Italy Declares Red Heatwave Alert For Rome, Four Other Cities

 

Italy’s health ministry on Thursday declared a red heatwave alert for the cities of Rome, Florence, Bologna, Brescia, and Turin as an unseasonal heatwave sweeps Europe.

The red alert, the first of the year in Italy, is issued to warn of “possible negative effects on the health of healthy, active people” and advise the public to stay out of the sun.

Outside Rome’s Colosseum on Thursday, tourists were struggling to cope with the muggy weather, with temperatures at 32C.

A man cools off at the Barcaccia fountain near the Spanish Steps during an early-season heatwave in Rome on 26 May 2026. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)

 

“We’re sweating a lot,” said Spanish tourist Nana Martinez Garcia.

“We’re drinking a lot of water so we can cool down,” she said, with her friend Maria Angeles Mellinas Tello piping in that they were “always staying in the shade whenever we can”.

US tourist Josh Ren said he had a game plan for the heat: “Get up early, do things more early, take a lot of breaks.

“Go sit down in some air-conditioned restaurant, go to the museum, stay inside a little bit more during the hottest time of the day.”

A person wears a hat for shade under the morning sun while walking along The Strand in Redondo Beach, California on March 20, 2026, during a heat wave. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)

 

Italy has mostly been spared the record-breaking heatwave seen in recent days in the UK and France, with Britain reporting its hottest-ever day in May at 35.1C.

Scientists say human-driven climate change is amplifying such extremes, with weather events like heatwaves, droughts, and floods becoming more intense and frequent.