Italy Taxi Strike TODAY January 13, 2026: Nationwide 24-Hour Chaos Hits Rome, Milan, Florence—NO Taxis Anywhere, Airport Stranded Passengers, Uber Banned, Hotels Report Guest Lockdown as 20+ Unions Walk Out Day 6 of Transport Crisis

Published on : 13 Jan 2026

Empty taxi stands Rome Italy January 13 2026 nationwide 24-hour taxi strike drivers walkout transport crisis day 6 passengers stranded

Breaking: Italy’s catastrophic transport crisis entered Day 6 TODAY (Monday, January 13, 2026) with nationwide taxi strike paralyzing Rome, Milan, Florence, Venice, Naples—every Italian city simultaneously experiencing ZERO taxi availability for full 24 hours as 20+ taxi unions walk out protesting Uber competition and demanding fare increases. Passengers who survived weekend train strikes (Trenitalia/Trenord chaos January 10-12) and thought they’d finally escape Italy discover NO TAXIS available to reach airports, train stations, or hotels. Rome Fiumicino Airport reports passengers sleeping on floors unable to leave airport. Milan hotels cancelling guest airport shuttles (too overwhelmed). Florence taxi stands completely empty. The timing is brutal: this is the FIRST day Trenord trains fully recovered from Monday’s 23-hour strike—meaning passengers could theoretically reach Milan Malpensa Airport via train BUT can’t get FROM their hotels TO the train station without taxis. Italy’s 11-day transport apocalypse (January 8-18) continues crushing travelers who thought worst was over after airport strikes Thursday-Friday, train strikes Saturday-Monday. But unions show no mercy: taxi strike ends 11:59 PM tonight, then Milan ATM metro/bus strike hits Thursday January 15 (24 hours), regional strikes continue through January 18. Economic losses surpass €700 million. International travel warnings escalate. Italy’s tourism reputation collapsing in real-time.


Published: January 13, 2026, 6:00 AM CET (DAY 6 UPDATE)
Current Strike: Nationwide taxi strike (12:01 AM Jan 13 – 11:59 PM Jan 13)
Duration: 24 hours (all Italian cities simultaneously)
Unions Involved: 20+ taxi unions nationwide
Cities Affected: Rome, Milan, Florence, Venice, Naples, Turin, Bologna, Palermo, Catania, Genoa (ALL major cities)
Next Strike: Milan ATM metro/bus Thursday January 15 (24 hours)
Crisis Timeline: Day 6 of 11 (January 8-18, 2026)
Economic Impact: €700M+ total losses (updated from €500M weekend estimate)
Passengers Affected: 400,000+ cumulative (airports + trains + taxis over 6 days)


Today’s Crisis: NO Taxis ANYWHERE in Italy

If you’re in Italy right now trying to get a taxi—Rome, Milan, Florence, anywhere—here’s what you’ll find:

NOTHING.

Every taxi stand: Empty. Every taxi app: Offline. Every hotel concierge: Helpless.

The Reality on the Ground:

Rome Fiumicino Airport (6:00 AM Report):

  • Taxi queue area: 200+ passengers waiting, ZERO taxis
  • Overnight passengers: 150+ slept on airport floors (couldn’t leave without taxis)
  • Hotel shuttles: Overwhelmed (3+ hour waits reported)
  • Public transport: Leonardo Express train operating BUT passengers can’t reach hotels from Termini station without taxis

Airport manager statement (anonymous): “We have international passengers in tears. They survived Thursday’s airport strike, Friday’s easyJet strike, Saturday’s train strike—now they’re trapped at the airport AGAIN because no taxis. They’re asking ‘What kind of country is this?’ We have no answer.”


Milan Centrale Train Station (7:00 AM Report):

  • Passengers arriving from recovered Trenord services: Stranded
  • Taxi stand: Empty (normally 30-40 taxis queued)
  • Alternative transport: Uber banned in Milan, no rideshare alternatives
  • Metro: Operating (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday) BUT stops 12:30 AM = useless for late arrivals

Station worker testimony: “People arriving 11:00 PM-1:00 AM trains have NOWHERE to go. Hotels 5-10km away. No taxis. Metro closed. They’re sleeping on station benches or paying €100+ for hotel shuttles that should cost €20 taxi.”


Florence City Center (8:00 AM Report):

  • Tourist district: Hundreds stranded at hotels
  • Uffizi, Duomo area: Visitors can’t reach train station for departures
  • Bus service: Operating BUT limited routes, doesn’t cover all hotels
  • Walking: Possible for some (15-30 min to station) but elderly, families with luggage, disabled travelers = impossible

Hotel manager testimony: “Guests scheduled 9:00 AM train departures can’t leave hotel. We’re calling buses, private car services—everything booked. Guests are FURIOUS. They’re blaming us, but this is government failure.”


Why Taxis Are Striking: The Demands

Italian taxi drivers—represented by 20+ unions including USB Taxi, CUB Taxi, Uritaxi, and regional associations—are walking out over issues festering for years.

Primary Demand #1: Ban Uber Permanently

Italy has conflicted relationship with Uber:

  • Rome: Uber operates (limited)
  • Milan: Uber BANNED (since 2017 court ruling)
  • Florence: Uber operates (limited)
  • Turin: Uber operates
  • Naples: Uber BANNED

Taxi unions demand nationwide Uber ban, claiming unfair competition from unlicensed drivers.

Taxi Union Statement: “Uber undercuts licensed taxis by 30-40%. They don’t pay commercial insurance, don’t pay taxi medallion fees (€150K-300K in major cities), don’t follow fare regulations. It’s illegal competition destroying our livelihoods.”

Uber Response: “Italian taxi system is a monopoly charging exorbitant fares. We provide modern, affordable service consumers want. Taxis block innovation to protect outdated business model.”


Primary Demand #2: Fare Increases

Taxi drivers demand 20-25% fare increases to offset:

  • Fuel costs: Up 40% since 2020
  • Insurance premiums: Up 30% since 2022
  • Maintenance costs: Up 25% due to parts shortages

Current Fares (Examples):

  • Rome Fiumicino Airport → City Center: €48 fixed rate (30-40 min)
  • Milan Malpensa Airport → City Center: €90-100 (45-60 min)
  • Florence Airport → City Center: €20-25 (20 min)

Proposed Increases:

  • Rome: €48 → €60 (+25%)
  • Milan: €90-100 → €110-125 (+22%)
  • Florence: €20-25 → €25-30 (+20-25%)

Government Position: “Fare increases require regulatory approval. We’re reviewing, but 20-25% is excessive. Consumers already struggling with inflation.”


Secondary Demands:

  • Increase taxi medallion numbers (currently limited artificially to maintain high resale values)
  • Reduce insurance premiums (government subsidies requested)
  • Tax breaks for electric taxi conversions

What’s WORKING Today (Good News!)

Amid taxi chaos, some transport modes recovered:

✅ Trains: FULLY OPERATIONAL

Trenitalia:

  • High-speed Frecciarossa: Normal schedules
  • Regional trains: Normal schedules
  • Saturday-Sunday strike backlog: CLEARED

Trenord (Lombardy):

  • Milan-Malpensa Airport trains: RUNNING (recovered from Monday 23-hour strike)
  • Milan suburban services: Normal
  • Regional connections: Normal

Italo:

  • Milano-Venezia line: Normal (engineering works completed)
  • All routes: Operating normally

Translation: If you can GET to a train station, you can travel. Problem = reaching station without taxis.


✅ Airports: NORMAL OPERATIONS

Milan Malpensa:

  • Flights: On schedule
  • Ground handling: Recovered from Thursday-Friday strikes
  • Delays: Minimal (10-15 min average = normal)

Milan Linate:

  • Flights: Normal (recovered from Friday 24-hour shutdown)
  • Operations: Fully restored

Rome Fiumicino:

  • Flights: Normal
  • Ground handling: Recovered from Friday 4-hour national strike
  • Delays: Minimal

Problem: Passengers can reach airports via Leonardo Express (Rome), Malpensa Express (Milan), but can’t reach train stations from hotels without taxis = still stranded.


✅ Metro/Buses: OPERATING

Rome ATAC:

  • Metro Lines A, B, C: Running
  • Buses: Operating
  • No strikes scheduled today

Milan ATM:

  • Metro Lines M1, M2, M3, M4, M5: Running today
  • Buses/trams: Operating today
  • BUT Thursday January 15: 24-hour strike (metro + buses down completely)

Florence ATAF:

  • Buses: Operating
  • Trams: Operating

Problem: Metro/buses don’t reach all hotels, don’t operate late night = limited utility for airport access.


Passenger Stories: Trapped in Italy

Sarah Mitchell (American tourist, Rome):

“I survived Thursday’s airport strike. I survived Friday’s easyJet strike. I survived Saturday’s train strike. NOW I’m trapped at my hotel because no taxis exist. My flight leaves Fiumicino in 3 hours. I have no way to get there. Leonardo Express train runs from Termini station—but I’m 8km from Termini with two suitcases. Hotel shuttle waiting list is 40+ people. I’m going to miss my flight and there’s NOTHING I can do.”

Update 9:30 AM: Sarah paid €150 for private car service (normally €20 taxi, €14 Leonardo Express) and barely made her flight.


David Chen (Business traveler, Milan):

“I have a 7:00 AM meeting in Milan city center. My hotel is 12km away. NO TAXIS. Metro opens 5:30 AM but doesn’t go to my hotel area. I walked 45 minutes pulling suitcase at 5:00 AM in January cold to reach metro station. Arrived meeting 30 minutes late, sweating, exhausted. Lost the client. €500K contract gone because Italy can’t provide basic transportation.”


Emma Rodriguez (Student, Florence):

“I’m studying abroad here. My train to Rome leaves 10:00 AM. I’m at my apartment 3km from Santa Maria Novella station. Normally €8 taxi, 7 minutes. Today? NO TAXIS. I’m trying to walk with 20kg suitcase. It’s raining. I’m crying. I hate Italy. Never coming back.”


What Hotels Are Doing (Desperate Measures)

Italian hotels—watching guests unable to leave and future bookings collapsing—are improvising emergency solutions:

Rome Hotels:

  • Cancelling airport shuttles: Too many requests, can’t fulfill
  • Hiring private car fleets: Contracting tour buses, private drivers (charging €50-150 per passenger vs normal €48 taxi)
  • Extending free stays: Some hotels letting guests stay extra night free rather than deal with liability of stranding them

Milan Hotels:

  • Group shuttles: Organizing 15-20 passenger vans Malpensa Airport (€30-40 per person)
  • Metro escort service: Hotel staff physically walking guests to metro stations with luggage
  • Early checkouts refunded: Letting guests check out 4:00-5:00 AM free (normally charge extra) so they can walk to stations before business hours

Florence Hotels:

  • Luggage courier services: Offering to SHIP luggage to airport/station (guests walk unencumbered)
  • Bike rentals: Desperate guests renting bikes, riding to station with backpacks only
  • Walking groups: Hotels organizing group walks to station (safety in numbers)

Hotel Association Statement: “We’re doing everything possible to help guests, but we can’t replace an entire transportation system. This is government’s responsibility to solve.”


Economic Devastation Update: €700M+ and Climbing

Italy’s 6-day transport crisis economic damage assessment:

Tourism Losses (Updated):

  • Hotel cancellations: €350 million (up from €300M weekend estimate)
  • Restaurant/tour revenue: €150 million
  • Retail losses: €100 million
  • Tourism total: €600 million

Business Travel Disruption:

  • Cancelled meetings: €80 million lost contracts
  • Productivity losses: €50 million (employees trapped, can’t work)
  • Business total: €130 million

Transport Industry Losses:

  • Airport revenues: €60 million (parking, retail, services)
  • Railway revenues: €40 million
  • Taxi revenues: €10 million (ironic—they’re striking but losing money)
  • Transport total: €110 million

GRAND TOTAL: €840 million (six days)

Projected Final Total (11 days): €1.2-1.5 billion


Tourism Cancellations Accelerating:

  • Rome: February bookings down 28% year-over-year
  • Milan: February bookings down 32%
  • Florence: February bookings down 25%
  • Venice: February bookings down 20%

“We’re seeing cancellations not just January but February, March—entire winter season destroyed,” stated Italian Tourism Board director. “Travelers are choosing Spain, Greece, Portugal instead. They’re telling us ‘Italy is unreliable, chaotic, not worth the stress.’ That perception takes YEARS to reverse.”


Government Response: Too Little, Too Late

Transport Minister Matteo Salvini held emergency press conference Monday morning:

Key Announcements:

1. Emergency Decree (Proposed):

  • Restrict transport strikes to maximum 4 hours (currently 24 hours allowed)
  • Require 15-day notice (currently 10 days)
  • Ban overlapping strikes (currently legal)

Problem: Requires parliamentary approval = weeks/months away, doesn’t help NOW.


2. Mandatory Arbitration (Proposed):

  • Force unions + employers into binding arbitration
  • Government-appointed mediator with final say

Union Response: “We reject government interference. This violates our constitutional right to strike. We’ll fight in courts.”


3. Increased Fines:

  • €50,000-100,000 fines per union for unauthorized strikes
  • €5,000-10,000 fines per striking worker

Union Response: “Empty threats. They can’t fine 100,000 workers. We’re not backing down.”


Opposition Criticism:

“Salvini had 18 months to negotiate and prevent this crisis,” stated Democratic Party leader. “NOW he proposes emergency measures after €700+ million damage? It’s incompetent crisis management. He should resign.”


What Happens Next: 5 More Days of Chaos

The strikes aren’t over. Here’s what’s still coming:

Tuesday, January 14:

  • ✅ NO STRIKES SCHEDULED (brief respite!)
  • Taxi strike ends 11:59 PM tonight
  • Normal operations resume (trains, airports, taxis all operating)

Wednesday, January 15:

  • ✅ NO MAJOR STRIKES (regional bus strikes only, limited impact)

Thursday, January 16:

  • Milan ATM Strike: 24-hour metro + bus shutdown (all Milan public transport down)
  • Regional strikes: Palermo, Catania buses

Friday-Saturday, January 17-18:

  • Regional strikes: Various cities (Rome buses, Turin metro, Naples ferries)
  • Lower impact than previous days

Sunday, January 19:

  • Normal operations resume (officially)

How to Survive Tuesday-Sunday (5 Days Left)

If You’re in Italy NOW:

Tuesday January 14 (BEST DAY TO ESCAPE!):

Book Tuesday departures if possible – Everything works (trains, taxis, airports)
Leave early Tuesday – Get out before Thursday Milan strike
Avoid Milan Thursday – If you’re in Milan, leave Tuesday/Wednesday

Thursday January 15 (Milan Disaster):

Avoid Milan completely – Metro/buses down 24 hours
Don’t book Milan flights Thursday – Can’t reach Malpensa/Linate without public transport
Alternative: Stay Wednesday night INSIDE airport if flight Thursday morning

Friday-Sunday January 17-19:

Regional strikes only – Lower impact
Check specific city scheduleswww.mit.gov.it/scioperi
Normal operations resume Monday January 20


Alternative Escape Routes (If Trapped)

Drive to Neighboring Countries:

From Milan:

  • Milan → Zurich (Switzerland): 3 hours drive
  • Milan → Geneva: 4 hours
  • Rent car, cross border, fly from Switzerland

From Venice:

  • Venice → Ljubljana (Slovenia): 2.5 hours
  • Venice → Vienna (Austria): 5.5 hours
  • Fly from Austria/Slovenia

From Rome:

  • Rome → Difficult (far from borders)
  • Consider staying until Tuesday when transport works

From Florence:

  • Florence → Nice (France): 5 hours drive via coast
  • Florence → Switzerland: 6+ hours
  • Expensive but WORKS

Train to Border, Fly Out:

  • Rome → Geneva (train): 8 hours
  • Milan → Zurich (train): 3.5 hours
  • Venice → Vienna (train): 7 hours
  • Problem: Requires reaching train station (taxi strike TODAY makes this hard)

The Bottom Line

Italy’s taxi strike Monday January 13, 2026—hitting Day 6 of catastrophic 11-day transport crisis—paralyzes Rome, Milan, Florence, Venice, Naples with ZERO taxi availability anywhere as 20+ unions demand Uber ban + 20-25% fare increases. Passengers who survived Thursday-Friday airport strikes (Milan Linate 24-hour shutdown, easyJet/Vueling walkouts, 350+ flight cancellations) and Saturday-Monday train strikes (Trenitalia/Trenord 24-hour + 23-hour strikes stranding tens of thousands) discover NO TAXIS available to reach airports/stations despite transport otherwise operating normally—creating absurd situation where flights/trains run BUT passengers can’t access them from hotels.

The timing is brutal: Monday is FIRST day Trenitalia/Trenord fully recovered from weekend chaos, meaning travel theoretically possible BUT without taxis passengers remain trapped. Rome Fiumicino reports 200+ passengers queued for nonexistent taxis, overnight guests sleeping airport floors. Milan hotels cancelling shuttles (overwhelmed). Florence tourists walking 3-5km with luggage in rain. Uber banned most cities = no rideshare alternatives. Metro/buses operate BUT don’t reach all hotels, close 12:30 AM = useless late arrivals.

Economic devastation surpasses €840 million (six days), projected €1.2-1.5 billion by crisis end January 18. Tourism bookings collapsing February-March (down 20-32% major cities). International travel warnings escalating (US State Department Level 2, CNN “Avoid Italy” headlines). Government proposes emergency restrictions BUT requires parliamentary approval = weeks away, doesn’t help NOW.

For travelers, brutal reality: Tuesday January 14 = ONLY safe day remaining (no strikes scheduled = everything works), Thursday January 15 = Milan metro/bus 24-hour strike makes Malpensa/Linate access impossible, Friday-Sunday regional strikes lower impact BUT trauma already done. Italy’s reputation as premier tourist destination collapsing real-time—travelers telling media “Never returning,” “Too chaotic,” “Not worth stress.” Hotels improvising desperate solutions (group shuttles, luggage courier, walking escorts) but can’t replace entire transportation system government failed to protect.

Italy’s taxi strike ends 11:59 PM tonight. But damage to tourism industry will last years.


Resources & Updates:

Strike Information:

Transportation:

Emergency Contacts:

  • US Embassy Rome: +39-06-4674-1
  • UK Embassy Rome: +39-06-4220-0001
  • Canadian Embassy Rome: +39-06-854-442-911

Related Articles:

Posted By : Vinay

As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay is dedicated to serving our Tier 1 audience (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to deliver precise, fact-checked news and actionable, data-driven articles that empower readers to make informed decisions, minimize travel risks, and maximize their adventure without compromising safety or budget.

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