2 Hours
Daily Tour
Unlimited
English, French, German, Italian, Spanish
Explore Florence on foot and uncover world-class art, hidden stories, and the city that invented the modern world, with easy GPS navigation and flexible timing. This Florence audio tour covers 28 stops across the historic centre and the Oltrarno hillside, from Piazza della Santissima Annunziata to the Basilica di San M... Read more
Florence begins here. A perfectly balanced Renaissance square, Europe's first orphanage, and a church where brides still leave bouquets. Quietly extraordinary and almost always overlooked.
One plain building. One seventeen-foot giant carved from abandoned marble. The Accademia doesn't try to impress from the outside, which makes what's waiting inside all the more extraordinary.
Leather, noise, and the smell of street food give way to a Victorian iron and glass market hall where Florence eats, argues, and comes alive. Ground floor tradition, upper floor delicious chaos.
Modest stone outside. Gem-encrusted walls within. The Medici Chapels hold centuries of ambition, Michelangelo's most haunting sculptures, and a secret chamber where genius once hid for his life.
Five hundred years of an unfinished façade, and not by accident. Behind this raw stone front lies one of Florence's oldest and most significant churches, where Renaissance architecture found its voice.
Power dressed as restraint. This fortress-like palace was deliberately understated, yet inside lies a courtyard, a dazzling chapel, and the rooms where a young Michelangelo first caught a dynasty's eye.
Florence at full volume. Marble, mosaics, bronze doors, and a dome that shouldn't exist but does. This square is where the Renaissance stopped being a movement and became a masterpiece.
The square showed you the replicas. This museum holds the originals. Ghiberti's Gates of Paradise, Michelangelo's most personal Pietà, and Donatello's Magdalene, all waiting inside a building most people walk straight past.
414 steps of marble precision rising nearly 85 metres above Florence. Giotto started it, others finished it, and the views from the top make every step completely worth it.
A grand square built on erasure. Ancient Roman crossroads, a demolished medieval neighbourhood, and a triumphal arch that calls it restoration. Florence rewriting itself, right under your feet.
A Renaissance silk and gold trading floor turned leather market. The arches haven't changed. The deals have. And somewhere in here, the word bankruptcy was born.
A shiny bronze nose, a coin, a grate, and a legend. Rub it right and Florence promises to bring you back. Millions have tried. The boar keeps its own counsel.
A bridge that doesn't look like one. Jewellers, golden light, the Arno below, and a private Medici corridor running silently overhead. One of Europe's oldest bridges, and still the most theatrical.
Nearly a kilometre of private passageway built in five months so one man could move through Florence unseen. Power, fear, and 90 ancient portraits hidden above the rooftops.
Government offices turned art dynasty. A corridor of columns, statues, and perfect symmetry opens into one of the greatest collections in the world, Botticelli, Leonardo, Michelangelo, all behind one plain façade.
No walls, no ticket, no barriers. This open air museum is where Florence announced power, burned its enemies, and carved its identity into stone. You're not entering it. You're already inside.
A prison turned into a palace of masterpieces. Florence's oldest public building now holds Donatello's David, early Michelangelo, and the finest Renaissance sculpture collection in Italy.
Gelato, the piano, Gucci, Florence Nightingale, and wine windows. A short walk through streets where Florence quietly invented things the modern world still uses every single day.
Florence's Pantheon of Italian Glories. Michelangelo, Galileo, and Machiavelli all lie here, while Dante stands outside in marble, honoured by the city that once banished him forever.
The crowds thin, the Arno opens up, and Florence finally exhales. A riverside promenade where the city slows down, the views stretch south, and the hill ahead begins to pull you upward.
Florence paved Europe's first citywide stone streets in 1339. As you cross to the quieter Oltrarno, the city shifts from spectacle to something more lived in, local, and real.
The only medieval gate in Florence without a tower, and the one with the most surprising wartime secret. Pass through it and the city begins its ascent toward something extraordinary.
A hillside path designed in the 1860s for elegant carriages that never quite arrived. Cypress trees, curving roads, and the city falling away behind you as Florence prepares its final reveal.
Every step uphill earns a better view. Keep climbing. The rooftops spread wider, the dome grows closer, and just ahead, Florence opens itself up completely for the first time.
A vast hilltop terrace where the entire city spreads out in one breathtaking sweep. Bronze David watches over it all, the dome anchors the skyline, and Florence finally shows you everything at once.
Cypress sentinels, layered stone terraces, and a curving hillside road leading upward. The crowds have thinned, the air has shifted, and something quieter and older is waiting just above.
Florence's most beautiful secret, perched at the very top of the hill. A thousand year old Romanesque basilica with a marble façade, a golden mosaic, and views that make the climb completely unforgettable.
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