Lido di Jesolo is the most well-rounded family pick we cover - only its looks sit below the rest. The journey is gentle - a short Venice flight, a quick flat transfer - and the resort is fully served: restaurants, supermarkets and pharmacies all on the strip, a long dead-flat seafront, and one of Italy's best attraction stacks (Caribe Bay, Sea Life, the luna park, the evening shows). The beach is fine golden Blue Flag sand with warm, shallow, near-waveless water. The one taste to weigh: a big, built-up resort that hums until late all summer. If anyone wants hush at nap time the quiet end of the catalogue suits better - here the buggy rolls from hotel to sand to gelateria without meeting a kerb.
Family-fit is the weighted blend of six signals, tuned to a teens trip, each derived from open data: maps, climate, Blue Flag, places. Open any signal to see why it scored as it did.
Fifteen kilometres of fine golden Blue Flag sand with shallow, calm, near-waveless water - ideal paddling for small children. The scenery is resort strip rather than cliffs and coves: the sand is the draw, not the view.
Looks are the weak point here: a flat, built-out strip 15 km long, backed by a dense wall of hotels, with a bit of pine shade standing in for real coastal drama. You come for the vast sweep of golden sand and the easy everything, not the view.
A proper hot Italian summer with a warm, shallow Adriatic that heats up fast; the flip side is a genuinely seasonal town - it largely shuts down outside late May to September, and the sea is cold in the shoulder months.
The standout: the shortest UK flight we score, a ~40-minute flat motorway transfer with well-rated local firms, and a simple single-terminal airport - the gentlest door-to-beach journey in the catalogue.
Good and pram-friendly: dead flat, a long named seafront promenade running the length of the resort, and a main street that goes car-free every summer evening; the one thing keeping it off the very top is daytime traffic threading the strip before the evening pedestrianisation.
A standout: a deep, well-rated restaurant scene plus supermarkets, pharmacies and everyday shops packed along Via Bafile - one of the best-served bases we cover, self-sufficient for a fortnight without a car.
A real strength for school-age days: one of Italy's biggest water parks, a Sea Life aquarium, a luna park, minigolf, arcades and evening shows, all in or near the town. Teens do well here too - the arcades, karting, watersports schools and the luna park all count. The one thing left out is Jesolo's famous club nightlife, which we deliberately don't score as a family venue.
The nearest A&E is a few km inland in Jesolo town, an easy run from the beachfront.
These are taste, so they sit outside the score. Read them against what your family wants.
Evenings out the door by design: dense lodging, a deep food scene and a main street that buzzes until late all summer. Families who want that will love it; families who want hush at nap time will prefer a quieter base.
Genuinely Italian and genuinely lived-in - but purpose-built and modern. You get an authentic passeggiata and proper gelato rather than cobbles or fishing-village charm.
Read from the price levels of the 15 most popular restaurants around the centre (Google Places). Eating out is the budget line a family meets every day.
The weather score for every month, so the season reads at a glance. Set your travel month here or by “When you're going” above.
Each bar is the weather score for that month, so the season reads at a glance. Tap a month to set it - the page re-rates to match.
Mosquito country: marsh or lagoon nearby, so still summer evenings can bring them out. Pack repellent, and a plug-in for the room is worth it.
Package-friendlyJet2 and TUI both package Lido di Jesolo from UK airports (fly to Venice); the OTAs and a DIY flight + hotel also work well here.
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A short, flat motorway run from Venice Marco Polo. The ATVO express bus is direct and hourly; private transfers are quick and well-rated. Treviso (Ryanair) is an alternative about an hour away.
The same corridor serves the Venice day trip: bus to Piazzale Roma, or bus + ferry via Punta Sabbioni for the lagoon route. A hire car is handy for the wider Veneto, though Venice itself is best reached by bus or boat.
How these were picked: at onboarding we verify the practical routes from the arrival airport and list the best option of each kind - public transport where it genuinely works well, pre-bookable transfer firms with strong ratings (we survey every airport's transfer firms on Google Places), and the hotel shuttle where that's the local pattern. Nobody pays to appear here.
Closest family-fit profiles, scored the same way.