Tandem skydiving in Italy

Tandem. Your first jump, done right.

From 4,000 metres, attached to an ENAC-certified instructor. 60 seconds of freefall at 200 km/h, then 5 minutes under canopy. That's it — no licence, no course. Just you, the air, and Italy from above.

Find the closest schoolHow much it costs
44
Cities covered
9
Gift occasions
4000m
Exit altitude
€170+
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How Much Does Skydiving Cost in Italy: 2026 Price Guide

A tandem jump in Italy typically costs between €200 and €280, including equipment and instructor. A complete AFF course — the pathway to obtaining an ENAC skydiving licence — runs between €1,800 and €2,500. Used gear for those who want to jump independently starts at around €3,000–€4,000.

8 min read

How Much Does Skydiving Cost in Italy: 2026 Price Guide

A tandem skydive in Italy typically costs between €180 and €280, depending on the dropzone, altitude, and video package. A full AFF course runs approximately €1,200–€1,800. Annual costs for a licensed skydiver (jump fees, gear maintenance, medical) generally range from €1,500 to €4,000+ depending on activity level.

18 min read

Tandem Skydive: Complete Guide to Your First Jump in Italy

A tandem skydive means you jump attached to a certified Tandem Master instructor, sharing one parachute system. No prior experience is needed. In Italy, the experience typically involves exiting the aircraft at around 4,000 metres, a freefall of roughly 50–60 seconds, and a canopy flight of 5–7 minutes before landing.

18 min read

Tandem Skydiving: The Complete Guide to Your First Jump

A tandem jump is a skydive from around 4,000 meters, harnessed to an ENAC-certified Tandem Master instructor. No prior experience is needed: after a 20–30 minute briefing you're ready to exit the aircraft together with your instructor, experience approximately 30–50 seconds of freefall, and glide down to landing. To participate, you simply sign a self-declaration of good health on the day of the jump.

9 min read

How Safe Is Skydiving Today: Real Data 2025

Skydiving has a fatality rate of approximately 1 death per 100,000 jumps (USPA data). Tandem jumping is significantly safer than solo licensed activity. The risk is real, but it is measurable and, to a large extent, manageable through training, certified equipment, and established procedures.

8 min read

How to Choose a Skydiving School: 10 Questions to Ask Before You Book

To choose a reliable skydiving school in Italy, first verify ENAC certification (the official list is at enac.gov.it), then ask about exit altitude, realistic total cost through to your license, safety systems installed, and instructor certifications. If the answers are vague or missing, book elsewhere.

11 min read