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Florence Art Masterpieces: A Renaissance Itinerary

Florence packed more world-changing art into a few square kilometres than almost anywhere on earth. This themed day pairs Michelangelo's David, the Uffizi's Botticellis and the climb up Brunelleschi's dome — with the best-rated skip-the-line tickets and guided tours to book so you spend your time in front of the art, not in the queue.

At a glance

  1. 1Accademia at opening — Michelangelo's David
  2. 2Uffizi Gallery, reserved entry
  3. 3Duomo & Brunelleschi's dome climb
  4. 4Medici chapels & Renaissance palaces

Start with David at the Accademia

Book the first slot of the day at the Galleria dell'Accademia, when the halls are quietest and Michelangelo's 5.17-metre David has room to breathe. A skip-the-line or guided ticket saves the long wait on Via Ricasoli — entry sells out days ahead in high season, so reserve early. Guides bring context to the unfinished Prisoners lining the approach to the statue, from around €25 for priority entry.

The Uffizi's Renaissance heavyweights

A short walk south brings you to the Uffizi, home to Botticelli's Birth of Venus and Primavera, Leonardo, Raphael and Caravaggio. The collection is vast, so a reserved-entry ticket or a small-group guided tour is the efficient way to find the key rooms without backtracking. Aim for a mid-afternoon slot to dodge the mid-morning crush, and allow two to three hours inside.

Climb Brunelleschi's dome

Finish at the Duomo, where Brunelleschi's 15th-century dome still crowns the skyline. The 463-step climb passes Vasari's Last Judgement frescoes up close before opening onto a rooftop panorama across the terracotta city. Dome access is timed and separate from cathedral entry, so a combined tour or ticket that reserves your climb slot is essential — spots go fast and cannot be bought on the day.

Round out the Medici story

With time to spare, add the Medici Chapels or a Renaissance-palace walk to see where the dynasty that funded all this art lived and worshipped. It ties the day together — the same family that commissioned Michelangelo and filled the Uffizi lies beneath Michelangelo's own marble tombs in the Sagrestia Nuova.

Florence art masterpieces — FAQ

Do I need to book Uffizi and Accademia tickets in advance?
Yes — both use timed entry and regularly sell out days ahead, especially from spring through autumn. Booking a skip-the-line ticket or guided tour on Excurgo guarantees your slot and saves you a queue that can top an hour in peak season.
Can I climb Brunelleschi's dome without a separate ticket?
No. Dome access is timed and booked separately from the cathedral, which is free to enter. A combined Duomo ticket or guided tour that reserves your climb slot is the only reliable way in, as same-day availability is rare.
Can I see the David, the Uffizi and the Duomo in one day?
Comfortably, if you reserve entry times in advance and group them by location — the three sites sit within a 15-minute walk of each other. Start with the Accademia at opening, take the Uffizi in the afternoon, and time your dome climb for late in the day.