Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket

REVIEW · FLORENCE

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket

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Five museums in one go.

This Florence Bargello combo ticket is a smart way to stack high-value art stops without playing ticket-scheduling Tetris. I like that you can move at your own pace while seeing Renaissance and medieval works across several iconic places, with Bargello covering sculpture, decorative arts, and even armor. One thing to plan around: Casa Martelli has tight opening windows, so you’ll want to time that stop carefully.

If you’re thinking Florence equals just one big church line after another, this pass is a nice shift. You’re trading a guided group rhythm for self-guided wandering, which is great when art museums are your thing. The main tradeoff is also simple: there’s no guided tour, so you’ll get more from the visit if you’re happy reading labels and using your own curiosity.

Key highlights worth centering

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket - Key highlights worth centering

  • 5 famous Florence sites for one price: Bargello plus Medici Chapels, Davanzati Palace, Orsanmichele, and Casa Martelli
  • Skip-the-line entry: faster doors, less time waiting
  • See more Renaissance art in fewer days: decorative arts, sculpture, and armor at Bargello
  • Visit on your schedule: you control the order and pacing
  • Casa Martelli needs a plan: limited opening times on Tuesday and Saturday

How the 3-day Bargello combo ticket really works

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket - How the 3-day Bargello combo ticket really works
This is a 5-attraction ticket covering entry to five places around Florence: the Bargello Museum, Medici Chapels, Davanzati Palace, Orsanmichele, and Casa Martelli. You pay a flat $45 per person, and your ticket stays valid for 3 days starting from the first time you activate it.

That “first activation” detail matters. If you activate on day one at Bargello, your time window is running even if you’re not using every entry right away. I recommend choosing your first activation based on where you’ll start naturally that day, then fill in the remaining sites over the next two days.

Also note what you’re not getting: no guided tour. You’re buying access, not interpretation. The good news is that these sites are the kind where you can slow down, look up close, and spend time with what catches your eye. The challenge is that you’ll want to go in with a little flexibility: if you’re hoping someone narrates everything for you, this isn’t that format.

Finally, the pass is built for comfort and practicality: it’s listed as wheelchair accessible. And for “what not to bring,” the rules are clear: no pets, and no luggage or large bags. If you normally travel with a big daypack, you should still be ready to store or travel light to match the museum policies.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Florence

Bargello Museum: Renaissance sculpture and even armor up close

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket - Bargello Museum: Renaissance sculpture and even armor up close
Bargello is the anchor of the ticket, and it’s the stop I’d prioritize if you only had time for one. With your entry, you can explore the museum’s exhibitions on Renaissance and medieval periods. The descriptions point you toward what Bargello is known for at a high level: masterpieces of sculpture, decorative arts, and armor.

What I like about this as a visitor is the mix. Sculpture museums can sometimes feel either too architectural or too art-theory heavy. Here, the combination of sculptural works with decorative arts gives you more ways to connect. And the mention of armor is a useful clue: even if you aren’t a weapons-history person, you’ll likely find yourself comparing materials, craftsmanship, and design choices. It’s the kind of display that turns “I walked in” into “I’m still here.”

Because the pass is entry-only, you should treat your visit like a choose-your-own experience. Spend extra time where the labeling helps you understand what you’re seeing—then step back to see how the objects relate within the room. That rhythm matters in museums. If you rush, Bargello can feel like a collection. If you slow just a bit, it feels like a story told with stone, metal, and careful decoration.

A practical tip: plan Bargello earlier in your visit window if you can. As you use multiple sites, your energy level will likely change, and Bargello is the one that rewards a full sit-down-and-look session.

Medici Chapels, Davanzati Palace, and Orsanmichele: art in different “Florence moods”

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket - Medici Chapels, Davanzati Palace, and Orsanmichele: art in different “Florence moods”
Your combo ticket doesn’t keep things in one lane. After Bargello, you get three more stops that help you understand Florence as more than just museums in a row.

Medici Chapels

The ticket includes entry to the Medici Chapels. The key value here, based on the description, is cultural focus: this is a major location tied to Florence’s Renaissance world. I see this as a strong pairing with Bargello because it complements the visual art with a sense of place and power—religious space and Renaissance identity connected in one stop.

You’ll want to bring a “listen with your eyes” approach. In spaces like this, details in architecture and decoration shape your understanding as much as any single object.

Davanzati Palace

Next up: Davanzati Palace. This is included for its historic setting and art/cultural collections connected to the Renaissance theme. A palace visit also changes the pacing. Compared with a museum gallery, a palace gives you a lived-in sense of scale. Even if you only spend a limited amount of time in each room, the structure helps you picture how wealth, daily life, and taste were expressed.

Think of this as your “pause and breathe” stop. Not every room needs equal time. Pick what interests you most, then move on before you get museum-fatigued.

You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Florence

Orsanmichele

Then there’s Orsanmichele, another included stop on the ticket. The description frames it as a must-see for anyone interested in Renaissance art and culture, which is helpful guidance: don’t treat it like a quick detour. Plan for it to contribute to your overall picture of Florence’s Renaissance character.

As with the other non-Bargello sites, you’re visiting at your own pace. That’s a good thing here, because religious-art spaces and historic sites reward looking slowly, noticing relationships between decoration and space.

Casa Martelli: the one stop you must schedule (or you’ll miss it)

If you remember only one planning detail from this whole ticket, make it this: Casa Martelli is open only on specific days.

It’s listed as open:

  • Tuesdays from 1:30 PM to 6:30 PM
  • Saturdays from 9:00 AM to 1:50 PM

That’s a huge practical consideration because it can decide whether you fully use all five entries during your 3-day validity window. If you’re in Florence for just a short stay, check the day-of-week before you activate the ticket. If Casa Martelli lands outside your available times, you may feel like you’re carrying a “coupon that won’t get redeemed.”

The good part is that Casa Martelli is included, so you’re not paying extra for it. The drawback is timing. If you want the cleanest experience—using every included site—build your schedule around those open hours.

My advice: if Casa Martelli matters to you, put it on your calendar first. Then place the other four museums around it. That approach reduces stress and helps you avoid that last-day scramble.

Skip the ticket line, but don’t skip preparation

One of the strongest selling points here is skip the ticket line. In a city where lines can eat your day, this matters. Less queue time means more time for actual looking.

That said, “skip the line” doesn’t mean “instant entry without friction.” You’ll still want to arrive with enough time to get through the entrance process smoothly, especially if you’re hopping between multiple sites within your 3-day window.

Because there’s no guided tour, you’re also responsible for managing your route. These five locations are spread across Florence, so wear shoes you can walk in without drama. Also remember the baggage rule: no luggage or large bags. If you’re carrying more than a small daypack, you’ll likely need a storage plan so you’re not stuck before you’re even inside.

Finally, since the ticket is self-guided, your best results come from simple habits:

  • Pick a realistic order each day so you’re not zig-zagging.
  • Give Bargello more time than you think you need.
  • Keep Casa Martelli’s limited hours in view.

This pass works best when you treat it as a “mini museum circuit,” not as five random punches in a spreadsheet.

Value for $45: when this combo ticket makes sense

At $45 per person, the value depends on how many of the five entries you’ll actually use. If you’re the type who plans well, you can likely turn this into a cost-effective way to access high-demand Florence sites across multiple categories: museum galleries, palace setting, and cultural chapels.

The “value engine” here is the combination:

  • You get entry tickets to all five locations under one ticket.
  • You reduce friction with skip-the-line entry.
  • You can visit across 3 days, starting from first activation, which helps if your schedule isn’t perfectly linear.

Where value can slip: if your dates and Casa Martelli’s opening hours clash, you might not be able to redeem all components. In that case, you’re still getting Bargello plus four other options, but the “all-in” feeling may not land.

So I see this ticket as best for three kinds of people:

  • You want to see several Renaissance-focused sites without committing to a guided tour.
  • You’re comfortable planning your own visits and reading signage.
  • You’ll actually use multiple days in Florence.

If you want someone else to do all the interpretation and route planning, this is where a guided option could feel more satisfying.

Who this experience suits best (and who should consider a different plan)

This combo ticket is a strong fit if you like art at your speed. The highlights emphasize discovering works up close and exploring exhibitions on your own pace. That’s the right mindset for a self-guided museum set.

You’ll also appreciate it if you want Renaissance coverage without building a complex schedule. Bargello gives you sculpture, decorative arts, and armor. Then the other sites broaden the “Renaissance in Florence” picture through chapels, palatial rooms, and culturally significant historic spaces.

It’s less ideal if you need a structured guide to connect the dots. Because guided tour is not included, you’re relying on the museum materials and your own curiosity.

Quick practical expectations before you go

Here’s what you can count on from the provided info:

  • Location: Florence, in Tuscany, Italy
  • Duration: valid 3 days from first activation
  • What’s included: entry tickets to Bargello Museum, Medici Chapels, Davanzati Palace, Orsanmichele, and Casa Martelli
  • What’s not included: guided tour
  • Access: listed as wheelchair accessible
  • Restrictions: no pets and no luggage or large bags
  • Extra note: Casa Martelli only opens Tuesdays and Saturdays within specific time ranges

One more thing: the ticket is described as “skip the ticket line,” which suggests a smoother start. Still, show up with a plan so you don’t burn the time you saved.

Should you book this Florence Bargello Museum 5-attractions combo ticket?

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket - Should you book this Florence Bargello Museum 5-attractions combo ticket?
I’d book it if you want a smart, flexible way to pack five major Florence art and culture stops into a short stay. Skip-the-line entry plus the 3-day validity window makes this feel efficient, and Bargello gives you the kind of depth that can anchor your whole trip.

I’d think twice if your schedule makes Casa Martelli hard to fit in. Since it only operates at set times, that can reduce the satisfaction of using all five entries.

A final check: ask yourself if you’re okay with a self-guided experience. If you’re the type who likes to wander and focus on what you personally find interesting, this pass is a great way to do Florence on your terms.

FAQ

How long is the ticket valid?

The ticket is valid for 3 days starting from the first activation.

What attractions are included in the combo ticket?

It includes entry tickets to the Bargello Museum, Medici Chapels, Davanzati Palace, Orsanmichele, and Casa Martelli.

Is a guided tour included?

No, a guided tour is not included.

Can I skip the ticket line?

Yes, skip-the-ticket-line entry is included.

What is the price?

The price is listed as $45 per person.

What are Casa Martelli’s opening hours with this ticket?

Casa Martelli is open only on Tuesdays from 1:30 PM to 6:30 PM and Saturdays from 9:00 AM to 1:50 PM.

Is the attraction wheelchair accessible?

Yes, it is listed as wheelchair accessible.

Are pets or luggage allowed?

Pets are not allowed, and luggage or large bags are not allowed.

What is the cancellation and payment policy?

Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and you can reserve now and pay later.

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