
Italy
Everybody knows that Venice can be expensive, but seven tourists from Rome were bitterly surprised after their bill for four cafes and three liquor in an open cafeteria was € 100, according to “Reuters”.
The unfortunate scene has played out in the famous cafe Lavena on Square “San Marco”. This is the place visited every morning from the composer Richard Wagner during his stay in the city.
From the receipt that tourists are posted on the wall on Facebook, it becomes clear that what is not seen on the menu is the price paid for the music that is 6 euros per person. It equals € 42, which is half of the bill.
Owners of the cafe, opened in 1750, in which guests are served by waiters in white shirts on the background of music from a chamber orchestra, defend themselves by explaining that all prices – 6 euros for coffee, 10 euros for liquor and prices for the music are written in the menu.
“If they found the price too high, they could go somewhere else, as many people do, or drink coffee standing inside the bar, where it costs just one euro,” said manager Lavena Massimo Milanese to the newspaper Corriere della Sera.
Western Balkans
At the height of the tourist season, there is a huge difference in the cost of going to a Cafeteria in the cities of the Western Balkans, according to a survey of Anatolian Agency.
Coffee in Dubrovnik costs 3.5 euros, in Sarajevo – 1 euro. A juice in Budva cost from 2 to 4 euros, while in Skopje – 1 euro.
The results of the research made by the Anatolia news agency showed that the most expensive is drinking coffee and juice in Dubrovnik and Budva, while the cheapest is in Sarajevo, Skopje and Pristina. In an ordinary cafe in Sarajevo can drink coffee at a price of € 0.75 to € 1. The juice costs 1.5 euros, mineral water – 1 euro beer is two euros and ice cream can get to 0.5 euros.
For a medium-out walk in Sarajevo should be separated from 2 to 5 euros.
In the cafes of Pristina with standard prices the coffee costs about one euro, the juice is 1.5 euros, beer is 1.5 euros mineral water is 0.5 euros, while ice cream is about 0.5 euros.
For one going out for a man in Pristina needed 2 to 5 euros.
In a standard cafe in Skopje the coffee cost from 1 to 2 euros, the juice is one euro beer is 2 euros, mineral water is 1 euro, while ice cream is 0.5 euros.
In the capitals of the region the highest prices are in Zagreb and Belgrade.
In Belgrade the coffee in a cafe standard cost from 1.5 to 3 euros, the beer is from 1 to 2 euros, mineral water is 1 euro, while ice cream is from 0.5 to 1 euro. For one going out with a friend in Belgrade this requires 6 to 8 euros.
In an average cafe in Zagreb the coffee cost from 1.2 to 2 euros, the juice is 2 euros, mineral water – 1 euro, beer is from 1.5 to 2 euros, while ice cream is 0.6 euros.
Prices of the Croatian and Montenegrin coast are much higher than the above. The most expensive are in Dubrovnik, Makarska and Budva, while in Bosnia and Herzegovina in Neum for a trip in the cafeteria must devote significantly less money.
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