Interactive map of all banks in Rome — find the nearest branch, with bank name, address, opening hours and, where available, phone number and official website. Data is pulled in real time from the OpenStreetMap community and covers all 15 municipal districts of the city, from the historic center to the coastal area of Ostia.
How to use the map
Each B pin represents a geocoded bank branch. For readability, nearby pins are grouped into numbered clusters: zoom in to separate them. Clicking on a pin shows you:
- Bank name (commercial brand, e.g. Intesa Sanpaolo, Unicredit, BPER, BNL BNP Paribas, Banco BPM, Mediobanca Premier, Poste Italiane).
- Full address (street, number, postal code) when the OSM contributor has filled it in.
- Branch opening hours in standard OSM format.
- Branch phone number and link to the bank’s official website.
- Indication of whether the branch has an on-site ATM and is wheelchair accessible.
- “Get directions” button for route planning in Google Maps.
The Use my location button asks your browser for geolocation permission and centers the map on your position: useful when you are out and looking for the nearest branch.
Main banks in Rome
Rome’s banking market is one of the most diverse in Italy. Alongside the large national groups you will find specialized institutions, cooperative credit banks and the Poste Italiane network (which, while not a bank in the strict sense, offers many counter and withdrawal services).
- Intesa Sanpaolo: widespread network, branches along main axes and neighborhoods, 24/7 self-service ATMs in many locations.
- UniCredit: strong presence in the historic center, EUR and commercial districts; dedicated private banking branches in some areas.
- Banco BPM (created by the BPM + Banco Popolare merger): good coverage in Prati, Parioli, EUR.
- BNL BNP Paribas: historic network with presence in almost all municipal districts.
- BPER Banca: after the integration of Carige and Unipol Banca, the network has been reinforced, including in the Lazio region.
- Crédit Agricole Italia: significant presence in some areas following the acquisition of Creval.
- Mediobanca Premier (formerly CheBanca!): branches in Rome, with a hybrid digital + physical model.
- Banca Popolare del Lazio, BCC di Roma and the Lazio cooperative credit banks: deeply rooted in local neighborhoods and outlying areas.
- Poste Italiane: maximum coverage (200+ offices), payment services, BancoPosta accounts, PostePay withdrawals.
The map updates automatically whenever an OSM contributor adds, moves or removes a branch: it does not rely on static lists that grow stale.
Visiting a bank in Rome: hours and best practices
Typical branch hours: Monday to Friday, roughly 08:20-13:20 and 14:35-16:05; some institutions close at 13:30 and do not reopen. On Saturday mornings selected branches of certain banks open (historically Banco BPM, UniCredit, Intesa with the “Banca 8” or “Banca per te” formats), but coverage is patchy: the map lets you check case by case. Branches inside shopping malls follow the mall’s hours (often 10:00-20:00).
Before heading out, keep these three best practices in mind:
- Check the bank’s official website for hours and appointments: many counter operations (investment advice, mortgages, inheritance matters, opening new accounts) require a mandatory booking, and showing up without an appointment means giving up on the consultation.
- For simple operations (paper statements, cashier’s checks, cash deposits, banknote exchange), advanced self-service kiosks are often faster: many branches have 24/7 “cash-in” ATMs available even outside traditional hours.
- If you hold an online-only account with no physical branch (Fineco, ING, Hype, BuddyBank, Revolut, N26), for physical anti-money-laundering procedures you may be directed to specific partner branches or asked to book a physical appointment: check in the app.
Areas covered by the map
Historic Center (Trastevere, Campo de’ Fiori, Monti, Pantheon), Prati-Trionfale, Parioli-Pinciano-Salario, Flaminio-Della Vittoria, Nomentano-Trieste, Tiburtino-Pietralata-San Basilio, Prenestino-Centocelle-Collatino, Tuscolano-Don Bosco-Appio Claudio, Appio-Latino-Ardeatino, Ostiense-Portuense-Gianicolense, Aurelio-Primavalle, Monte Sacro-Ponte Mammolo, Giuliano-Dalmata-EUR-Mezzocammino, Lido di Ostia Ponente/Levante/Castel Fusano. Good coverage also at the main transport hubs (Termini, Tiburtina, Ostiense, Trastevere, San Pietro, EUR Magliana, Flaminio) and business districts (EUR Europa, Torrino-Mezzocammino, Parco de’ Medici).
Frequently asked questions
Do banks open on Saturdays in Rome?
Some branches of the main networks (Intesa Sanpaolo, UniCredit, Banco BPM) open on Saturday mornings with a “flexible branch” format, but opening is not consistent. Check the branch you are interested in on the map: the opening_hours tags, when recorded, also include any Saturday opening.
Can I carry out counter operations at a bank other than my own?
Some operations (cashing a check, commercial inquiries, requesting a new product, deposits) require you to be a customer or to book an appointment; others (exchanging damaged euro banknotes, cash deposits into third-party accounts below a threshold) are more flexible. The rule of thumb: for in-the-moment transactional services your own bank is always the fastest choice.
What is the difference between a “private” branch and a traditional branch?
Private banking branches serve high-net-worth clients with dedicated relationship managers and usually by appointment; traditional (retail) branches serve standard customers, small businesses and provide basic advice. On the map some branches are labeled with the specific brand (“Intesa Sanpaolo Private Banking”, “UniCredit Private”).
Is the map data official?
No: it is collaborative OpenStreetMap data updated by the community. Coverage is wide but not 100%: if you notice a missing or closed branch you can update it for free from the OSM website. For definitive commercial terms and opening hours, the bank’s official website is always the source of truth.
Is Banche.Roma.it affiliated with the banks listed?
No. The site is independent and the information is intended for orientation purposes. To open accounts, apply for mortgages, loans and other services, contact the credit institutions directly; consult their official websites and the information documents required by law.
Map data: OpenStreetMap / Overpass API, updated in real time by the community. Editorial page updated April 2026.