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🇮🇹 Italy

Milan

Where Gothic spires meet cutting-edge design, and every evening ends with an Aperol Spritz on a canal-side terrace.

3-Day ItineraryBudget-FriendlyApr – Jun Best
Explore
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Currency
EUR (Euro)
1 USD ≈ 0.92 EUR
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Language
Italian
Good English in business/fashion areas
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Timezone
CET (UTC+1)
CEST (UTC+2) in summer
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Best Months
Apr – Jun, Sep – Oct
15–27°C, pleasant & dry
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Daily Budget
~$75–120 USD
€70–110 budget–midrange
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Visa
Schengen Zone
90 days visa-free for most
How long are you staying?

1 day in Milan

Only got 24 hours? Here's how to experience the best of Milan in a single action-packed day.

Day 1

Milan Highlights in 24 Hours

🌅 Morning

Duomo & Rooftop Terraces

Start at Milan's Duomo — the third-largest church in the world, 600 years in the making. The exterior has 3,400 statues and 135 spires. Take the lift (€14) or stairs (€10) to the rooftop terraces — walk among the Gothic spires with views stretching to the Alps on clear days. Inside, the stained glass is extraordinary. Then walk through the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II — the world's oldest shopping mall.

Tip: Book Duomo rooftop tickets online — the queue for walk-ups can be 90 minutes. Morning light is best for photos.
☀️ Afternoon

The Last Supper & Brera

Pre-book Leonardo da Vinci's Last Supper at Santa Maria delle Grazie (€15, book months ahead on the official site — only 30 people every 15 minutes). The 25-minute viewing is intense and moving. Walk to the Brera district — Milan's art quarter with the Pinacoteca di Brera (€15), independent galleries, and the Orto Botanico di Brera garden (free).

Tip: Last Supper tickets sell out 2–3 months ahead. Check for cancellations daily at 2pm on the official booking site.
🌙 Evening

Navigli — Aperitivo & Nightlife

Head to the Navigli canal district for Milan's best aperitivo scene. Most bars along Naviglio Grande and Naviglio Pavese offer cocktails (€8–12) with a generous buffet spread from 6–9pm. Start at Mag Café for craft cocktails or Rita for a bustling terrace. The canal-side walk at dusk, with reflections of coloured buildings in the water, is quintessentially Milanese.

Tip: Aperitivo in Navigli is competitive — scope out the buffet quality before ordering. The bigger the crowd, the better the spread.

3 days in Milan

A carefully curated route mixing iconic landmarks, hidden gems, street food, culture, and adventure — designed for younger travelers.

Day 1

Duomo, Last Supper & Navigli

🌅 Morning

Duomo & Rooftop Terraces

Start at the Duomo di Milano — 600 years in construction, the third-largest church on Earth. The rooftop terraces (€14 lift, €10 stairs) let you walk among 135 Gothic spires with views to the Alps on clear days. The interior's stained glass stretches to the vaulted ceiling. Walk through the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II — mosaic floors, luxury shops, and the famous Prada store.

Tip: Spin your heel three times on the bull mosaic in the Galleria floor for good luck — the tile has a visible dip from millions of spins.
☀️ Afternoon

The Last Supper

Pre-book Leonardo's Last Supper at Santa Maria delle Grazie (€15, book 2–3 months ahead). Only 30 visitors every 15 minutes — this intimate, climate-controlled viewing is unforgettable. The painting is larger than expected and the deterioration adds poignancy. Lunch afterwards at Pescaria in Brera — Sicilian-style seafood sandwiches (€8–12) that attract huge queues.

Tip: If official tickets are sold out, check daily at 2pm for cancellations — or book a guided museum tour that includes entry.
🌙 Evening

Navigli Aperitivo

The Navigli canal district is Milan's soul after dark. Most bars along Naviglio Grande offer aperitivo — a cocktail (€8–12) with an abundant buffet spread (6–9pm). Start at Mag Café, then walk the canal to Rita or Luca & Andrea for terrace drinks. The old workshops and coloured houses reflected in the still water at twilight are the most Instagrammable scene in the city.

Tip: Thursday is the big aperitivo night on the Navigli — the terraces fill up by 7pm, so arrive early to claim a canal-side seat.
Day 2

Brera, Fashion District & Cultura

🌅 Morning

Brera — Art & Coffee

Brera is Milan's most beautiful neighbourhood — cobblestone streets, ivy-covered palazzi, and independent galleries. Start at the Pinacoteca di Brera (€15) for Mantegna's Dead Christ, Raphael's Marriage of the Virgin, and Caravaggio works. Walk through the Orto Botanico di Brera — a hidden botanical garden (free). Coffee at Jamaica Bar, where artists have gathered since 1911.

Tip: Brera is most atmospheric on a weekday morning — the galleries are quiet and the artisan shops are open without crowds.
☀️ Afternoon

Quadrilatero della Moda

Walk the Quadrilatero della Moda — Via Montenapoleone, Via della Spiga, Via Manzoni, and Corso Venezia form Milan's fashion rectangle. Even without buying, the window displays are art installations. Lunch at Panzerotti Luini near the Duomo — a Milan institution since 1888. Their fried panzerotti (€3) are a perfect portable lunch. The queue moves fast.

Tip: The fashion district stores have sale seasons in January and July — discounts of 30–70% on Italian designer brands.
🌙 Evening

Isola & Porta Nuova

Isola is Milan's creative, gentrified neighbourhood north of Porta Nuova. Walk through the Bosco Verticale (Vertical Forest) towers — two residential buildings covered in 900 trees and 20,000 plants. Dinner on Via Paolo Sarpi — Milan's Chinatown with authentic Chinese, Sichuan, and dumpling houses (mains €8–14). Drinks at Frida or Blue Note jazz club.

Tip: The Bosco Verticale is best photographed from Piazza Gae Aulenti at golden hour — the entire Porta Nuova skyline is stunning.
Day 3

Castello, Canals & Hidden Milan

🌅 Morning

Castello Sforzesco & Sempione

Castello Sforzesco (free courtyard, museums €5) was the seat of Milan's Sforza dynasty. The museums inside hold Michelangelo's final, unfinished sculpture — the Rondanini Pietà — and a collection spanning Egyptian artefacts to Renaissance armour. Walk through Parco Sempione behind the castle to the Arco della Pace triumphal arch. The park is peaceful in the morning.

Tip: The museums are free on the first and third Tuesday of each month after 2pm — and the Rondanini Pietà alone is worth the visit.
☀️ Afternoon

Fondazione Prada & South Milan

Take the metro to Fondazione Prada (€15) — a converted gin distillery turned contemporary art complex designed by Rem Koolhaas. The gold-clad Haunted House building is iconic. The permanent collection and rotating exhibitions are world-class. Have lunch at Bar Luce inside — designed by Wes Anderson, with pastel Formica furniture and Italian film nostalgia.

Tip: Bar Luce at Fondazione Prada is the most Instagrammed cafe in Milan — the Wes Anderson design is worth a coffee stop even without the museum.
🌙 Evening

Colonne di San Lorenzo & Ticinese

The Colonne di San Lorenzo — 16 Roman columns from the 3rd century — are Milan's unofficial gathering spot. Every evening, locals sit on the steps with €2 beers and spritz from the surrounding bars. Walk through Porta Ticinese to the Navigli canals. For dinner, try Taglio (deli-restaurant, charcuterie boards €12–16) or Osteria dei Vecchi Sapori for traditional Milanese food.

Tip: The Colonne area is where Milanese students pre-game — grab drinks from the Carrefour Express and join the crowd.

7 days in Milan

A full week to go deep — from famous landmarks to local neighbourhoods, day trips, hidden gems, and proper local immersion.

Day 1

Duomo, Last Supper & Navigli

🌅 Morning

Duomo & Rooftop Terraces

Start at the Duomo di Milano — the Gothic masterpiece took 600 years to build. The rooftop terraces (€14 lift) let you walk among 135 spires and 3,400 statues with panoramic views to the Alps. Inside, the scale is staggering — five naves, 52 pillars, and extraordinary stained glass. Walk through the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II next door and spin on the bull mosaic.

Tip: Book Duomo rooftop tickets online to skip the 90-minute walk-up queue — morning light is best for photography.
☀️ Afternoon

The Last Supper

Pre-book Leonardo's Last Supper at Santa Maria delle Grazie (€15). Only 30 people every 15 minutes in a climate-controlled room. The painting is larger and more moving than photos suggest. Lunch at Luini near the Duomo — their fried panzerotti (€3) have been a Milan institution since 1888. The queue is always long but moves quickly.

Tip: Book 2–3 months ahead on the official site. Check daily at 2pm for cancellations — they do appear.
🌙 Evening

Navigli Aperitivo

Navigli canal district is where Milan unwinds. Aperitivo (6–9pm) at bars along Naviglio Grande — cocktails €8–12 with a buffet spread. Start at Mag Café for craft cocktails, then walk the canal to Rita or Luca & Andrea. The old artisan workshops and coloured buildings reflected in the canal at twilight are the most atmospheric scene in the city.

Tip: Thursday is the biggest aperitivo night — arrive by 6:30pm for a canal-side table or you will be standing.
Day 2

Brera, Fashion & Porta Nuova

🌅 Morning

Pinacoteca di Brera & Art Quarter

Pinacoteca di Brera (€15) is Milan's finest gallery — Mantegna's Dead Christ, Raphael's Marriage of the Virgin, Caravaggio, Bellini. The Brera neighbourhood itself is cobblestoned charm — independent galleries, the Orto Botanico (free), and Jamaica Bar where artists have met since 1911. Walk Via Fiori Chiari for antique shops.

Tip: Brera is free on the first Sunday of each month — arrive early as it gets crowded by noon.
☀️ Afternoon

Quadrilatero della Moda

The fashion district — Via Montenapoleone, Via della Spiga, Via Manzoni, Corso Venezia — is worth walking for the window displays alone. The architecture and interior design of these stores is art. Lunch at Paper Moon in Montenapoleone for excellent thin-crust pizza (€12–16) or find a panino shop on a side street for €5–7.

Tip: January and July sales see 30–70% discounts at Italian designer stores — even the luxury brands participate.
🌙 Evening

Isola & Porta Nuova

Walk through Porta Nuova — Milan's modern skyline centred on Piazza Gae Aulenti. The Bosco Verticale (Vertical Forest) towers are covered in 900 trees and are stunning at sunset. Cross into Isola — a creative neighbourhood with street art, craft beer bars, and Via Paolo Sarpi (Milan's Chinatown) for affordable Chinese, dumplings, and Sichuan food (mains €8–14).

Tip: Piazza Gae Aulenti has a free light show on the fountain most evenings — check from the raised platform.
Day 3

Castello Sforzesco & Hidden Milan

🌅 Morning

Castello Sforzesco

The Sforza Castle (courtyard free, museums €5) houses Michelangelo's Rondanini Pietà — his final, unfinished masterpiece — along with Egyptian artefacts, Renaissance armour, and medieval instruments. Walk through Parco Sempione to the Arco della Pace. The park has a good cafe for a morning coffee stop with views back to the castle.

Tip: Free museum entry on the first and third Tuesday after 2pm — the Rondanini Pietà alone justifies the visit.
☀️ Afternoon

Colonne di San Lorenzo & Ticinese

Walk to the Colonne di San Lorenzo — 16 Roman columns from the 3rd century where Milan's students and young professionals gather every evening. The Basilica di San Lorenzo Maggiore behind is a hidden gem. Continue through the Porta Ticinese neighbourhood to the Basilica of Sant'Eustorgio (€6 for the stunning Portinari Chapel). Lunch at a Ticinese trattoria.

Tip: The Portinari Chapel in Sant'Eustorgio has some of the finest Renaissance frescoes in Lombardy — and almost no visitors.
🌙 Evening

Tortona & Design District

The Tortona district is Milan's design and creative hub — converted industrial buildings now house ateliers, coworking spaces, and galleries. Base Milano is a cultural centre in a former train depot. MUDEC museum (€14) has global culture exhibitions. Dinner at one of the Tortona trattorias, then drinks at Spirit de Milan — a live music venue in a converted factory with jazz and swing.

Tip: Tortona explodes during Salone del Mobile (April) and Milan Fashion Week — but year-round it has a creative energy.
Day 4

Lake Como Day Trip

🌅 Morning

Train to Como & Lakefront

Trenord regional train from Milano Centrale to Como San Giovanni (1 hour, €5). Walk down to the lakefront — the promenade with the Alps rising from the water is immediately breathtaking. Take the Brunate funicular (€6 return) for panoramic views from 700 metres above the lake. The ride up through steep woods is half the fun.

Tip: Take the regional train, not Trenitalia Frecce — same route, €5 instead of €20. Depart by 8:30am.
☀️ Afternoon

Bellagio by Ferry

Ferry from Como to Bellagio (€12 slow ferry, €18 fast, 2 hours or 45 min). Bellagio — the "Pearl of the Lake" — has steep lanes, pastel houses, lakeside terraces, and Villa Melzi gardens (€6.50). Lunch at a lakeside trattoria — fresh lake fish with polenta (€12–16). The scenery of mountains plunging into blue water from the ferry is extraordinary.

Tip: The slow ferry is half the price and twice the experience — you see the entire shoreline, villas, and mountains.
🌙 Evening

Return & Milan Evening

Ferry back to Como and train to Milan. Use the evening to explore a neighbourhood you have not yet visited — try the aperitivo scene around Corso Como (10 Corso Como rooftop is iconic) or the authentic trattorias of the Porta Romana neighbourhood. Osteria del Treno near Centrale station serves classic Milanese risotto alla Milanese (€14).

Tip: The last train from Como to Milan departs around 10:30pm — check Trenord schedules to avoid being stranded.
Day 5

Contemporary Art & Science

🌅 Morning

Fondazione Prada

Fondazione Prada (€15) is a converted 1910 gin distillery redesigned by Rem Koolhaas. The gold-clad Haunted House, the permanent collection, and rotating exhibitions are world-class. Bar Luce — designed by Wes Anderson with pastel Formica and Italian cinema nostalgia — is the most Instagrammed cafe in Milan. Allow 2–3 hours for the full complex.

Tip: Bar Luce is open independently of the museum — you can enjoy the Wes Anderson interiors with just a coffee (€2).
☀️ Afternoon

Museo della Scienza e Tecnologia

The Museo Nazionale della Scienza e Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci (€10) is Italy's largest science museum — housed in a 16th-century monastery. The Leonardo da Vinci gallery has wooden models of his inventions, there is a real submarine to board, and interactive science exhibits. The cloisters themselves are beautiful. Lunch at the museum cafe or nearby on Via Olona.

Tip: The submarine tour has timed slots — book your time when you enter to avoid disappointment.
🌙 Evening

San Siro or La Scala

For football fans, the San Siro stadium (Stadio Giuseppe Meazza) seats 80,000 and hosts AC Milan and Inter. Match tickets from €20 on club websites. For culture, La Scala opera house offers last-minute tickets from €15 for upper gallery seats. The museum (€12) has original costumes and Verdi memorabilia. Either is an unforgettable Milanese evening.

Tip: La Scala last-minute gallery tickets go on sale the day of the performance — check the box office at 1pm.
Day 6

Markets, Food & Neighbourhoods

🌅 Morning

Mercato Comunale & Porta Romana

Explore Porta Romana — an authentic residential neighbourhood with the Mercato Comunale (covered food market) on Piazza XXIV Maggio. Local vendors sell fresh pasta, cheeses, cured meats, and seasonal produce. Breakfast at Pavé (Via Felice Casati) — Milan's best pastry shop with brioche and granita that rival Sicily. The neighbourhood has zero tourist infrastructure.

Tip: Pavé sells out of their signature crostata by noon — arrive before 10am for the full selection.
☀️ Afternoon

Cimitero Monumentale & Chinatown

The Cimitero Monumentale (free) is an extraordinary open-air sculpture museum — elaborate tombs and mausoleums from Milan's wealthiest families spanning 1866 to today. Art Nouveau, Gothic, Egyptian, and modern designs. Then walk to Via Paolo Sarpi (Chinatown) — hand-pulled noodles at Ravioleria Sarpi (€8), Sichuan dishes at Shuguolala, and excellent bubble tea.

Tip: The Cimitero Monumentale is one of Milan's most underrated attractions — the sculptures rival museum collections.
🌙 Evening

Navigli Dinner & Last Drinks

Return to Navigli for a proper sit-down dinner — El Brellin (traditional Milanese in a historic laundry house, mains €14–18), Osteria con Vista, or Al Pont de Ferr for creative Lombard cuisine. Walk the Naviglio Grande one last time at night — the canal reflections, wine bars, and artist studios create an atmosphere unique to Milan. End at Mag Café.

Tip: The Navigli antique market runs the last Sunday of each month along the canal — 400 stalls of vintage treasures.
Day 7

Farewell — Risotto, Shopping & Last Views

🌅 Morning

Highline Galleria & Last Duomo Visit

Visit the Highline Galleria (€12) — a glass walkway above the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II roof with close-up views of the iron-and-glass architecture and the Duomo spires. Take one more look at the Duomo interior if you rushed the first time. Walk through the Piazza dei Mercanti — Milan's medieval heart, hidden behind modern commerce.

Tip: The Highline Galleria is best at opening (10am) when the light streams through the glass roof structure.
☀️ Afternoon

Last Shopping & Souvenirs

For affordable shopping, head to Corso Buenos Aires — Europe's longest shopping street with over 350 stores. For food souvenirs, Eataly (Piazza XXV Aprile) has curated Italian products — olive oil, pasta, pesto. Peck (Via Spadari) is Milan's legendary gourmet food hall since 1883. A final risotto alla Milanese with ossobuco at Trattoria Masuelli (since 1921, mains €16–20).

Tip: Peck's basement is a wine cellar with over 3,000 Italian wines — a bottle of Barolo or Amarone makes an incredible souvenir.
🌙 Evening

Farewell Aperitivo

One final Milanese aperitivo — Terrazza Aperol on Piazza Duomo for an Aperol Spritz (€12) with the Duomo facade right in front of you, or Ceresio 7 rooftop pool bar for the fashion crowd and skyline views. Milan's goodbye is always sophisticated. The Malpensa Express to the airport runs every 30 minutes from Cadorna (€13, 52 minutes).

Tip: Malpensa Express from Cadorna is faster and cheaper than taxis (€90+). Last train is around 11pm — check schedules.

Budget tips

Aperitivo is dinner

Most Navigli and Isola bars offer generous buffet spreads with any drink (€8–12) from 6–9pm. Some spreads include pasta, rice, salads, and bruschetta — effectively a free dinner with your cocktail.

Free museum days

Many museums are free on the first Sunday of each month (Brera, Castello Sforzesco). First and third Tuesdays after 2pm for Castello museums. The Duomo exterior, Galleria, and most churches are free.

ATM transit passes

ATM daily pass: €7.60 (metro, tram, bus). 3-day: €13. Single ticket: €2.20 (90 min). Milan is flat and bikeable — BikeMi bike share is €4.50/day for standard bikes.

Cheap eats

Panzerotti at Luini: €3. Pizza al taglio: €3–5. Piadina shops: €5–7. Chinese on Via Paolo Sarpi: €8–12 for a full meal. Supermarkets (Esselunga, Conad) have excellent prepared meals for €4–7.

Outlet shopping

Serravalle Designer Outlet (1 hour by bus from Milano Centrale, €20 return) has 240 stores with 30–70% off Italian brands year-round — Prada, Gucci, Armani at factory prices.

Free experiences

Walking the Navigli canals, Parco Sempione, Bosco Verticale, Colonne di San Lorenzo gathering, Cimitero Monumentale, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele, and most churches are completely free.

Budget breakdown

Daily costs per person in euros. Milan has a reputation for expense, but aperitivo buffets, street food, and free museum days keep it surprisingly accessible.

🎒 Budget ✨ Mid-Range 💎 Splurge
Accommodation Hostels → boutique hotels → design hotels €22–45 €75–140 €180+
Food Street food & markets → trattorias → Michelin dining €15–25 €30–55 €70+
Transport Metro & bike → taxis → private transfers €4–8 €10–18 €25+
Activities Free sites → museums & galleries → opera & tours €0–12 €15–35 €50+
Drinks Aperitivo buffet → wine bars → rooftop cocktails €5–10 €12–22 €30+
Daily Total $50–109 → $154–293 → $386+ €46–100 €142–270 €355+

Practical info

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Visa & Entry

  • Schengen Zone — most nationalities get 90 days visa-free within any 180-day period
  • Milan has 3 airports: Malpensa (MXP, 50km), Linate (LIN, 7km), Bergamo/Orio al Serio (BGY, 50km — used by Ryanair)
  • Malpensa Express to Cadorna (€13, 52 min). Linate bus to Centrale (€5, 25 min). Bergamo bus to Centrale (€6, 60 min)
💉

Health & Safety

  • No vaccinations required. Tap water is safe. Milan has public drinking fountains (vedovelle) throughout the city
  • Milan is safe overall. Standard pickpocket precautions around Duomo, Centrale station, and on crowded metro lines
  • Emergency 112. Pharmacies (farmacie) are common — look for green crosses. Fatebenefratelli hospital for non-emergencies
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Getting Around

  • ATM Milan: 5 metro lines, trams, and buses. Single ticket €2.20 (90 min). Daily pass €7.60. Buy at machines or tabacchi
  • The historic tram line 1E (orange vintage trams) is a scenic way to cross the city — same ticket as regular metro
  • BikeMi bike share: €4.50/day standard, €6/day electric. Milan is flat and bikeable. Uber works but taxis are more reliable
📱

Connectivity

  • Free WiFi in most cafes and the ATM metro network. Open WiFi Milano covers some public areas
  • EU roaming works at home rates. For non-EU SIMs: TIM, Vodafone, or Iliad from €8 for 50GB at tabacchi shops
  • Download ATM Milano app for real-time metro/tram info, and Google Maps offline for the city
💰

Money

  • Cards accepted widely including contactless. Some smaller bars and market stalls still prefer cash — carry €20
  • ATMs (Bancomat) everywhere. Use bank machines (Intesa Sanpaolo, UniCredit) to avoid fees from Euronet-style machines
  • Coperto (cover charge) of €2–3 per person is standard at restaurants. Tipping is not expected but rounding up is nice
🎒

Packing Tips

  • Milan is a fashion city — smart-casual is the norm. You will feel underdressed in hiking boots and cargo shorts
  • Summers are hot and humid (30–35°C). Winters are cold and foggy (0–5°C). Pack layers and an umbrella year-round
  • Comfortable walking shoes that are also stylish — Milan's cobblestones and fashion standards demand both

Cultural tips

Milan is Italy's most cosmopolitan city — efficient, stylish, and proud of its design heritage. Dress well, drink well, and respect the aperitivo hour.

👗

Dress the Part

Milanese dress well even for casual outings. Smart-casual is the minimum. Dark colours, clean lines, good shoes. You do not need to be fashionable, but looking presentable opens doors and earns respect.

Coffee at the Bar

Stand at the bar (al banco) for your espresso — it costs €1–1.50. Sitting at a table can triple the price. Order "un caffè" for espresso, "un caffè macchiato" for a shot with milk. Cappuccino is strictly a morning drink.

🍝

Milanese Cuisine

Milan has its own culinary identity — risotto alla Milanese (saffron risotto), cotoletta alla Milanese (breaded veal cutlet), ossobuco, and panettone. Ask for these at traditional trattorias, not pizza places.

🕐

Aperitivo Culture

Aperitivo is sacred — the ritual pre-dinner drink with food that turns into dinner itself. It runs 6–9pm and is the social highlight of the Milanese day. Do not eat dinner before aperitivo.

🗣

Be Direct

Milanese are efficient and direct — not unfriendly, but busy. Service in restaurants is professional, not performative. A "Buongiorno" and "Grazie" are expected. Friendly but not overly chatty.

🚇

Metro Etiquette

Validate your ticket before boarding — inspectors issue €55 fines. Stand right, walk left on escalators. Bags off seats. Eating and drinking on public transport is frowned upon.

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