Livigno
Livigno is a valley, town and commune in the Lombardy region of Italy. Livigno is a pleasant tourist centre frequented both in winter and in summer. It is one of the most important and well-equipped tourist resorts in the Alps.| Tap on a place to explore it |
Photo: qwesy qwesy, CC BY 3.0.
Photo: Marcin Sulikowski, CC BY-SA 3.0.
- Type: Village with 6,000 residents
- Description: Italian comune
- Postal code: 23041
- Neighbors: Pontresina
Places of Interest
Highlights include San Rocco and Passo d’Eira.
Places in the Area
Nearby places include Trepalle.
Trepalle
Village
Photo: MatthewGhera, CC BY 3.0.
Trepalle is a village in the Italian Alps, a frazione of Livigno, Lombardy. It is sometimes considered to be the village located at the highest altitude in Europe and is the highest in the European Union with its church located at the Passo d'Eira at 2,209 m.
Livigno
- Categories: commune of Italy and locality
- Location: Province of Sondrio, Lombardian Alps and Prealps, Lombardy, Northwest Italy, Italy, Europe
- View on OpenStreetMap
Latitude
46.5382° or 46° 32′ 17″ northLongitude
10.136° or 10° 8′ 10″ eastPopulation
6,000Elevation
1,816 metres (5,958 feet)United Nations Location Code
IT LVXOpen location code
8FRGG4QP+79OpenStreetMap ID
node 62516950OpenStreetMap feature
place=village
This page is based on OpenStreetMap, GeoNames, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikivoyage.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.
Satellite Map
Discover Livigno from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
In Other Languages
From Arabic to Wu Chinese—“Livigno” goes by many names.
- Arabic: “ليفينو”
- Arabic: “ليفينيو”
- Armenian: “Լիվինիո”
- Armenian: “Լիվինո”
- Basque: “Livigno”
- Breton: “Livigno”
- Bulgarian: “Ливиньо”
- Catalan: “Livigno”
- Cebuano: “Livigno”
- Chechen: “Ливиньо”
- Chinese: “Livigno”
- Chinese: “利維尼奧”
- Chinese: “利维尼奥”
- Czech: “Livigno”
- Danish: “Livigno”
- Dutch: “Livigno”
- Esperanto: “Livigno”
- Estonian: “Livigno vald”
- Finnish: “Livigno”
- French: “Livigno”
- Galician: “Livigno”
- German: “Livigno”
- German: “Luwin”
- Greek: “Λιβίνιο”
- Hebrew: “ליביניו”
- Hungarian: “Livigno”
- Indonesian: “Livigno”
- Interlingua: “Livigno”
- Irish: “Livigno”
- Italian: “Livigno”
- Japanese: “リヴィーニョ”
- Kazakh: “Ливиньо”
- Korean: “리비뇨”
- Kurdish: “Livigno”
- Ladin: “Livigno”
- Latin: “Livignum”
- Latin: “Vinea”
- Ligurian: “Livigno”
- Lithuanian: “Livinjas”
- Lithuanian: “Livinjo”
- Lombard: “Livign”
- Lombard: “Livígn”
- Lombard: “Livigno”
- Luxembourgish: “Livigno”
- Macedonian: “Ливињо”
- Malay: “Livigno”
- Min Nan Chinese: “Livigno”
- Neapolitan: “Livigno”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Livigno”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Val di Livigno”
- Norwegian: “Livigno”
- Occitan (post 1500): “Livigno”
- Persian: “لیوینیو”
- Piemontese: “Livigno”
- Polish: “Livigno”
- Portuguese: “Livigno”
- Romanian: “Livigno”
- Romansh: “Livign”
- Romansh: “Livigno”
- Romansh: “Luin da Buorm”
- Russian: “Ливигно”
- Russian: “Ливиньо”
- Serbian: “Livigno”
- Serbian: “Ливињо”
- Serbo-Croatian: “Livigno, Sondrio”
- Serbo-Croatian: “Livigno”
- Sicilian: “Livigno”
- South Azerbaijani: “لیوینیو”
- Spanish: “Livigno”
- Swedish: “Livigno”
- Swedish: “Luwin”
- Tagalog: “Livigno”
- Tatar: “Ливиньо”
- Turkish: “Livigno”
- Ukrainian: “Лівіньйо”
- Ukrainian: “Лівіньо”
- Uzbek: “Livigno”
- Uzbek: “Livinyo”
- Uzbek: “Ливино”
- Venetian: “Livigno”
- Volapük: “Livigno”
- Waray (Philippines): “Livigno”
- Wu Chinese: “利维尼奥”
- “Livigno”
Places with the Same Name
Discover other places named “Livigno”.
Localities in the Area
Explore places such as Teola and Ponte del Brum.
Lombardian Alps and Prealps: Must-Visit Destinations
Delve into Bergamo, Brescia, Sondrio, and Bormio.
Explore These Curated Destinations
Discover places selected for their distinct character and enduring appeal.
About Mapcarta. Data © OpenStreetMap contributors and available under the Open Database License". Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, except for photos, directions, and the map. Description text is based on the Wikivoyage page “Livigno”. Photo: Marcin Sulikowski, CC BY-SA 3.0.