. Find out which vehicles can drive in central Genova in 2026.

Genova Umweltzone — key facts at a glance

In effect since
2011
Operating hours
Mon–Fri 8:00–20:00
Required sticker
ZTL — permit-only access
Fine for non-compliance
84 · Art. 7 Codice della Strada
Operated by
Comune di Genova — Direzione Mobilitàopen official portal

Detailed boundary data for this city is not yet in our map. Use the city portal to check the exact perimeter.

ZTL access rules for Genova — who can enter

Italian ZTL (Genova) is permission-based, not Euro-class based. Only authorised vehicles may enter during active hours; non-residents face a €84 fine per offence (Codice della Strada Art. 7). Enforcement: ANPR cameras at every entry point.

Vehicle categoryAccess statusNotes
Residents (with permit)AllowedFree annual permit at the comune (Permesso ZTL)
Non-residents with permitAllowedTemporary or commercial permit, request online before entering
Commercial / delivery vehiclesRestricted hoursUsually allowed early morning (6:00–9:00) and late evening
Taxi / NCC / public busAllowedAuthorised commercial transport service
Motorcycle / scooterAllowedTypically exempt from ZTL restrictions (but city-specific)
Electric vehiclesAllowedEVs and hybrids (full electric mode) usually exempt
Tourist / non-residentBannedPark outside ZTL — use park-and-ride lots

Non-residents who need legitimate ZTL access (hotel guests, deliveries, weddings) must apply for a temporary permit (autorizzazione temporanea) with the comune online before entering. Hotels can request permits for guests; commercial activities can register their vehicle plate for delivery hours. Foreign-registered vehicles work the same — ANPR cameras read all EU plates.

Frequently asked questions about green zones in Germany

Plakette rules, fines, exemptions, foreign-registered cars and the Diesel-Fahrverbot — everything tourists and residents need to know before driving into a German Umweltzone.

  • What is an Italian ZTL (Zona a Traffico Limitato)?

    An Italian ZTL (Zona a Traffico Limitato) is a restricted-access zone in a city historic centre where only authorised vehicles can enter during active hours. Unlike Germany's Umweltzone or France's ZFE-m, ZTL is not based on Euro emission class — it's a permit-and-resident system. Nearly every major Italian city has a ZTL covering its Centro Storico: Roma (6 sub-zones), Firenze (5), Milano (Area B + Area C), Bologna, Napoli, Torino, Verona, Pisa, Lucca, Padova, Brescia and dozens more. Operating hours typically weekdays 7:30–19:30; some are 24/7 (Lucca, Milano Area B).

  • How does the Italian ZTL system work?

    Italian ZTL enforcement is via ANPR cameras (varchi elettronici) at every entry point reading licence plates. Each entry is checked against a database of authorised vehicles: - Residents get a free annual permit (Permesso ZTL) from the comune - Commercial vehicles can register for delivery-hour access - Hotels register guests' plates for the duration of stay - Taxis, public buses, emergency services, electric vehicles are typically exempt Non-authorised entry during active hours = automatic ANPR fine. There is no sticker to buy — access is entirely based on plate registration.

  • Who can enter an Italian ZTL?

    Allowed during active hours (without special permit): - Residents of the ZTL with annual permit - Commercial / delivery vehicles during designated loading hours (usually 6:00–9:00) - Public buses, taxis, NCC drivers - Emergency services (police, fire, ambulance, carabinieri) - Electric and full-hybrid vehicles in EV mode (city-dependent) - Vehicles for disabled persons with permit (Contrassegno Disabili) - Motorcycles and scooters (most cities exempt; check locally) Forbidden without permit during active hours: - Tourists and non-residents — must park outside the ZTL - All other passenger cars without prior authorisation

  • What is the fine for entering an Italian ZTL without authorisation?

    ZTL fines vary by city: €80–€166 per violation. Most common: €84 (Roma, Verona, Pisa) / €87 (Bologna, Torino) / €91 (Firenze) / €102 (Milano). Legal basis: Codice della Strada Art. 7. Reduced rate (–30%) if paid within 5 days — typical in Italy. Can rise by up to 50% if unpaid beyond 60 days. Each automatic camera reading = separate fine: if you enter and leave ZTL twice in a day, you get two fines. Foreign-registered vehicles are not exempt. Fines arrive by post via EU Directive 2015/413 (CBE) — usually 4-8 weeks. Italian ANPR systems read all EU plates automatically. Many tourists discover the fines months later.

  • How can a tourist or non-resident get ZTL access?

    Three legitimate ways for non-residents: 1. Hotel-arranged permit: tell your hotel your arrival plate. Hotels register guests with the comune (usually free). The most common method for tourists. 2. Temporary online permit (Autorizzazione Temporanea): request via the city's mobility portal before entering. Available for weddings, medical visits, moving house. Free or small fee (€5–€15). 3. Commercial subscription: businesses with regular delivery to ZTL can subscribe to annual commercial access. Not for occasional visits. NEVER assume your hotel's location is outside ZTL without checking — many central hotels ARE inside, and you DO need permit to drive there. Email the hotel ahead and ask: 'Sono entro la ZTL?'

  • I drive a foreign-registered car — do ZTL rules apply?

    Yes — ZTL applies identically to all EU and non-EU plates. ANPR cameras read German, French, Polish, Belgian, UK, Ukrainian, Russian, Swiss plates the same as Italian ones. There is no foreign-vehicle exemption. Three common scenarios: 1. Hotel inside ZTL: arrange permit via hotel before arriving. Provide them your plate number. 2. Day trip with car: park outside the ZTL using P+R lots. Most Italian historic centres have well-marked park-and-ride with shuttle/metro/tram to the centre. Cheaper than fines. 3. Driving through: avoid by following the SatNav's 'avoid ZTL' option, or use the autostrada A-roads outside the city. Cross-border fine collection works via EU Directive 2015/413 (CBE). Italian Polizia Locale issues fines to foreign plates within 6 months of the violation — they arrive at your home address by post in your native language.