The United Nations cultural organisation has said that it had stopped short of placing Venice, one of the world's top tourist destinations, on its world heritage in danger list.
The Italian city has been in UNESCO's sights because of risk stemming from mass tourism and rising water levels, but at its annual meeting in Saudi Arabia the agency decided against a downgrade.
UNESCO, the United Nation's educational, scientific and cultural organisation, keeps the world heritage list, which it says is a reflection of the planet's cultural and natural diversity.
The agency's World Heritage Committee meets once a year to update it, and many countries consider inclusion on the list is crucial for tourism and the ability to get funding to preserve the sites.
Conversely, countries are eager to avoid being dropped from the list.
"The Committee has taken the decision not to include Venice on the list of World Heritage in Danger," a UNESCO source told AFP.
The "in danger" qualification is the first stop towards exclusion from the list that features 1,157 sites, of which 900 are cultural, 218 natural and 39 mixed.
Venice is in danger from rising water levels, attributed to climate change, and excessive numbers of tourists, Lazare Eloundou Assomo, UNESCO's Director of World Heritage, told AFP ahead of the Riyadh meeting.
Italian counter-measures were deemed "insufficient".
Venice officials agreed on Tuesday to test a fee on day tourists to the overcrowded historic centre.
The city council voted in favour of a limited test, to begin next spring, of a long-debated ticketing system.
Critics, however, say it will do little to stem the hordes of tourists who descend each year.
Activists revealed official data in recent days showing that the number of tourist beds in Venice outnumbers residents by 49,693 to 49,304.
Some are demanding that only full-time residents be permitted to rent apartments to tourists on a short-term basis, and they criticised a ban on new hotel rooms as insufficiently enforced.
Authorities have debated for years - without taking concrete action - over how best to regulate the millions of visitors to the city.
They flock there to see sights including St Mark's Square, the Rialto Bridge and its picturesque canals.
Additional reporting PA