Bar in Venice, Italy
Al Mercà
100Pearl PointsSmall window, big local credibility. Go early.

About Al Mercà
Al Mercà is a no-frills Venetian bacaro near the Rialto — no reservations, no sit-down service, and no cocktail program. Walk up, pour a local Veneto white, eat a cicchetto or two, and move on. At Venice's lowest price point for wine and bites, it's the most efficient introduction to how locals actually drink in this city.
Quick Take: Al Mercà, Venice
Al Mercà operates on limited hours and limited space — this is a stand-up cicchetti and wine counter in Campo Bella Vienna, and the window to catch it at its leading is narrow. If you're visiting Venice for the first time and want to understand how locals actually drink and eat between meals, Al Mercà is one of the most useful stops you can make. It is not a sit-down experience, and it is not trying to be.
The format here is the point. Al Mercà is a bacaro — the Venetian version of a wine bar , where the offering centres on small bites and poured wine consumed standing at or near the counter. For first-timers, that means no reservations, no menu anxiety, and no dress code. You walk up, you order a glass of local white or orange wine, you eat what's on the counter, and you move on. Booking difficulty is as easy as it gets: there is no booking at all.
The spirit of the place is firmly rooted in Veneto wine rather than cocktails. Expect the kind of direct, unfussy pours , Soave, Prosecco, skin-contact whites , that pair directly with the cicchetti on offer. This is not where you go for a crafted cocktail program; if that's your priority, Aman Bar or Arts Bar will serve you better. Al Mercà's value is in its authenticity to the bacaro format and its proximity to the Rialto market crowd, which keeps the energy immediate and local-leaning.
Pricing is low by any Venice standard. A glass of wine and a few bites should cost a fraction of what you'd pay at a canal-side restaurant. That price gap matters when you're calibrating your budget across a full Venice trip , see our full Venice bars guide and our full Venice restaurants guide for where to spend more deliberately.
For first-timers, the practical advice is simple: go around midday or early evening, expect to stand, keep your order simple, and treat it as a 20-minute stop rather than a destination meal. If you want to extend the bacaro crawl, Al Covino and Al Covo are worth adding to the same circuit. For a broader picture of what Venice offers beyond bars, our full Venice hotels guide, Venice wineries guide, and Venice experiences guide cover the rest.
If you're comparing the bacaro format to what's available in other cities, the closest analogue in spirit , small counter, local drink focus, no-fuss entry , would be something like Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu for precision or 1930 in Milan for a more curated Italian bar experience. Al Mercà sits at the opposite end of that spectrum: low ceremony, high locality. That is precisely its appeal, and for a first visit to Venice, that's enough to make it worth the detour. For something further afield with a similarly unpretentious counter format, Lost & Found in Nicosia is an interesting point of comparison.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Al Mercà worth the price?
Pricing varies at Al Mercà; confirm via check the venue's official channels.
Where is Al Mercà located?
Al Mercà is located in Venice, at Campo Bella Vienna, 213, 30125 Venezia VE, Italy.
How can I contact Al Mercà?
You can reach Al Mercà via check the venue's official channels.
Location
Campo Bella Vienna, 213, 30125 Venezia VE, Italy
Venice, Italy
Compare Al Mercà
| Venue |
|---|
| Al Mercà |
| Aman Bar |
| Il Mercante |
| Vino Vero |
| Arts Bar |
| Al Covo |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Aman Bar, Notable alternative
- Il Mercante, Notable alternative
- Vino Vero, Notable alternative
- Arts Bar, Notable alternative
- Al Covo, Notable alternative
Al Mercà and Il Mercante operate in entirely different registers. Il Mercante leans into cocktail craft and atmosphere; Al Mercà is a stand-up bacaro with a wine-forward, cicchetti-driven format. If you want a proper cocktail bar experience, Il Mercante wins. If you want to spend €3–5 and drink like a local near the Rialto, Al Mercà is the better call.
Vino Vero is the closest peer to Al Mercà in format, both are natural-wine-oriented, low-key bars with a local following. Vino Vero edges ahead on wine list depth and tends to attract a more wine-literate crowd; Al Mercà wins on accessibility and informality for first-timers. Aman Bar and Arts Bar are in a different category entirely, hotel bars with refined service, higher price points, and a guest profile that skews to design-hotel visitors. Book those if ambiance and service depth matter more than price and locality.
Al Covo is better framed as a restaurant than a bar comparison, and sits at a significantly higher spend. For a first-time visitor trying to cover both the bacaro experience and a proper Venetian dinner, the logical split is Al Mercà for the casual midday or early-evening drink-and-bite, and Al Covo (or a comparable full-service restaurant) for dinner. Don't try to use Al Mercà as a dinner substitute, it isn't built for that.
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