HomeEuropeHotels can refuse to serve tap water, Italy's top court rules

Hotels can refuse to serve tap water, Italy’s top court rules

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MILAN, May 27 (Reuters) - ‌Italian hotels can refuse to serve their ​guests tap water, Italy's highest court ruled in response to ⁠a tourist's complaint against a luxury hotel in a ski resort in the Dolomites.

The tourist sued the five-star ​Hotel Sassongher in Corvara, where she stayed for the 2020 New ‌Year holidays, after it refused to give her tap water during meals, offering instead mineral water at €7 ($8.15) per bottle.

She ⁠sought more than €2,700 in damages. 

In a ruling ⁠issued in late April but reported by national media this week, the Court of Cassation said Italian law did not oblige bars or restaurants to serve tap ‌water to customers, upholding the earlier findings of two ⁠lower courts.

The claimant had argued that, ‌under "constitutional and national sources", water is ​a natural good and a universal human right, and that the free provision of a minimum amount ‌necessary to meet essential needs must ​be guaranteed.

Hotel Sassongher declined ⁠to comment, while the lawyer for the tourist ‌did not immediately respond ⁠to a request for comment.

There is no single European law requiring all member states to provide free tap water ​on request. The ‌EU Drinking Water Directive encourages restaurants to serve it, but ⁠does not impose a general ​obligation.

($1 = 0.8588 euros)

(Reporting by Cristina Carlevaro, editing by ​Alvise Armellini, Kirsten Donovan)

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