Does anyone use a motorway toll tag for travel by car through France and into Italy, and if so what are your experiences and would you recommend using a toll tag? Thank you
chris18's activity
Questions Asked
Hi,
I'm looking for a little information or advice in relation to Gaia, the Italian utility company who supply our water.
Hi,
I wonder if anyone else has been through the Enel online bill payment registration process please?
Are you driving from the UK to Italy this summer? If so, which route do you take and where do you go?
Hi, I wonder if anyone can assist me with a purchase please.
I need to buy a brushcutter for our garden. I think I need a 4 stroke 25cc or 35cc brushcutter. Has anyone got any tips as to the best manufacturer?.
Are you driving from the UK to Italy this summer? Which route do you take and which part of Italy do you travel too?
If i'm buying a piece of land for €3000 which adjoins my house, do I need to use a notaio? I don't want to, but I have a feeling I might be required to.
Does anyone know if Supermarkets in France and Italy accept gift cards from UK supermarkets such as Sainsburys, Tesco etc.
I'm driving to Italy this summer. Can anyone recommend a decent value hotel on the outskirts fof Colmar, France for a one night stay.
Comments posted
Thanks for that Alan. In the summer we go through Great St Bernard Tunnel or Gottard Tunnel, so the electronic vignette would be all round more efficient than the sticky one. I don’t know if you’ve looked at the Bip&Go website, but their facility CAN be used in Italy - it’s an additional subscription fee over and above the arrangement to use it in France, but in practice it can be used in Italy. I must admit I am looking forward to sailing through the barriers without having to stop and pay in both France and Italy!
Thanks for your reply Alan. I’ve been doing a bit of research and Bip & Go looks like a realistic prospect.
What I am looking for is a facility which allows me to use it in France and Italy as I’ll be travelling from Calais to Lucca.
Well done. You've prepared thoroughly and have enjoyed a relatively stress free journey as a direct result.
There are a few other Italy Forums, and I note that on those other forums a number of people are posting messages where they have had pretty much the same experience as you - thorough prep followed by a surprisingly 'light touch' at the border check points.
@Clueless in Italy @alan h
Quite right. If our Italian friends require us to quarantine for 5 days then so be it. We would expect them to respect our requirements if the situation was reversed, so we must respect theirs.
Tony, thank you very much for the info re the ferry to Elba.
You should be OK, you've clearly taken all reasonable steps. Are you going ferry or eurotunnel? We use eurotunnel, just out of personal preference.
Do you drive through France and into Italy, or France/Swiss/Italy? The reason I ask is because we really enjoy the drive, so much so that when we get to the Italian border i'm sometimes tempted to go back to Calais and start all over again. This idea is not popular with my family!
In the past we've stayed in Calais just outside the tunnel at an Ibis that sells decent food in its own restaurant, room service only during Covid. We've also stayed at Reims, Metz, Bourg en Bresse and latterly Troyes - all very nice to look around. In Switzerland we've stayed in Colmar and Lugano. We've used the Gottard tunnel (free with Swiss vignette) , Mont Blanc tunnel (€45 one way), and Great St Bernard tunnel (€28 one way).
I'd be inclined to take a relaxed approach.
If they ask just tell them that you're taking some old bits and pieces to your second home.As long as the vehicle towing the trailer does not advertise secondhand goods or antiques you should be OK, as it will appear non-commercial.
At the moment, no restrictions on entry to France, and from 26 June no restrictions on entering Swiss. The over-arching caveat is of course, that both countries will want to see double jab Covid vaccine record, and it would be wise to take a PCR/other Covid test less than 48 hours before entering France. Good Luck.
I think you would enjoy Troyes.
We've not stopped at any of the War memorials but every time we pass the Forest at Verdun. Homage is not a strong enough word.
I see you stay south of Pisa. Have you ever been on the ferry to Elba? We have'nt been to Elba but I would be interested to hear if you have.
I hope my positivity is not misplaced! After Eurotunnel Calais, we head to Troyes, nice old medieval centre and some good restaurants to eat outside. At this stage it's full on holiday mode in the car. After a night in Troyes we head also to Lausanne, via some of the villages in the Jura.
I have to confess the restaurant prices in Lausanne make me happy that my end destination is Italy. From Lausanne we head to The Great St Bernard tunnel. Now, I don't know what your experiences have been in continental tunnels, but we've previously used the Mont Blanc tunnel (busy-ish and pricey) and the Gottard tunnel (mass tourism but free). The best one of those two in my opinion is the Gottard. If you go Gottard, there's a great service station at Stalvedro Sud and you are surrounded by people with big smiles on their faces as they are all holiday bound, but what hit's you is the sudden change in the landscape - you've entered the Gottard in something which is very Swiss, but you exit to a landscape which so Italian. The Great St Bernard is as you know not too busy and reasonably priced, with the addition of that cafe at the AGIP. The on in to Italia!
I hope my positivity is not misplaced! After Eurotunnel Calais, we head to Troyes, nice old medieval centre and some good restaurants to eat outside. At this stage it's full on holiday mode in the car. After a night in Troyes we head also to Lausanne, via some of the villages in the Jura.
I have to confess the restaurant prices in Lausanne make me happy that my end destination is Italy. From Lausanne we head to The Great St Bernard tunnel. Now, I don't know what your experiences have been in continental tunnels, but we've previously used the Mont Blanc tunnel (busy-ish and pricey) and the Gottard tunnel (mass tourism but free). The best one of those two in my opinion is the Gottard. If you go Gottard, there's a great service station at Stalvedro Sud and you are surrounded by people with big smiles on their faces as they are all holiday bound, but what hit's you is the sudden change in the landscape - you've entered the Gottard in something which is very Swiss, but you exit to a landscape which so Italian. The Great St Bernard is as you know not too busy and reasonably priced, with the addition of that cafe at the AGIP. The on in to Italia!