🏦 This is a brand hub for Intesa Sanpaolo in Italy. For the bigger picture on Italian ATM networks, Euronet traps, and tipping, see the Italy Money Guide. For exact branch addresses by Rome landmark, see the Rome ATM Guide. For card acceptance, transport, and neighborhood money tips, see the Rome Money Guide.

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The 30-second answer: is Intesa Sanpaolo good for tourists?

Yes, with one caveat. Intesa Sanpaolo has the densest ATM network in Italy: you will find a machine in every city and most towns. Withdrawal limits are higher than at BNL (often €500–600 per transaction), menus are available in English, and DCC pushing is low. The caveat: some Intesa Sanpaolo ATMs charge a €1.75–3 operator fee to foreign cards, which you will see on screen before confirming. This is still dramatically cheaper than Euronet (€2.99–4.99 plus DCC).

If you are not a Global ATM Alliance member (BofA, Barclays, Scotiabank, Westpac, Deutsche Bank), Intesa Sanpaolo is the most convenient Italian ATM choice because of coverage. Alliance members should default to BNL first to skip the $5 non-partner fee, and use Intesa only when BNL is not nearby.

Intesa Sanpaolo ATM fees at a glance

Here is what a €200 withdrawal actually costs, broken down by who charges what.

Fee type Amount Paid to
Intesa operator fee (foreign cards) €0–3 Intesa. Displayed on screen before you confirm.
Exchange rate Mid-market (interbank) Your card network (Visa/Mastercard)
Your bank's foreign ATM fee $2–5 Your home bank. Zero with Wise, Schwab, Revolut.
Your bank's FX conversion fee 1–3% Your home bank. Zero with Wise, Schwab, Revolut.
DCC markup (if accepted) +3–8% The ATM. Always decline and select EUR.

Fees last verified: 2026-04-14. Source: Intesa Sanpaolo Bancomat fee page. The €1.75–3 range reflects variation between urban and smaller-town branches; the exact fee for your withdrawal is displayed on screen before you confirm.

⚠ The Intesa fee-disclosure screen (this is the important one)

Intesa Sanpaolo shows the operator fee on a separate screen before you confirm the withdrawal, which is unusual for European bank ATMs. It looks like a simple "€2.50 will be charged, continue?" prompt. You can accept or cancel at this step; if you cancel, your card is returned with no debit. This is why the €1.75–3 fee is never a surprise at Intesa. If a machine shows no fee disclosure screen and jumps straight to DCC, it is not actually an Intesa machine (common confusion with Euronet boxes next to Intesa branches).

Intesa Sanpaolo vs. BNL: quick decision tree

For Italy-bound travelers, BNL and Intesa Sanpaolo are the two main real-bank options. Here is how to decide which to use.

BNL Intesa Sanpaolo
Operator fee €0 €0–3 (varies by branch)
Global ATM Alliance Yes (BofA saves $5) No
Branch density Mid-tier, tourist-focused Highest in Italy
Per-transaction limit €250–500 €500–600
Northern Italy coverage Urban cities only Deep (absorbed regionals)
DCC pushiness Low Low

💡 The quick rule

Bank of America, Barclays, Scotiabank, Westpac, or Deutsche Bank customer? Always use BNL first, Intesa as backup. Everyone else? Use whichever is closer. The €1.75–3 Intesa fee and the $5 non-partner fee roughly cancel out, so convenience wins.

Where to find Intesa Sanpaolo ATMs in Italy

Intesa Sanpaolo has absorbed dozens of regional banks (Cassa di Risparmio, Banca Popolare, Sanpaolo IMI) and operates under several brand names in different regions. The result: over 4,000 branches, more than any other Italian bank.

Milan

Duomo & central Milan

Intesa Sanpaolo is headquartered in Milan and Turin, so branch density is highest here. Branches surrounding Piazza del Duomo, along Corso Buenos Aires, and at Piazza Cordusio (a block from La Scala).

Milan

Malpensa & Linate airports

Intesa Sanpaolo ATMs in the main arrivals hall at MXP and in the central terminal at LIN. Withdraw here before heading into the city by train, Malpensa Express, or taxi.

Rome

Termini & Piazza Venezia

Intesa branches near Termini station (multiple options), at Piazza Venezia (the hub of central Rome), and along Via del Corso. Less tourist-focused than BNL placements but better for everyday coverage.

Venice

Rialto & San Marco

Intesa at Campo San Luca near Rialto Bridge and at Piazzale Roma. Venice has few banks overall, so plan ahead. Intesa has wider Venice coverage than BNL.

Florence

Duomo & Santa Maria Novella

Intesa branches around the Duomo, at Piazza della Repubblica, and near Santa Maria Novella station. The bank is Florence's dominant retail option.

Naples

Central Naples & airport

Intesa at Piazza Garibaldi (central station), along Via Toledo, and at Naples Capodichino airport arrivals. The bank absorbed Banco di Napoli, which boosts its regional coverage.

Turin

Piazza San Carlo & central Turin

Intesa's co-headquarters city. Branches surrounding Piazza San Carlo, along Via Roma, and at Porta Nuova station. The densest bank coverage of any Italian city outside Milan.

Amalfi Coast

Amalfi, Positano, Sorrento

Intesa is often the only bank ATM in smaller Amalfi Coast towns. Branches in Amalfi (main square), Positano (Via Cristoforo Colombo), and Sorrento (Piazza Tasso). Essential before SITA bus rides where change is cash-preferred.

How to withdraw at an Intesa Sanpaolo ATM

The general flow (insert card, select language, enter PIN, choose "Prelievo") is covered in the Italy Money Guide. What is specific to Intesa is worth calling out:

💡 Intesa UI quirks worth knowing

Fee disclosure screen: Intesa inserts a fee-acceptance prompt after you pick the amount ("€2.50 will be charged, continue?"). Cancel at this step if you want to walk to a BNL instead; the card returns with no debit. This screen is the main operational difference from BNL, UniCredit, and French banks.

Higher preset amounts: Intesa offers €500 as a preset on most urban machines, the highest preset among Italian banks. Per-transaction cap is typically €500–600 but some flagship branches (Piazza Cordusio in Milan, Piazza San Carlo in Turin) allow €1,000.

€100 notes: Intesa is one of the few Italian banks that dispense €100 notes. If you withdraw €600, you may receive six €100s, which small trattorias and market stalls cannot break. Request €480 or €380 to force a mix of €50s and €20s.

Old regional branding: Some Intesa-owned branches still display Banca Popolare, Cassa di Risparmio di Firenze, or Banco di Napoli signage. The ATM inside still behaves as an Intesa Sanpaolo machine with the same fees; the brand is a holdover from the consolidation history.

Intesa Sanpaolo vs. the Euronet trap

Even if Intesa charges a small operator fee, it is still dramatically cheaper than Euronet. Here is the math.

Intesa Sanpaolo Euronet
Operator fee €0–3 €1.99–4.99
DCC pressure Low High, multi-screen
Exchange rate Mid-market +3–13% with DCC
Total cost of €200 withdrawal €200–203 + your bank fees €200 + €3 + up to €26 DCC

The best card to pair with Intesa Sanpaolo

Intesa's small operator fee means the total cost hinges on your home bank. A no-fee traveler card plus Intesa is cheaper than a standard US bank card plus BNL, despite BNL's zero operator fee.

The Intesa-specific winner: Charles Schwab Investor Checking

Intesa is the one Italian bank where Schwab clearly beats every alternative. Schwab reimburses the €1.75–3 Intesa operator fee (reimbursement posts monthly), charges zero FX conversion, and has no foreign ATM fee. A €200 withdrawal at Intesa costs you exactly €200. On a BNL machine, Schwab saves the same money but BofA also ties (via the Alliance); on Intesa, Schwab is uniquely free because no other common US card covers the operator fee. See Schwab Investor Checking.

Bank of America customers: prefer BNL first

BofA saves $5 at BNL via the Global ATM Alliance but pays it at Intesa (Intesa is not an Alliance member). Default to BNL when both are available; use Intesa only in smaller towns or northern Italy where BNL is absent. Intesa wins on coverage; BNL wins on cost for BofA cardholders.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Intesa Sanpaolo charge foreign cards a fee?

Sometimes. Many Intesa Sanpaolo ATMs charge a small operator fee of €1.75–3 per foreign card withdrawal. The fee is displayed on screen before you confirm, so there are no surprises. Accept it since it is still cheaper than Euronet, or walk to a BNL for zero operator fee.

Is Intesa Sanpaolo in the Global ATM Alliance?

No. Only BNL represents Italy in the Global ATM Alliance. Bank of America, Barclays, Scotiabank, Westpac, and Deutsche Bank customers should prefer BNL over Intesa Sanpaolo to save the non-partner fee.

What is the Intesa Sanpaolo withdrawal limit?

Intesa has higher per-transaction limits than most Italian banks, often €500–600. Your home bank's daily limit may cap you lower. Intesa machines dispense €50, €20, and sometimes €100 notes.

Where are Intesa Sanpaolo ATMs most common?

Intesa Sanpaolo has the densest branch network in Italy, particularly strong in Milan, Turin, and across northern Italy where it absorbed regional banks. You will find an Intesa ATM in nearly every town with more than 5,000 residents.

Is the €1.75–3 Intesa fee the same at every branch?

No. The fee varies by branch, typically €1.75 at urban Milan and Turin locations, €2.50 at most Rome and Florence branches, and up to €3 at smaller towns or Amalfi Coast locations. The exact fee is always shown on screen before you confirm, so you can cancel at no cost and walk to a different branch or to BNL.

Why does my Intesa branch still say "Cassa di Risparmio" or "Banca Popolare"?

Intesa Sanpaolo was formed through the merger and acquisition of dozens of regional Italian banks (Cassa di Risparmio di Firenze, Banca Popolare di Novara, Sanpaolo IMI, Banco di Napoli, and others). Some branches kept the old signage for local goodwill. The ATM inside is an Intesa machine with Intesa's fee policy; the visual branding is a legacy holdover and does not affect your withdrawal.

Should I use Intesa Sanpaolo or UniCredit if BNL isn't nearby?

Broadly similar. UniCredit charges €0–3 operator fee (more often zero than Intesa but less consistently). Intesa has denser coverage in Milan, Turin, and all of northern Italy. UniCredit is stronger in Rome and has a larger Central-European footprint. If both are equally close, Intesa's fee is disclosed more clearly up-front.

Does Intesa Sanpaolo own other Italian banks?

Yes. Intesa absorbed Cassa di Risparmio, Banca Popolare, Sanpaolo IMI, and Banco di Napoli. Some branches still display the old regional bank brand, but the ATMs behave as Intesa Sanpaolo machines with the same fees and policies.