Frito Inn

Bar & restaurant · Venice · Cannaregio

Frito Inn

Frito Inn is a casual bar and fried-food counter in Venice’s Cannaregio sestiere, specialising in the classic Venetian snack of frittura di pesce — lightly battered and fried local seafood served in a paper cone or on a tray. It occupies a compact street-front position near the Lista di Spagna, one of the main pedestrian arteries linking the railway station to the Rialto bridge, placing it on the route most first-time visitors walk into the city.

At a glance

Type
Bar and fried-seafood counter (friggitoria)
Style
Informal Venetian street food
Location
Cannaregio sestiere, Venice, Italy
Coordinates
45.4436° N, 12.3268° E

Overview

Frito Inn brings together the two defining street-food traditions of Venice: the fried seafood counter known as a friggitoria and the neighbourhood bar where locals pause for a quick glass of wine. The venue targets both Venetians on a lunch break and travellers looking for an affordable, authentic meal that requires no reservation. Its name blends the Venetian word for fried food with the familiar English suffix “Inn,” signalling a playful, welcoming tone.

History

Friggitorie have been a fixture of Venetian street culture for centuries: the combination of a lagoon fishing economy and a dense medieval urban fabric made fried fish the original fast food of the city. Frito Inn continues that tradition in Cannaregio, one of Venice’s most residential and lived-in sestieri, which retains a working neighbourhood character even as tourism has intensified along the Lista di Spagna. The area saw significant demographic change in the twentieth century as the railway bridge (inaugurated 1846) made it the main gateway from the mainland.

What you see

The counter is typically lined with metal trays of freshly battered moeche (soft-shell crab, seasonal), calamari rings, gamberi, and mixed lagoon fish. Seating is minimal — the format encourages eating standing at the bar or taking a cone to a nearby campo. The visual language is functional: tiled surfaces, stainless steel, and the persistent aroma of hot oil and sea salt that characterises every Venetian friggitoria.

Cultural significance

The friggitoria is as embedded in Venetian identity as the gondola or the bacaro, and venues like Frito Inn keep that informal food culture alive against the pressure of souvenir shops and tourist menus. Eating fried seafood in a paper cone while walking a calle is an experience that has remained essentially unchanged for generations.

Practical information

Address
Cannaregio, Venice (check Google Maps for exact street number)
Hours
Check official channels or Google Maps for current opening hours
Price range
Budget — cones and plates typically €5–12
Reservations
Not required; counter service

Getting there

The nearest vaporetto stop is Ferrovia (line 1, 2, or N), a short walk from Venice Santa Lucia railway station. From the station, follow the Lista di Spagna east toward the Rialto; Cannaregio’s main streets are fully walkable and car-free. Water taxis can also reach Ferrovia directly from Marco Polo Airport.

Sources & resources

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