Florence: City Pass 25+ Attractions
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Firenze
Unlock Florence's treasures with a 5-day City Pass. Enjoy free entry to 25+ attractions, guided tours, and hop-on-hop-off bus access.
Duration: 5 days
Cancellation: 1 day learn more
Highlights
  • Uffizi Gallery - We will book your Uffiizi ticket on the first day of your City Pass between 09:00AM - 01:00 PM.

The Uffizi Art Museum in Florence is globally renowned for its outstanding collections of ancient sculptures and paintings that span from the Middle Ages to the modern era. The painting collections from the 14th century and the Renaissance house some absolute masterpieces by artists such as Giotto, Simone Martini, Piero della Francesca, Beato Angelico, Filippo Lippi, Botticelli, Mantegna, Correggio, Leonardo, Raphael, Michelangelo, and Caravaggio, along with numerous valuable works by European painters, mainly from Germany, the Netherlands, and Flanders. Furthermore, the gallery boasts an invaluable collection of ancient statues and busts from the Medici family, adorning the corridors and consisting of ancient Roman copies of lost Greek sculptures.

  • Accademia di Belle Arti - The Accademia will be booked on your second day of your City Pass between 09:00AM - 01:00 PM.

The Galleria dell’Accademia is an art gallery that has existed since the 16th century. With 7 statues, the Accademia has the largest collection of sculptures by Michelangelo in the world, including the famous statue of David. The gallery also has the largest and most important collection of paintings with a gold background.

  • Museo de’ Medici - The Museo de’ Medici - located in one of the most extraordinary buildings in the city - is the place to discover the history of the most famous dynasty in the world. From Lorenzo the Magnificent to the Electress Palatine, the memory of Casa Medici is preserved and handed down here through the exhibition of precious collections of works of art, historical relics, original documents, faithful reconstructions and multimedia installations.
  • Museo Opificio delle Pietre Dure - This extraordinary museum showcases the art of inlaying semi-precious stones and marble to create beautiful images. Florence has been known for this type of art since the Renaissance. The Medici family invested a great deal in this development and had a decisive influence on the craft. In this museum, you can admire a collection of 600 types of precious stones, as well as the tools used by the craftsmen of the time.
  • Museo di San Marco - The museum is located in the Dominican monastery of San Marco in Florence. Beato Angelico, one of the most famous painters of the Renaissance, designed many of the rooms in the monastery. Some of his paintings can be admired in the Museo di San Marco. The museum also contains works by Fra Bartolomeo, a painter of the Florentine school and monk of the Dominican monastery.
  • Museo Fondazione Franco Zeffirelli Onlus - Franco Zeffirelli, real name Gianfranco Corsi, was a director with a career spanning almost 70 years. He worked equally for theatre, opera and film and left behind a comprehensive documentation of his productions. The exhibition comprises over 300 works, including designs for stage sets, costume sketches, models and costumes created by the master over a seventy-year career in theatre and film. The crowning glory of the tour is the Sala dell’Inferno, the Hall of Hell. Here, a short film shot in full HD is projected with the animated drawings created by the master to give shape to his personal vision of hell from Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy. In addition to the permanent exhibition, there are regular temporary exhibitions dedicated to important artists from all over the world.
  • National Archaeological Museum, Florence - The National Archaeological Museum houses Egyptian, Greek, Etruscan and Roman relics such as chariots and sculptures. Among them are some Etruscan artefacts of great importance. These include the bronze statue “Chimera”, which depicts an animal that is part lion, part goat and part snake and was found in Arezzo in 1533. Other highlights include the “Arringatore” (orator), the “Minerva” and the terracotta and travertine urns from Volterra, as well as the Greek ceramic vases with black figures. The museum is well known for its large Egyptian collection, the second largest in Italy after the one in Turin.
  • Museo degli Innocenti - The “Ospedale degli Innocenti” (Hospital of the Innocents) is an architectural masterpiece that combines functionality and beauty, elegance and symmetry: a ‘palace for children’, as the architect Giovanni Michelucci called it.
    It was originally built as a children’s hospital (the first of its kind in Europe). It was built from 1419 to a design by Filippo Brunelleschi, making it one of the very first buildings of the Renaissance.
  • Synagogue and Jewish Museum of Florence - With its large copper-green dome, the Great Synagogue is an imposing eye-catcher in the cityscape of Florence. The “Tempio Maggiore” was inaugurated in 1882, a few years after the emancipation of Italian Jews in 1861, and is one of the most important examples in Europe of the exotic Moorish style. The interior has a special atmosphere thanks to the many wall frescoes, the soft light that shines through the stained glass windows and the magnificent mosaics.
  • Casa Buonarroti - The Casa Buonarroti Museum is entirely dedicated to Michelangelo Buonarroti. Although the great painter, sculptor and architect never lived here, his family built the house entirely in his memory – and furnished it with his works.
  • Leonardo Interactive Museum - Da Vinci Interctive Museum - Leonardo Interactive Museum®: the first museum dedicated to Leonardo da Vinci. 100% interactive: discover the fantastic machines and mechanisms designed by Leonardo, experience his incredible architectural designs and study his drawings.
    Leonardo da Vinci: universal genius, Renaissance legend, extraordinary engineer, and scientist of his time. The interactive exhibition allows you to immerse yourself in the mind and creative work of one of the greatest geniuses of all time.
  • Synagogue and Jewish Museum - The Siena Synagogue was built in 1786 in neoclassical style and is located in the historic centre of the Tuscan city. The building style is typical of the synagogues in the ghetto, with no special external features but a rich interior. In contrast, the elegant interior of the synagogue is richly decorated. The rectangular hall contains rows of pews on the sides, while in the centre is the podium, built in 1756 and decorated with nine ten-branched candelabras. Opposite the ark is the women’s gallery, the place reserved for women’s prayers, as the Siena Synagogue follows the traditionalist rite. In this case, it is a kind of balcony closed by a wooden grille.
  • Church and Museum of Orsanmichele - The church of Orsanmichele is located right in the centre of Florence between Piazza della Signoria and the cathedral. It has a fascinating history: it was built in the 13th century as a loggia for the grain market and was built directly above the historic small oratory of San Michele in Orto. Thanks to the generosity of the Florentine guilds, which furnished the church with high-quality sculptures and paintings between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries, it later became a place of worship again.
  • Duomo - Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore - Florence is one of the most beautiful cities in Italy and a favourite destination for tourists from all over the world. The capital of Tuscany is known for its art, architecture and history. One of the most important sights in Florence is the Florentine Cathedral, also known as the Duomo di Firenze or Santa Maria del Fiore, which is located directly on the Piazza del Duomo. Our audio guide gives you an expert tour of the cathedral and Piazza del Duomo – it’s easy with your Florence City Pass.
  • Cathedral Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta - The Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, the cathedral of Siena, is one of the most sublime and important Romanesque-Gothic churches in Italy. Some of Italy’s greatest art treasures await you inside. These make Siena Cathedral truly one of the top sights in Tuscany.
  • Leaning Tower of Pisa - The Leaning Tower of Pisa - a landmark that is known worldwide for its unique leaning. This whimsical bell tower sits majestically on the Piazza dei Miracoli in the charming city of Pisa and is an absolute must-see for any traveler to Italy. The Piazza dei Miracoli itself is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a place of incomparable historical significance.
    The Skip the line entry ticket is only included from a validity of minimum of 4 days.
What's Included
  • 24-hour Hop-on Hop-off bus ride in Florence
  • Free access to Museo de Medici and more
  • Guided walking tour with a local
  • Visit Uffizi and Accademia Galleries
Additional Information

Explore Florence & Tuscany hassle-free with the Florence City Pass. This all-inclusive pass let`s you visit top attractions including Uffizi Gallery, Academia Gallery, Jewish museum and Synagogue, Franco Zeffirelli museum and Cathdral of Siena. Join a guided Florence walking tour and get to know all information by a local.

Take the stress out of planning your trip to Florence, and get to know the city’s rich history, culture, and unique atmosphere through museums, churches, tours and gastronomy in one pass. Join included hop on hop off bus tour and discover the guided tour trough Florence with a local. Explore the city and the region at your own pace, and take 5 days to do so.

The pass includes free admission to top landmarks, including the Uffizi Gallery, Accademia Gallery, Orsanmichele, Museum de Medici and Museo Casa Buonarroti.

Location
Uffizi Gallery
Piazzale degli Uffizi
Cancellation Policy

For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.

Customer Ratings
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(3 Ratings)
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Deirdre_t
Apr 20, 2024
Worthless - I was provided with no instructions as to how to activate this pass. When I reached out, I was told to access the attached "Link" It was not a link I could access through my iphone nor my computer and I notified the company of that. I got no response. I wrote to them again, informing them that the pass was worthless without instructions as to how to use. The only think I got from them was a voucher which contained no information, such as what was available through the pass, how to get Uffizi or Academia tickets, where to go for the hop on hop off bus - I never heard from them after day 2 of the pass. Asking for a refund.
Review provided by Viator
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June 2024
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