X-ray of a tall Negroni Sbagliato cocktail glass on illuminated lightbox, amber-orange glass exterior with cobalt blue liquid and ice visible inside
The aperitivo is Milan's design specification for the evening, a precise pause the city has been refining for over a century. A curated guide to where to stay, eat, drink, and look in one of Europe's most considered cities.

Milan - The Long Aperitivo

2026.05.13 @ 08:21:30 GMT

Destinations Inspiration Studio

Milan does not hurry the evening. Around six o'clock, the city reorganizes itself. Chairs appear at tables. Ice goes into glasses. The aperitivo is a structure imposed on the day, a deliberate pause between work and dinner that no other Italian city has made into such a precise social institution. Understanding this rhythm is close to understanding Milan.

For the traveller who moves between cities for work rather than for sightseeing, Milan rewards familiarity over novelty. The architecture concentrates in the centre, the food is among the most technically accomplished in Europe, and the design retail — the city anchors Salone del Mobile each April, the largest design fair in the world — is organized for people who know what they are looking for.

Where to Stay

Portrait Milano, the Lungarno Collection property on Corso Venezia 11, occupies the former Archiepiscopal Seminary, a piece of Lombard Baroque dating from 1565. The renovation is specific: 73 suites that open onto courtyards or a hidden garden, a spa, and a position in the heart of the Quadrilatero d'Oro fashion district. The Ferragamo family's hotel group understands the relationship between craft and hospitality. Excelsior Hotel Gallia, a Luxury Collection property near Centrale station, takes the other approach: a grand 1932 hotel renovated by Marco Piva, with a rooftop terrace and the gravitational pull of a large, confident city address.

Where to Eat

Enrico Bartolini al MUDEC holds three Michelin stars and occupies the upper floors of MUDEC, the museum of world cultures in the Tortona design district. The density of technique on the plate is the highest in the city. Seta at Mandarin Oriental, guided by chef Antonio Guida, holds two stars and carries a Mediterranean sensibility inflected with his Puglian background, a more personal address, with one of the better-designed dining rooms in the city. For an older reference, Il Luogo di Aimo e Nadia on Via Montecuccoli has been a Michelin address since 1990, now under chefs Alessandro Negrini and Fabio Pisani. It is the kind of restaurant that the city quietly relies on.

What to See and Shop

10 Corso Como on Corso Como 10 was the original concept store, Carla Sozzani opened it in 1990 and it remains the most complete version of the format, combining fashion, design objects, books, and a cafe in a courtyard space off the main street. The purpose is the edit, not the volume. The Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, fifteen minutes south, is the other essential: a 19th-century iron-and-glass arcade that the city uses as a living room, and the address of one of its best bars.

Where to Drink

Camparino in Galleria has occupied the corner of the Galleria since 1915, and is ranked among the world's 50 best bars. It serves the Campari Seltz, Campari and seltzer, nothing further, better than anywhere, in a room that has made no attempt to update itself. Bar Basso on Via Plinio 39 is where the Negroni Sbagliato was invented in the 1970s, when a bartender reached for prosecco instead of gin. The drink stayed. Both bars operate on the principle that the aperitivo should not be complicated.

Milan is a city that has decided, collectively, that the hour before dinner is worth organizing with care. The bars that have done it longest have changed the least, and they remain the most accurate guide to what the city values.