Milan
City Guide

Milan

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

Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €70.00/day
Best season Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct
Language Italian
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Rome
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

The Day You Fell for Milan — Marble Spires to Cobblestone Aperitivo

09:00

Duomo di Milano

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Piazza del Duomo is nearly empty at nine — a rare window to stand alone before the cathedral's 3,400 statues and 135 Gothic spires without a single tour group in your frame. Walk the full perimeter starting from the south side: the east apse, rarely photographed, is arguably more intricate than the famous west facade. Morning sidelight catches the Candoglia marble and turns it pale gold — by noon, flat overhead sun and dense crowds will steal the magic entirely.

Tip: Stand at the center of the piazza near the equestrian statue of Vittorio Emanuele II and shoot upward with a wide-angle lens — the spires fill the entire frame. Skip the rooftop terrace queue if it's already 30 people deep; the free rooftop food hall at La Rinascente department store across the square gives you nearly the same angle of the spires with zero wait.

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10:30

Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Exit the Duomo piazza from the north side — the Galleria's triumphal entrance arch is directly ahead, a 30-second walk. Step under Italy's oldest active shopping arcade and look straight up: the iron-and-glass dome, completed in 1877, soars 47 meters and looks its absolute best right now, when mid-morning sun streams through the oculus and spotlights the mosaic floor below. Walk the full cruciform length slowly; the floor mosaics depict the coats of arms of Milan, Rome, Florence, and Turin.

Tip: Find the bull in the Turin coat-of-arms mosaic at the central octagon — locals spin their heel three times on its anatomy for good luck. Do it now before the queue forms by midday. Skip Caffè Biffi and Savini inside the Galleria for coffee: you pay triple for the address and get forgettable espresso.

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12:00

Luini Panzerotti

Food
Duration: 30min Estimated cost: €6

Exit the Galleria from the south end back toward the Duomo, then turn right onto Via Santa Radegonda — Luini is a 2-minute walk on the left, identifiable by the permanent queue snaking out the door. This family institution has been frying panzerotti since 1888. Order the classic panzerotto fritto with tomato and mozzarella (€3) — the dough is shatteringly crisp outside, molten inside. Eat standing on the sidewalk like a true Milanese office worker on lunch break.

Tip: The queue looks intimidating but moves in under 10 minutes — they run a tight operation. Always order the fritto version, never al forno: the fried one is what earned them a century of loyalty. Grab two — one classic tomato-mozzarella, one with ham — because you will regret ordering only one. They close when the dough runs out, usually by 15:00.

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13:00

Castello Sforzesco

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Walk northwest from Luini along Via Dante, Milan's grand pedestrianized boulevard — the 12-minute stroll is lined with gelaterias and bookshops, and the castle's massive red-brick tower grows larger with every block until it fills your entire field of view. The Sforza Castle, seat of Milan's Renaissance rulers and later fortified by Leonardo da Vinci himself, has a fortress exterior that photographs beautifully from the Piazza Castello fountain. Walk through the main gate into the vast free-entry courtyards, where the sheer scale of ducal power becomes visceral.

Tip: The best photograph is from Largo Cairoli facing northwest, where the reconstructed Torre del Filarete is framed symmetrically by the fountain jets with early-afternoon light behind you. Walk through to the rear Corte Ducale courtyard — most tourists stop at the front gate, so the back courtyards are nearly empty and far more atmospheric.

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15:00

Brera District

Neighborhood
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €10

Exit the Castello from the east gate and walk 8 minutes along Via Pontaccio into Brera — you will feel the shift immediately, from fortress grandeur to intimate cobblestone lanes lined with art galleries and shuttered balconies trailing ivy. This is Milan's bohemian quarter, where painters and poets gathered for centuries and still do. Wander Via Brera and Via Fiori Chiari, admire the Pinacoteca di Brera's elegant Baroque courtyard through the gate, then claim a sidewalk table as golden-hour light filters between the ochre buildings and settle in for aperitivo.

Tip: Jamaica Bar on Via Brera 32 has been the neighborhood's living room since 1911 — Hemingway drank here. Order a Negroni at the zinc bar (€9) for the most authentically Milanese aperitivo hour. Avoid the restaurants with laminated photo menus lining Via Fiori Chiari's main stretch — they charge tourist prices for frozen pasta reheated in a microwave. Walk one block deeper into the side streets for where locals actually eat.

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19:00

Ratanà

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €45

Walk north from Brera for 15 minutes through Porta Nuova — Milan's striking modern district where the Bosco Verticale towers rise covered in 20,000 trees, a jaw-dropping contrast to medieval Brera you just left. Ratanà occupies a beautifully restored 1930s railway workers' clubhouse with exposed brick arches and a hidden garden courtyard. The kitchen champions nearly forgotten Milanese recipes: start with mondeghili, traditional Milanese fried meatballs that have vanished from most menus (€14), then order the risotto alla milanese mantecato al midollo — saffron rice finished with ossobuco bone marrow instead of butter (€18). Budget €45-50 with a glass of Lombardy wine.

Tip: Reserve by phone at least 2 days ahead — they do not seat unreserved walk-ins after 19:30, and the garden fills first. A warning for this neighborhood: the restaurants clustered along the nearby Corso Como pedestrian strip survive entirely on foot traffic, charging €18 for forgettable carbonara with no shame — if Ratanà is full, walk deeper into Via de Castillia or Via Valtellina for honest neighborhood trattorias, and never default to Corso Como.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Milan?

Most travelers enjoy Milan in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Milan?

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 Milan?

A practical starting point is about €70 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Milan?

A good first shortlist for Milan includes Duomo di Milano, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, Castello Sforzesco.