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Buongiorno, Ciao or Salve? Italian Greetings Made Easy

June 5, 2026 ItalianNow 5 minute read

Buongiorno, Ciao or Salve? Italian Greetings Made Easy
Table of Contents
  1. The 5 greetings you actually need
  2. The formality trap: say ciao only with tu
  3. The safety net: salve, then mirror
  4. Morning or evening? Buongiorno vs buonasera
  5. What about buon pomeriggio?
  6. The buonanotte trap
  7. Saying goodbye the right way
  8. Put it together in real life

The very first word you’ll say to a real Italian is also the one beginners get wrong most often. English gives you a single all-purpose “hello,” so you never had to think about it. Italian quietly asks you two questions before you’ve even opened your mouth: what time is it? and how well do I know this person? Get either wrong and you can come off as overly familiar — or like you’re reading from a phrasebook.

Here’s the good news: you don’t need to memorize twenty greetings to sound natural. You need five words, one safety-net rule, and the confidence to stop overthinking the clock. Let’s make Italian greetings genuinely easy.

The 5 greetings you actually need

Almost every situation a beginner meets is covered by these five. Note the two columns that trip people up: register (how formal) and whether the word is a hello, a goodbye, or both.

ItalianEnglishWhen
ciao hi / bye (informal) any time, friends only
salve hello (neutral) any time, hello only
buongiorno good morning / good day morning to early afternoon
buonasera good evening late afternoon onward
buonanotte goodnight parting for the night only

A quick pronunciation pass, because these are worth saying right from day one. Ciao is simply “chow.” Salve has two syllables — “SAHL-veh,” and yes, you sound that final e. Buongiorno is “bwon-JOR-no,” buonasera is “bwo-na-SEH-rah,” and buonanotte is “bwo-na-NOT-teh.” All five are written without accents, and the buon- words are now standardly one word (you’ll still see buon giorno spelled apart, and that’s fine too).

The formality trap: say ciao only with tu

Because ciao is famous worldwide, beginners reach for it everywhere — including the exact places it backfires. Ciao belongs to the tu world: friends, family, classmates, children, and peers in relaxed settings. Use it with a shopkeeper, a waiter, an older stranger, or anyone in a professional setting and it can land as too casual, even rude.

With those people, Italians reach for salve or buongiorno / buonasera instead. If you’ve ever wondered when the line between casual and polite address actually matters, this is the front line of it — and our guide to tu vs Lei: formal and informal “you” goes deeper on the choice your greeting is quietly announcing.

The safety net: salve, then mirror

Here is the single move that keeps a beginner from ever sounding rude:

Salve is the beginner’s superhero word: polite without being stiff, fine at any hour, perfect with strangers and new acquaintances. It comes from Latin salvēre, “to be in good health.” Its one limit is important — salve is a hello, never a goodbye. When you leave, switch to arrivederci for politeness or ciao among friends.

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Morning or evening? Buongiorno vs buonasera

This is the question that fills Italian forums, and the honest answer is freeing: there is no fixed clock time. The real rule natives follow is daylight. While it’s light out you say buongiorno; once the light is fading or it’s dark, you switch to buonasera. Because sunset moves with the season and the latitude, so does the switch.

How loose is it in practice? Very — and regionally so:

ItalianEnglishSwitches to buonasera
buongiorno good day (Rome) until ~2-3 p.m.
buonasera good evening (the South) after the afternoon break
buongiorno good day (the North) tracks the fading light

For practical purposes: morning to roughly early afternoon → buongiorno; mid-afternoon onward → buonasera. If you guess “wrong,” nobody minds — and the mirror rule fixes it instantly. In quick exchanges you’ll even hear Italians clip these to just ‘giorno and ‘sera.

What about buon pomeriggio?

There is a literal “good afternoon” — buon pomeriggio — but everyday speakers rarely say it. You’ll catch it on TV and radio, yet most Italians simply stretch buongiorno through the afternoon. Reaching for buon pomeriggio every day actually marks you as a textbook learner, so let it stay in your “recognize it” pile, not your “say it” pile.

The buonanotte trap

Buonanotte looks like a fourth time-of-day hello, but it isn’t a greeting at all — it’s a goodbye for the very end of the night. It carries the sense “that’s me for today, see you tomorrow,” so using it to greet someone arriving at a late dinner sounds like you’re telling them to go to bed. When you turn up late in the evening, the hello is still buonasera; save buonanotte for the moment you part to head home or to sleep.

Saying goodbye the right way

Beginners always ask for the matching farewells, so here they are. Notice that buongiorno and buonasera double as polite goodbyes — you can leave a shop with the same word you walked in with.

ItalianEnglishWhen
ciao bye informal, with tu
arrivederci goodbye polite; we'll meet again
a presto see you soon friendly
a domani see you tomorrow neutral
buonanotte goodnight parting for the night

A couple of small things polish your goodbyes fast. Arrivederci literally means “until we see each other again”; its very formal one-on-one variant is ArrivederLa. And a courteous grazie on the way out — paired with arrivederci — is exactly how Italians close a friendly transaction. With an older shopkeeper you might even add signore (“sir”) for warmth.

Put it together in real life

Watch how the rules play out across a single day:

ItalianEnglish
Buongiorno, mi dica Good morning, how can I help?
Ciao, come stai? Hi, how are you?
Buonasera, un tavolo per due Good evening, a table for two
Arrivederci, a domani! Goodbye, see you tomorrow!

That second line is the natural follow-up to any casual greeting, and come stai shifts depending on whom you’re talking to — a pattern that echoes through Italian, including agreement puzzles like mi piace vs mi piacciono. Greetings also rarely travel alone: a ciao with a friend often comes with a wave or a shrug, and our look at what Italian hand gestures really mean shows the body language that rides along.

So the next time you push open a door in Rome or wave to a neighbor in Bologna, you already know the move: read the light, read the person, and when either is uncertain, say salve and let them lead. Try it out loud once today — the ear catches up faster than you’d think.

Mini quiz

Quick check: pick the right greeting

4 quick questions to see what stuck.

Question 1 of 4
  1. You walk into a bakery in the morning. What do you say?

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