Italy’s top court rules against tourist refused tap water in Dolomites hotel
Italy's supreme court has ruled that hoteliers are not legally obligated to serve tap water to customers. The case originated in 2019 when a tourist at a five-star hotel in the Dolomites repeatedly requested tap water with her meals, which was refused.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedItaly's supreme court has ruled that hoteliers are not legally obligated to serve tap water to customers. The case originated in 2019 when a tourist at a five-star hotel in the Dolomites repeatedly requested tap water with her meals, which was refused. Instead, she was provided with expensive bottled water. The tourist argued that water is a universal human right and an integral part of hotel services, seeking compensation for damages. However, both lower courts and the supreme court dismissed her case, stating no Italian law mandates the provision of tap water by hoteliers.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThere is no law in Italy obliging restaurant managers or hoteliers to serve customers tap water.
Italy's top court ruled that being served tap water is not a consumer right.
The tourist sought €2,700 in compensation for economic damage and emotional distress.
A tourist was refused tap water at a hotel in the Italian Dolomites and instead was charged for bottled water.
Asking for free tap water in Italy is generally considered a breach of etiquette.