Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Florence”
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Florence Day Trips on a Budget: 7 Options Compared
Florence Is the Cheap Base for Tuscany, Not the Only Way to See It The math settles most of the day trip debate before you leave the hotel. A regional train to Siena costs about 10 euros and takes 1 hour 20 minutes to 1 hour 30 minutes. A rental car for the same day, once you add fuel, tolls, parking and the risk of an 80 to 335 euro ZTL fine for straying into a restricted zone, runs well past 100 euros.
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Florence Duomo on a Budget: Prices and Free Entry
The Florence Duomo on a Budget Most visitors overpay for the Duomo complex because the three-tier system is easy to misread and resellers exploit exactly that confusion. Buy the Ghiberti Pass, EUR 15, unless climbing Brunelleschi’s dome specifically matters to you; it still gets you into the Baptistery, the crypt, and the Opera Museum. The cathedral’s nave itself, the part most people picture when they say “the Duomo,” is free on a separate line and needs no pass at all.
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Day Plans
Florence in 3 Days on a Budget (With Daily Costs)
Florence in 3 Days on a Budget Three days is enough to do Florence properly without overspending: the Duomo complex on its cheaper tier, the two headline museums booked around the peak-season queues, and a full day that costs almost nothing at all. Expect roughly EUR 40 to 45 on the free-heavy day and EUR 85 to 95 on the museum day, averaging out to around EUR 65 a day before lodging.
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Day Plans
Florence in 4 Days on a Budget (With Daily Costs)
Florence in 4 Days on a Budget Four days is the 3-day itinerary plus one more day for the Oltrarno’s artisan streets and Santa Croce, without touching the day-trip towns covered in our Florence, Italy guide . Daily spend swings from about EUR 30 on the quietest day to EUR 90 on museum days, averaging around EUR 60. See the 6-day and 7-day versions if you have more time to spread the same trip out.
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Florence in 6 Days on a Budget (With Daily Costs)
Florence in 6 Days on a Budget Six days is the 4-day itinerary plus two more days for the small paid museums that get overshadowed by the Uffizi and a genuinely slow, low-spend day. This is enough time in the city itself that you could peel off a day for Siena or Pisa instead; if that appeals, our Florence, Italy guide covers the gateway trips. Daily spend still ranges from about EUR 25 to 30 on the cheapest day to EUR 90 on museum days.
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Florence in 7 Days on a Budget (With Daily Costs)
Florence in 7 Days on a Budget Seven days is the 6-day itinerary with one more genuinely free day added at the end, for a trip that never has to rush the two headline museums. A week in the city is also long enough to swap a day for Siena or Pisa if you want it; that side of the trip is covered in our Florence, Italy guide , not here.
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Florence on a Budget: 9 Cheap and Free Things to Do
Florence on a Budget: What It Actually Costs Florence is generous to a tight budget in a way most big Italian cities are not, because its single best moment, the view from Piazzale Michelangelo, costs nothing, and its cheapest meal, a lampredotto sandwich from a cart, costs under 4 euros. Plan on EUR 60 to 90 a day outside lodging for a trip that covers real food and one paid sight, and closer to EUR 100 to 140 on the days you add the Uffizi or the Accademia.
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Day Plans
Florence Plus Tuscany in 3 Days on a Budget
3 Days: Florence as a Base, Two Day Trips by Train This plan uses Florence as a sleeping base and spends two of your three days out in Tuscany by train, not car: one full day in Siena, one half day in Pisa. It is the cheapest version of this itinerary in this family; see the 4 day , 5 day , 6 day and 7 day versions if you have longer and want to add San Gimignano, Lucca or a car day into Chianti.
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Day Plans
Florence Plus Tuscany in 4 Days on a Budget
4 Days: Florence as a Base, Three Day Trips by Train and Bus This plan uses Florence as a sleeping base for three day trips, all reachable without a car: Siena, Pisa and San Gimignano. It extends the 3 day version with one more train-and-bus day trip; go to the 5 day , 6 day or 7 day version if you also want Lucca or a car day into Chianti.
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Day Plans
Florence Plus Tuscany in 5 Days on a Budget
5 Days: Florence as a Base, Four Day Trips, Still No Car This plan uses Florence as a sleeping base for four day trips, Siena, Pisa, San Gimignano and Lucca, and none of them need a car. It extends the 4 day version with Lucca’s walled old town. Only the 6 day and 7 day versions of this itinerary add a rental car, for Chianti and Val d’Orcia.
Book these before you go Pisa tower ticket on opapisa.
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Day Plans
Florence Plus Tuscany in 6 Days on a Budget
6 Days: Florence as a Base, Plus the First Day a Car Actually Helps This plan uses Florence as a sleeping base for five day trips: Siena, Pisa, San Gimignano and Lucca by train and bus, then Chianti by rental car on day 6, the first day in this family where a car earns its cost. It extends the 5 day version with that one car day; the 7 day version adds a second car day into Val d’Orcia.
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Day Plans
Florence Plus Tuscany in 7 Days on a Budget
7 Days: Florence as a Base for All of Tuscany, Train and Car Both This is the full version: Florence as a sleeping base for six day trips, four of them by train or bus (Siena, Pisa, San Gimignano, Lucca) and two of them by rental car (Chianti, then Val d’Orcia and Montepulciano). It extends the 6 day version with one more car day. If a week is more than you need, the 3 , 4 and 5 day versions cover the same spine, shorter.
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Piazzale Michelangelo on a Budget: Prices vs Free
Piazzale Michelangelo: The Best View in the City Costs Nothing The single best framing of Florence, the terrace at Piazzale Michelangelo with the Duomo and the Arno laid out below it, is free, all day, every day. There is no ticket, no timed slot, and no reason to book a paid tour to see it, though paid options do exist if you want transport or a guide included. Ten minutes further uphill, San Miniato al Monte is free too, and it is quieter than the terrace below it at almost any hour.
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Siena on a Budget: Prices and Free Days
Siena Costs About 10 Euros to Reach and Nothing to Enter Siena is the strongest single Tuscan day trip from Florence, and the best part is that the town itself charges you nothing to walk through. The regional train from Firenze Santa Maria Novella runs about 10 euros one way and takes 1 hour 20 minutes to 1 hour 30 minutes, despite a straight-line distance of only about 50km, because no high speed line connects the two cities.
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