Florence: 25+ Attractions City Card with Uffizi & Accademia

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Florence: 25+ Attractions City Card with Uffizi & Accademia

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Operated by Turbopass City Pass · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Florence can feel like a stampede.

This card helps you cut through the pressure by bundling skip-the-line entry for the big two draws, Uffizi and Accademia, with a built-in local walking tour to orient you fast. I also like how it keeps the day flexible by adding plenty of museum options beyond the famous galleries. The main drawback: you still need to follow the timed entry and ticket pick-up rules, so your schedule has to be a bit disciplined.

What makes this pass practical is how many stops you can chain together without re-planning ticket logistics every time. You get entries to museums across Florence, plus Siena Cathedral and Palazzo Piccolomini. And the added walking and bike tours are a real shortcut for finding your bearings and saving energy on day one.

Key points to know before you go

Florence: 25+ Attractions City Card with Uffizi & Accademia - Key points to know before you go

  • Skip-the-line for Uffizi and Accademia helps you spend more time inside and less time shuffling in lines
  • Guided walking tour plus guided bike tour makes it easier to plan your own museum afternoons
  • Lots of included extras beyond the headline galleries, including Medici, Leonardo da Vinci Interactive, and the Museo di San Marco
  • Siena is included with Cathedral of Siena and Palazzo Piccolomini, so you can add a day trip without buying separate tickets
  • High-season timing can be stricter (especially April–October), so start early when you can

A Florence Card That’s Built Around Time, Not Just Tickets

Florence: 25+ Attractions City Card with Uffizi & Accademia - A Florence Card That’s Built Around Time, Not Just Tickets
If Florence is on your list, odds are you’ve already heard the same story: getting into the top museums can eat half a day. This pass is designed for that problem. It bundles entry to major sights like Uffizi Gallery and Accademia Gallery, and it pairs those with guided time on the ground so you can move through the city with less guesswork.

The best part for you is not the sheer number of venues. It’s the way the day can flow. Instead of bouncing around buying multiple tickets, you can build a route around what you actually want to see: art galleries in the morning, hands-on or specialty museums later, then a walking-and-sightseeing rhythm that keeps you from burning daylight.

The “timed entry” piece is where your planning matters. Your pass is valid 1–5 days, but Uffizi and Accademia require a reservation and a time slot, and you must pick up tickets on the right day and in the right spot. If you like a totally free-form day with no structure, this card may feel a little controlling.

You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Florence

Uffizi and Accademia: The Skip-the-Line Reality Check

Florence: 25+ Attractions City Card with Uffizi & Accademia - Uffizi and Accademia: The Skip-the-Line Reality Check
This pass specifically includes skip-the-ticket-line entry to the Uffizi Gallery and Accademia Gallery. That’s the headline benefit for a reason. These are the two attractions where lines commonly balloon, and having skip-the-line access changes the whole experience.

Here’s the important part you should plan around:

  • You need a reservation and time slot for each (Uffizi and Accademia). The time slot is tied to your day choice, so pay attention to the “Days option” information.
  • The Uffizi ticket must be picked up on the same day of your visit, at a location about 350 meters from Uffizi.
  • The Accademia ticket pick-up happens in front of Accademia before entry.
  • Uffizi and Accademia are closed on Mondays and the first Sunday of each month.
  • Between April and October, expect longer waiting times due to crowd levels and strict security control.

What this means for your day: plan to be nearby and ready ahead of your time slot. Don’t schedule these as a last-minute activity late in the afternoon unless you enjoy stress. If you’re traveling in April–October, I’d treat mornings as your best friend.

How the Walking Tour and Bike Tour Fit Into Your Own Day

Florence: 25+ Attractions City Card with Uffizi & Accademia - How the Walking Tour and Bike Tour Fit Into Your Own Day
Two included experiences help you get oriented: a Florence city walking tour with a local guide and a guided bike tour through Florence.

These matter because Florence is a city where the layout rewards attention. A walking tour is a fast way to learn which streets funnel you efficiently from one area to another. You also tend to pick up practical context that makes the museums feel less random once you start popping inside.

The bike tour is for a different need: covering more ground with less fatigue. It’s a smart match for a day when you want to hit multiple museum stops. Even if you’re not doing every included venue, the orientation you get can make your follow-up wanderings feel more intentional.

One more note: the walking tour guide name Lucrezia appears as an example of an excellent guide. If you see that name on the tour info or guide assignment, take it as a good sign that the guide style is aimed at clarity and keeping you moving.

Building a Museum Plan: A Smooth 2-Day Approach

You can use the pass for 1–5 days, and you’ll probably want at least two full days if you want more than the big two galleries. Here’s a plan concept that keeps you from wasting time backtracking.

Day 1: Uffizi morning, then specialty museums

Start with your Uffizi time slot. Once you’re done, shift gears. Instead of trying to cram in only the headline venues, use the rest of the day to explore the included museums around the city.

A good flow is:

  • Museo degli Strumenti Musicali for a change of pace (music-focused, a nice contrast to painting-heavy days)
  • Opificio delle Pietre Dure if you want a craft and restoration type of stop (you’ll be able to spend time at your own tempo)
  • Orsanmichele if you want another recognizable Florence landmark included in the pass

You’ll likely feel your brain slow down after Uffizi. This is where the pass works best: you can pick stops that feel varied rather than repeating the same museum format back-to-back.

Day 2: Accademia morning, then Medici and Leonardo

Do Accademia in the morning. Then move into stops that give Florence a different personality.

Two standout options on this pass:

  • Leonardo da Vinci Interactive Museum: a hands-on break that can feel lighter than the art galleries
  • Museo de Medici: the Medici connection gives you a distinct thread for understanding power, taste, and patronage in Florence (even if you don’t go deep, it’s a strong thematic anchor)

Add on something that keeps you moving:

  • Museo di San Marco for another major included museum choice
  • Museo Casa Buonarroti if you want to connect Florence to one of its most famous names

This kind of pacing helps you actually enjoy the included list instead of treating it like a checklist.

Leonardo da Vinci Interactive Museum: Why It’s a Smart Inclusion

Florence: 25+ Attractions City Card with Uffizi & Accademia - Leonardo da Vinci Interactive Museum: Why It’s a Smart Inclusion
A big art-city pass can feel one-note. This one avoids that with the Leonardo da Vinci Interactive Museum entry.

Interactive museums work for you in a specific way: they reset your pace. After timed entries and galleries, you often want somewhere you can spend time without staring at the same kind of display layout for hours. An interactive setting lets you slow down, try things, and keep the day from feeling like a grind.

It’s also a good “choose your own energy” stop. If you’re tired, you can spend a smaller amount of time there. If you’re feeling fresh, you can linger longer without it feeling like a box to check.

The Medici Thread: Museo de Medici, Museo Casa Buonarroti, and More

Florence: 25+ Attractions City Card with Uffizi & Accademia - The Medici Thread: Museo de Medici, Museo Casa Buonarroti, and More
The pass includes free access to Museo de Medici and also lists Museo Casa Buonarroti. Even without turning this into an academic project, these are useful anchors because they connect people and places.

Think of it like this: when you see the city as made by individuals and families with strong influence, Florence becomes more legible. You stop wondering why everything feels connected and start noticing patterns: why certain buildings matter, why certain collections and artworks were valued, and how the city shaped what it kept and celebrated.

Pair that with:

  • Museo Franco Zeffirelli for a different kind of culture stop
  • The Cattedrale dell’Immagine if you want an included attraction that breaks up the museum sequence

This is also a smart use of your card because those places can take less planning than Uffizi and Accademia. You can place them where your feet and attention feel best.

Specialty Florence Stops Worth Slotting In

Florence: 25+ Attractions City Card with Uffizi & Accademia - Specialty Florence Stops Worth Slotting In
This card doesn’t only give you art-galley classics. It also includes a bunch of museums and landmarks that can add variety to your route.

Here are a few included items you should consider using as “spacing stops” between major attractions:

  • Museo degli Innocenti: a museum entry that can work well when you want a quieter segment of your day
  • Museo degli Strumenti Musicali: a change of subject from paintings and sculpture
  • Museo di San Marco: another major Florence museum choice included on the pass
  • Orsanmichele: a classic Florence location that’s included, useful for breaking up museum-to-museum fatigue
  • The Cattedrale dell’Immagine: another included option that’s not the same kind of gallery experience

How to use these: pick two or three, not all of them. With passes like this, the temptation is to squeeze in everything. You’ll enjoy Florence more when you give each stop enough time to breathe.

Siena Cathedral and Palazzo Piccolomini: Adding a Day Trip Without Extra Ticketing

Florence: 25+ Attractions City Card with Uffizi & Accademia - Siena Cathedral and Palazzo Piccolomini: Adding a Day Trip Without Extra Ticketing
One of the biggest value moves here is the Siena portion. The pass includes:

  • Siena Cathedral entry
  • Palazzo Piccolomini, Siena entry

If Siena is on your “maybe” list, I’d treat this pass as a nudge to do it. The card makes it less expensive to add the trip because you’re not buying separate admission for those two highlights.

Practical advice: Siena days tend to feel different from Florence days. Plan for more walking and more time outdoors, and keep your Florence museum ambitions lighter on that day. With Siena included, you can also spread your Florence museums across multiple days and still keep Siena as a satisfying topper.

Price and Value: Is This Card Worth $101.84?

At $101.84 per person, the value comes from three areas working together:

First, the pass includes skip-the-ticket-line entry to Uffizi and Accademia. Those are the two times you most want to avoid waiting.

Second, you’re getting a lot of included entries beyond just two galleries, including major museums like:

  • Leonardo da Vinci Interactive Museum
  • Museo de Medici
  • Opificio delle Pietre Dure
  • Museo Franco Zeffirelli
  • Museo Casa Buonarroti
  • plus multiple other included stops

Third, it bundles guided time with the walking tour and bike tour. Even if you’re comfortable navigating Florence on your own, guided time helps reduce wasted hours.

When it’s not the best fit: if you only want to do one or two major attractions total, you might be overbuying. Also, if you dislike timed entry, the reservation requirement for Uffizi and Accademia may feel like a hassle.

One extra thing: Brunelleschi Pass is not included. If your plan includes that specific extra, you’ll need to budget for it separately.

Who Should Book This Card (And Who Should Skip It)

You’ll likely love this card if:

  • You want Uffizi and Accademia without living in lines
  • You’re planning at least two days in Florence
  • You like mixing a few big galleries with other museum stops
  • You want Siena added without making it a separate ticket hunt
  • You enjoy guided orientation so your free time is better spent

You might skip it if:

  • Your schedule is too unpredictable to handle timed entry and pick-up rules
  • You’re only in Florence for a short stop and want just one museum day
  • You don’t want to be tied to any day-specific planning

Quick Tips to Make the Pass Feel Easy

  • Pick your Uffizi and Accademia visit days carefully since time slots depend on your day choice.
  • Treat morning entry as the default strategy, especially in April–October when waiting and security checks can stretch out.
  • Plan your other museum picks as pairs or triples, not a full list. Your feet will thank you.
  • Bring your requirements: passport or ID and a charged smartphone (you’ll need what’s specified for the pass).
  • Use the right voucher approach: the GetYourGuide voucher/app won’t be valid for redeeming Florence entrances and activities, and you’ll need a printed voucher.

Should You Book This Florence City Card?

I’d book it if your goal is to see the big sights efficiently and still have room for other included museums. The skip-the-line setup for Uffizi and Accademia, plus the guided walking and bike tours, is what makes this pass feel like a time-saver instead of just a discount ticket booklet.

But if you’re the type who wants zero structure and zero timed plans, you may feel boxed in by the reservation and ticket pick-up rules. In that case, consider buying individual tickets based on your exact day and mood.

If you do book, plan smart: align your schedule with the museum opening pattern (especially Mondays and the first Sunday of each month) and keep your Siena day lighter on Florence museums.

FAQ

How long is the Florence City Pass valid?

It’s valid for 1 to 5 days. You can check availability to see the starting times.

Does this pass include skip-the-line entry to the Uffizi and Accademia?

Yes. It includes skip-the-ticket-line entry for both Uffizi Gallery and Accademia Gallery.

Are Uffizi and Accademia open every day?

No. They are closed on Mondays and the first Sunday of each month.

Do I need a reservation or time slot for Uffizi and Accademia?

Yes. There is a reservation and time slot requirement for Uffizi and Accademia, and you should check the information on the Days option.

Where do I pick up the Uffizi ticket?

You must pick up the Uffizi entry ticket on the same day of your visit at a location about 350 meters from Uffizi.

Where do I pick up the Accademia ticket?

You must pick up the Accademia Gallery entry ticket in front of Accademia before entry.

What is required for the pass voucher?

A printed voucher is required, and you should bring a passport or ID card and a charged smartphone.

Does the GetYourGuide voucher or app work for Florence entries?

No. The GetYourGuide voucher / GetYourGuide App will not be valid to redeem entrances and activities in Florence.

What Siena attractions are included?

The pass includes Siena Cathedral entry and Palazzo Piccolomini, Siena entry.

Is the Brunelleschi Pass included?

No. Brunelleschi Pass is not included.

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