Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket

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Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket

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Traveller rating 3.9 (38)Price from$45Operated byACCORD Italy Smart ToursBook viaGetYourGuide

Florence’s art is worth planning. This 5-attraction combo ticket pairs the Bargello Museum with four other Renaissance-era stops, so you can move on your own schedule. I like that it brings major works of art up close without dragging you through a fixed agenda, and I also like the five-museum value for a single price covering multiple entries.

One thing to watch: Casa Martelli has limited open hours and only on specific days, so it’s smart to line it up early in your trip rather than hoping it fits last-minute.

Key Points You’ll Actually Care About

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket - Key Points You’ll Actually Care About

  • Bargello Museum plus four add-ons in one pass, so you’re not buying tickets one by one.
  • Your own pace through sculpture, decorative arts, and armor-related exhibits at Bargello.
  • 3 days of validity starting from your first activation, which helps if your timing shifts.
  • Skip-the-ticket-line entry is included, a real time-saver in a busy city.
  • Casa Martelli hours are restricted, so plan that day around Tuesday or Saturday access.

A 5-Museum Ticket That Lets Florence Move at Your Pace

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket - A 5-Museum Ticket That Lets Florence Move at Your Pace
A combo ticket works best when it gives you freedom, not pressure. This one gives you access to five Florence must-sees across your 3-day validity window, starting from the first time you activate the tickets. That matters because Florence days can run long, and you rarely stick to a perfect minute-by-minute plan.

You’ll be visiting a mix of museums and historic sites tied to Italian Renaissance art and culture: Bargello Museum, Medici Chapels, Davanzati Palace, Orsanmichele, and Casa Martelli. You can pick the order that makes sense for your energy level and the rest of your day—art museum one hour, then a slower-paced stop when your feet start negotiating.

The vibe here is simple: access, not a guided script. There’s no guided tour included, which means you’ll want to bring curiosity. If you love walking into museums and figuring things out at your own speed, this pass fits well.

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

Bargello Museum: The Reason This Pass Starts Here

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket - Bargello Museum: The Reason This Pass Starts Here
The Bargello Museum is the anchor of the ticket, and it’s an excellent one. With your entry, you can explore a collection focused on Renaissance and medieval periods, plus the kind of highlights that benefit from slow looking. The ticket info points to masterpieces of sculpture and decorative arts, along with armor—so you’re not only seeing paintings in a traditional gallery sense.

What I like about a museum like this, using this pass, is that you can treat Bargello as your main event. Spend time where you want it: up close with sculpture, then branch into decorative arts, and return if something catches your eye. Without a guided tour, you won’t feel pushed out before you’re ready.

Also, because the ticket bundles multiple sites, Bargello can be your “focus stop,” while the other museums become flexible add-ons. If you’re the type who wants one standout deep attention visit and then a few lighter stops, this structure makes your day easier.

Practical note: you’re allowed entry tickets, but you are not allowed pets or luggage/large bags. That means you’ll likely want a small day bag and a plan for keeping things light.

Medici Chapels, Orsanmichele, and Davanzati Palace: Build a Smart Route

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket - Medici Chapels, Orsanmichele, and Davanzati Palace: Build a Smart Route
This pass includes access to Medici Chapels, Orsanmichele, and Davanzati Palace. The key idea is that these stops complement Bargello: you stay in the Renaissance-and-medieval orbit, but you change the setting and the kind of experience you get.

Here’s the practical way to think about the route:

  • If you’re coming in with high energy, stack more museums on the front end of your 3 days.
  • If you’re visiting during peak walking hours, put the more time-sensitive stop first (for you, that likely means Bargello or Casa Martelli).
  • If you tend to get tired mid-afternoon, use the combo to spread visits across mornings and one late slot.

The ticket is built for flexible pacing. You can choose to stay longer where you love the theme (Renaissance art and culture) and move on when your attention needs a reset. That’s the real advantage of bundling entries: you’re not stuck paying for each new ticket at the moment you decide you want one more museum.

One more thing: because there’s no guided tour included, these sites work best if you like to read, look, and ask questions in your own head. Even basic attention—spotting what period something belongs to, comparing styles, noticing materials—turns an entry ticket into a stronger visit.

Casa Martelli: Plan Around Tuesday and Saturday Hours

Casa Martelli is included, and it’s also the one stop you need to schedule first. The info is specific: it’s open only Tuesdays from 1:30 PM to 6:30 PM and Saturdays from 9:00 AM to 1:50 PM.

That limited window is the main “gotcha” of this otherwise flexible ticket. If you arrive in Florence on a day that isn’t Tuesday or Saturday, you’ll want to adjust your plan inside the 3-day validity window so you still get a chance to use Casa Martelli.

Why I consider this a big deal: the entire combo ticket has value only if you actually use the full set of entries. If Casa Martelli is one of the reasons you bought the pass, your best strategy is to build one of your two museum days around its operating hours.

So, check your trip calendar and then pick your most convenient slot:

  • If you have a Tuesday afternoon, it can fit naturally after lunch.
  • If you’re in Florence on a Saturday morning, you can hit it early before the day gets crowded.

Using the Skip-the-Ticket-Line Entry Without Stress

This ticket includes skip the ticket line. That’s not just about saving a few minutes—it changes how you feel at the start of a museum visit. When entry lines are long, you waste energy before you even get to the art. With fast entry included, you can start looking sooner.

You should still expect a bit of day-to-day variation at museum entrances. Some places move faster than others depending on staffing and crowd levels. But having skip-the-line access generally makes planning more realistic, especially in Florence where lines can form.

My practical advice: arrive with a simple routine—have your ticket ready, keep your bag situation sorted (no large luggage), and go in with a plan for how you’ll spend your time. Even a loose plan helps: one big focus room at Bargello, then a reset, then one of the other included sites later.

Because you can use multiple entries over 3 days, you don’t need to cram everything into one long day. You can treat skip-the-line as a way to get through the first bottleneck quickly, then settle into a calmer rhythm.

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

Price and Value: Does $45 Really Make Sense?

The price is $45 per person for a ticket valid for 3 days from the first activation. Whether it’s a “good deal” depends on one question: how many of the five sites will you actually visit in that window?

If you think you’ll do all five, the math usually favors buying the combo rather than sorting separate admissions later. You’re packaging Bargello plus Medici Chapels, Davanzati Palace, Orsanmichele, and Casa Martelli into one decision.

If you’re less sure—maybe you’ll only get to Bargello and two others—then the ticket still can be worth it, but you’ll want to be honest about your schedule. A 3-day validity window is generous compared with many timed passes, yet you can still run out of time if your days are packed with other activities.

Here’s how I’d decide quickly:

  • If you’re doing Florence museums for at least part of three days, and you like art-based stops, this price is likely reasonable.
  • If you only have time for one big museum day, you may not use enough of the included entries to feel like you got the full value.

Also remember: there’s no guided tour included. That’s good for independent pacing, but it means you’re investing your time and attention in reading and looking rather than relying on a guide for context.

Who This Combo Ticket Suits Best

This ticket is a strong fit if you want a self-directed Florence art plan with built-in flexibility.

Best match:

  • You like Renaissance and medieval themes and want multiple sites that support that focus.
  • You enjoy “pick what you like” museum time rather than a scripted route.
  • You’re visiting for up to 3 days, so you can spread entries across different times of day.

Less ideal if:

  • You only want one museum and you’re not interested in any of the other included stops.
  • You can’t adjust your schedule for Casa Martelli’s limited days and hours.
  • You prefer a guided tour to handle the storytelling and pacing for you (since guided tours are not included).

If you’re the type who likes walking into a museum, slowing down near the pieces that catch your eye, and letting the day unfold, you’ll probably appreciate how this pass is structured.

Should You Book This Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket?

Florence: Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket - Should You Book This Bargello Museum 5-Attractions Combo Ticket?
I’d book it if you know you want more than just one museum day. Bargello Museum is the anchor, and the included access to Medici Chapels, Davanzati Palace, Orsanmichele, and Casa Martelli gives you multiple ways to explore Florence’s art and culture without paying for each entry separately.

Skip-booking thoughts if you can’t reach most of the included sites, or if Casa Martelli’s Tuesday/Saturday hours don’t match your calendar. The pass only feels like a win when you actually use the entries.

If you’re torn, lean toward booking and then make a simple plan right after: circle your Casa Martelli day, set a Bargello time block, and leave the other stops as flexible backups inside your 3-day window.

FAQ

Which attractions are included in this Florence combo ticket?

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

How long is the ticket valid?

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

Do I get a guided tour with this ticket?

No. Guided tour is not included.

What are Casa Martelli opening days and times?

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

Is skip-the-ticket-line entry included?

Yes. Skip the ticket line is included.

Is the ticket wheelchair accessible?

Yes. The activity is wheelchair accessible.

Can I cancel for a full refund?

Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Can I reserve and pay later?

Yes. Reserve now & pay later is available.

Are pets or large bags allowed?

No. Pets are not allowed, and luggage or large bags are not allowed.

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