Florence
City Guide

Florence

Italy · Best time to visit: Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct.

Guide coming in Deutsch, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 2 days
Daily budget €110.00/day
Best season Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct
Language Italian
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Rome
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

First Light on Marble — The Day Florence Stops You in Your Tracks

08:15

Galleria dell'Accademia

Museum
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €16

Arrive at the Via Ricasoli entrance five minutes before opening — the doors open and the queue vanishes instantly. Walk straight through the Hall of Prisoners, where Michelangelo's unfinished slaves strain against raw stone, into the tribune where David stands alone under a natural skylight. At this hour with almost no one around, the silence makes it feel like a private audience with the Renaissance.

Tip: Book timed entry online at least two weeks ahead — walk-up lines exceed 90 minutes by 10 AM. Stand at David's left side and look up at the hand for the photo angle most visitors miss.

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10:00

Brunelleschi's Dome at the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore

Landmark
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €30

Exit the Accademia, turn right on Via Ricasoli, and in eight minutes the Duomo's terracotta dome appears above the roofline — that first reveal never loses its power. Enter through the Porta della Mandorla on the north side, climb 463 steps between the inner and outer shells where Vasari's Last Judgment fresco surrounds you at arm's length, and emerge onto the panoramic terrace with every red roof and cypress hill in Florence spread below. The morning light at this hour illuminates the fresco perfectly and the terrace is still uncrowded.

Tip: Book the dome climb slot on the official Duomo website days in advance — there is no elevator, no turning back, and slots sell out fast. The cathedral entrance is free and worth 15 minutes for the Uccello clock face above the west door.

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12:15

All'Antico Vinaio

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €8

Walk south through Via dei Calzaiuoli — Florence's main pedestrian artery buzzing with street musicians — and turn left on Via dei Neri; the queue spilling onto the sidewalk marks the spot. This legendary schiacciata sandwich shop has been a Florentine institution since the 1990s, serving warm, crisp, oil-kissed flatbread stuffed to order at a pace that keeps the terrifying line moving in under ten minutes.

Tip: Order La Favolosa (€6) — truffle cream, finocchiona salami, pecorino, and artichoke cream on schiacciata — with a glass of house Chianti (€3). The original shop at #74r has the fastest line; the newer locations across the street use the same kitchen.

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13:30

Uffizi Gallery

Museum
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €20

Walk two minutes south on Via dei Neri to the entrance on Via della Ninna — the post-lunch slot means the morning tour groups have cleared out. Your non-negotiables: Room 2 for Giotto's Ognissanti Madonna, Room 8 for Botticelli's Birth of Venus and Primavera side by side, Room 35 for Leonardo's Annunciation, and Room 83 for Titian's Venus of Urbino. The upper-floor windows frame Ponte Vecchio through the Vasari Corridor perfectly.

Tip: Book a 13:30 timed slot online — afternoons are roughly 40% less crowded than mornings. Beeline to Room 8 (Botticelli) on the second floor first before the room fills, then work backward through the collection.

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16:00

Ponte Vecchio

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Exit the Uffizi through the Piazzale degli Uffizi colonnade and Ponte Vecchio appears directly ahead — the medieval bridge lined with glinting goldsmith shops that has survived floods and wars since 1345. Cross slowly, pausing at the three arched openings in the center where the downstream Arno view is unobstructed. In late-afternoon light the river turns amber and the bridge doubles itself in reflection — this is the shot.

Tip: For the classic postcard view of the bridge itself, walk five minutes east along the north riverbank to Ponte alle Grazie and shoot back toward Ponte Vecchio with the Arno in the foreground.

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19:30

Buca Mario

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €50

Walk north from Ponte Vecchio through Via de' Tornabuoni — Florence's most elegant shopping street, perfect for window browsing as the evening settles in — for twelve minutes to this vaulted cellar restaurant that has served Florentine steaks since 1886. The low brick ceilings and white tablecloths feel like stepping into another century, and the bistecca alla fiorentina — thick-cut Chianina beef, charred outside, ruby within — is the definitive version of this city's most iconic dish.

Tip: Reserve three days ahead for 19:30. Order the bistecca alla fiorentina (€50/kg, minimum 1.2 kg shared for two) and start with ribollita (€12), a bread-thickened vegetable soup that is peasant food elevated to art. Budget €45-55 per person with house wine. Steer clear of any restaurant between here and Piazza della Signoria with laminated photo menus outside — they charge €25 for reheated tourist pasta.

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Day 2

Beyond the Bridge — Oltrarno's Soul and a Sunset Farewell

09:00

Palazzo Pitti

Museum
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €16

Cross Ponte Vecchio and walk straight up Via de' Guicciardini for five minutes — the massive rusticated façade of the Medici's grandest palace fills the entire street. The Palatine Gallery on the first floor is the treasure: Raphael's Madonna of the Chair and Titian's Mary Magdalene hang in rooms still decorated exactly as the Medici left them, gilt frames against silk damask walls. Unlike the Uffizi, there are no ropes and few crowds — you can stand inches from a Raphael.

Tip: Enter right at 09:00 and head directly to the Sala di Saturno for Raphael's clustered masterpieces. Buy the combined Pitti + Boboli ticket (€22) at the entrance to save €4 over separate tickets.

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11:00

Boboli Gardens

Park
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €10

Exit Palazzo Pitti through the rear courtyard and you are already inside — the Boboli Gardens unfold uphill behind the palace like a Renaissance painting come to life. Follow the central cypress avenue to the Kaffeehaus terrace for a panoramic view over Florence's skyline, then loop back down past the Neptune Fountain and the Buontalenti Grotto with its fake stalactites and hidden Michelangelo casts. This is where the Medici came to escape the city without leaving it.

Tip: The Kaffeehaus halfway up the hill serves espresso with the best hidden view in Florence — most tourists walk right past it. Wear comfortable shoes; the gravel paths are steep and uneven.

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13:00

Trattoria 4 Leoni

Food
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €25

Exit Boboli through the main Pitti entrance and walk two minutes into the quiet Piazza della Passera — the terrace tables under the orange awning are where Oltrarno locals actually eat lunch. No English menu on the door, no hawkers outside — just honest Tuscan cooking from a kitchen that has been refining the same recipes for decades.

Tip: Order the pear and pecorino ravioli (€14) — the signature dish unchanged for twenty years — and tagliata di manzo (€18) sliced over wild arugula. No reservation needed for lunch if you arrive by 13:00; budget €25-30 with house wine.

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14:30

Brancacci Chapel

Religious
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €10

Walk ten minutes west from Piazza della Passera through Oltrarno's artisan streets — peek into woodworking and leather workshops with doors flung open — to the Church of Santa Maria del Carmine. The Brancacci Chapel inside is small enough to miss, but Masaccio's frescoes painted in 1427 changed Western art forever: the Expulsion from the Garden of Eden shows a grief so raw that Picasso reportedly stood here in silence. You are limited to 30 minutes inside, and it is enough — the chapel is only as wide as a living room.

Tip: Book the €10 timed entry at the church entrance — only 30 people are allowed in at a time. Look for the Tribute Money on the upper left wall: the way Masaccio painted natural light falling across the apostles' faces directly influenced Leonardo da Vinci.

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16:30

Piazzale Michelangelo

Landmark
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €0

Walk east from the chapel through Oltrarno's quieter residential streets, passing through the artisan neighborhood of San Niccolò, then follow the signs uphill through tree-lined switchbacks — the twenty-five-minute climb rewards you with Florence's greatest panorama. The entire city spreads below: the Duomo's dome, Palazzo Vecchio's tower, every bridge in a row like piano keys across the Arno. Arrive before golden hour to watch the light shift from warm gold to rose across the terracotta rooftops — this sunset is not overhyped, it is the single most beautiful moment in Florence.

Tip: Grab a €3 beer from the kiosk on the east side and claim a spot on the steps below the bronze David replica — center-left gives you the Duomo and Ponte Vecchio in one frame. For an even quieter panorama, walk five minutes further uphill to Basilica di San Miniato al Monte.

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19:30

Il Santo Bevitore

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €40

Walk twenty minutes back downhill through quiet residential lanes to Via di Santo Spirito, where candlelight glows through arched windows. Il Santo Bevitore is Oltrarno's best-loved dinner spot — a short seasonal menu of refined Tuscan cooking paired with an exceptional wine list, served in a vaulted medieval space where locals outnumber tourists on any given night.

Tip: Reserve two days ahead for 19:30 and request the back room with stone arches. Order the slow-cooked pork cheek with polenta (€18) and the house Chianti Classico Riserva by the glass (€8); budget €35-45 with wine. On your walk back, resist the gelato shops clustered near Ponte Vecchio — they use powdered mix and charge double. Locals go to Gelateria La Sorbettiera on Piazza Tasso instead.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Florence?

Most travelers enjoy Florence in 2 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Florence?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Florence?

A practical starting point is about €110 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Florence?

A good first shortlist for Florence includes Brunelleschi's Dome at the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore, Ponte Vecchio.