REVIEW · FLORENCE
Florence: Bike Rental for 24 Hours
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by My Green Tour srl · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Florence feels different when it’s on wheels. This 24-hour bike rental gives you an easy way to hit the city’s top sights fast, without the stop-and-go of walking, and you’ll get a city bike plus a map and water right at pickup. One thing to plan for: this is Florence, so expect heavy pedestrian and vehicle traffic, and the lack of phone support can make navigation more work than you’d like.
You start at the central office by Eataly, choose from city or mountain bikes, and then ride at your own pace through the historic center. You’ll pedal past big-ticket names like the Duomo, Medici sites, Signoria Square, Ponte Vecchio, and even make the climb up to Michelangelo Square for that classic view. You’ll also have a locker option for safe bike storage, but do bring the required identity document for the rental period.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Ride
- What This 24-Hour Florence Bike Rental Really Feels Like
- Picking Up Your Bike at Green Tour Office by Eataly
- Choosing Between City and Mountain Bikes (and Why It Matters)
- Map, Water, Lockers, and the ID Rule You Can’t Skip
- Cycling the Historic Center: Duomo, Medici Power, and San Lorenzo
- Signoria Square and the Michelangelo David Copy Experience
- Ponte Vecchio to Pitti Palace: River Charm Without the Full Walking Grind
- Pedal to Michelangelo Square: The Climb That Changes the Whole Day
- Crowds, Crosswalks, and the Phone Holder Surprise
- Time Planning for a Smooth 24-Hour Loop
- Price and Value: Is $41 for 24 Hours Worth It?
- Who Should Book This Florence Bike Rental (and Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book This 24-Hour Florence Bike Rental?
- FAQ
- How long is the Florence bike rental?
- What’s included in the price?
- Where do I pick up the bike?
- Do I need to bring an ID?
- Are phone holders provided for navigation?
- What types of bikes are available?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
Key Things to Know Before You Ride

- 24 hours of freedom: set your own loop and stop when a street or square calls your name.
- Map + suggested sights: Duomo, Medici stops, Signoria, Ponte Vecchio, Pitti Palace, and Michelangelo Square are all covered.
- City and mountain bike options: pick what fits your comfort level and how hilly your day gets.
- Lockers for bike storage: convenient for taking a break or doing a short detour on foot.
- Phone holders aren’t available: bring your own strategy for directions (or plan to rely on the provided map).
- An ID is required: you’ll need to leave an identity document with the agency while you rent.
What This 24-Hour Florence Bike Rental Really Feels Like

A full day on a rental bike changes the shape of Florence. Walking is gorgeous, but it can also be slow and crowded, especially around the big landmarks. With a bike, you can cover real distance while still being close enough to hop off and wander when something catches your eye.
The included city map matters more than it sounds. Florence is a maze of narrow streets and one-way segments, and having a paper plan helps you keep momentum instead of spiraling into wrong turns. Add the complimentary bottle of water, and you’re set up for an afternoon that doesn’t feel like a scavenger hunt.
The best part is how the sights line up into a logical route. You’re not just biking in circles. You’re moving through Florence’s major highlights—Duomo area, Medici sites, central squares, the river crossing at Ponte Vecchio, then out toward the viewpoints.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Florence
Picking Up Your Bike at Green Tour Office by Eataly

Your pickup spot is Tourist Point, next to Facile.it, across from Eataly, at the GREEN TOUR OFFICE. This is a smart location because you’re already near the core of where most people want to go, so you lose less time getting started.
When you arrive, the team can help in multiple languages, including Armenian, English, German, Italian, Russian, Spanish, Kurdish. Even if your Italian is limited, you should be able to get what you need to leave confident and rolling.
Quick reality check: Florence pickup locations can be busy and slightly chaotic around meal times. Make sure you give yourself a little buffer so you can choose your bike and get your map without rushing.
Choosing Between City and Mountain Bikes (and Why It Matters)

You can pick from a variety of bikes, including city bikes and mountain bikes. For most people, a city bike is the practical choice because Florence streets can be uneven and crowded, and you want comfort without overthinking it.
A mountain bike can be a good fit if you expect more rough surfaces or you simply like the stability and sturdier feel. The info says you’ll get comfortable options, but comfort still depends on your riding style and what you’re comfortable steering through traffic.
Here’s my advice for your decision: if you’re mostly planning to ride through the historic center and do frequent stops on foot, choose the bike you’ll feel easiest controlling at low speed. Florence rewards calm riding. It doesn’t reward hero moves.
Map, Water, Lockers, and the ID Rule You Can’t Skip

Included with your rental are a comfortable bike, city map, free luggage deposit, and a locker. This combination is more useful than it looks.
- The luggage deposit helps if you’re starting the day with bags or storing something before a museum visit.
- The locker lets you step away without dragging your bike around every time you duck into a church or pause for a photo.
- The map gives you a ready-made path between the major stops so your day stays fun, not frantic.
One important rule: the agency requires an identity document, which you must bring and leave during the rental period. Don’t plan to travel light with a digital-only ID. Bring the document you’re actually allowed to use for check-in.
Cycling the Historic Center: Duomo, Medici Power, and San Lorenzo

Your route builds around Florence’s biggest landmarks, and the biking format helps you move between them efficiently. The map points you toward key sights like the Duomo of Florence, Medici Palace, and San Lorenzo church.
The Duomo is one of those places you feel from far away—massive and unmistakable. The info notes it as the 4th biggest church in Europe with the largest dome in the world. Even if you don’t go inside every time, seeing it change as you approach on bike is a big part of the experience.
From there, the Medici-related stops help you understand why Florence looked like it did. The map mentions Medici Palace and San Lorenzo church, including the detail that the Medici dynasty is buried there. That’s not just a trivia point—it’s a clue to what you’re walking through. Florence isn’t one era; it’s layers, and these names anchor multiple layers at once.
San Lorenzo can feel calmer than the most crowded zones near the Duomo, so it’s a good time to park the bike and slow down. When you leave the seat, you’ll notice more than if you’re just passing through on foot speed.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Florence
Signoria Square and the Michelangelo David Copy Experience

Signoria Square is described as an open-air museum with magnificent statues, including a copy of Michelangelo’s David. This is exactly the kind of stop that benefits from biking.
Why? Because you can arrive when you want, take your time for photos and looking, then move on without the stress of competing with every other group. When you’re on wheels, you decide the tempo.
Also, Signoria Square is the type of place where the details matter. You’re surrounded by sculpture and architecture, and it’s easy to lose track of time if you’re standing there with nowhere to go next. With a bike nearby (and lockers available), you can take a real break, not just a quick snap.
One more practical note: scooters and cars can mix with intense pedestrian traffic here. Slow down. Ride like you’re sharing the sidewalk with people who don’t expect you. It makes the experience smoother for everyone.
Ponte Vecchio to Pitti Palace: River Charm Without the Full Walking Grind

Ponte Vecchio is pointed out as the oldest bridge of Florence and famous for historical jewelry shops. Biking to it is ideal because you can approach from different angles and still stop at the right moment for a view.
Crossing on a bike gives you a middle ground between speed and stillness. You get movement to keep the day flowing, but you can pause easily because you’re not stuck in a long walk with your calves burning.
From Ponte Vecchio, the route includes Pitti Palace, noted as the last residence of the Medici. Whether you go inside or keep it as a “see the scale from outside” stop, this is a powerful shift in atmosphere. The palace area feels more expansive and more removed from the ultra-central congestion, which can make your day feel like you’re breathing again.
If you’re aiming for a balanced day, I’d use this part of your loop to reset. Take a breather, check your map, and decide if you want to keep pushing toward viewpoints or spend more time near the river.
Pedal to Michelangelo Square: The Climb That Changes the Whole Day

Michelangelo Square is the big payoff for a little cardio. The plan explicitly suggests you can pedal all the way up, and the reward is one of the most beautiful views of Florence.
This is where choosing your bike and pacing really matters. A ride up toward a viewpoint can feel steep depending on your comfort level and the exact streets you take. Don’t treat it like a workout race. Treat it like part of the sightseeing.
I like doing this later in the day. The light shifts, the crowds often thin out at certain hours, and you can time your view break with a calmer feel. Even if you decide not to ride the whole way up, you’re still in the right mindset: you’re aiming for the view, then you’ll have a clear next step afterward.
Crowds, Crosswalks, and the Phone Holder Surprise

One issue worth calling out: phone holders are unavailable. That single detail affects how you navigate.
If you rely on your phone for directions, you’ll need another plan. Use the paper map, or bring a way to secure your device that works with your own gear (not provided here). And don’t assume you’ll be able to stop instantly whenever your route needs a quick check—Florence is busy, so plan for a few slower moments.
The one negative review included a specific complaint about difficulty moving among pedestrians and a lack of space to mount a cell phone. You don’t need to panic, but you should go in with the right expectation: this is not a quiet countryside ride.
My best advice: ride slower than you think you need to. When you do, the crowds feel less stressful, and you get more of the fun cycling vibe—rather than feeling like you’re negotiating every corner.
Time Planning for a Smooth 24-Hour Loop
With a full day, you’ll want to think in chunks, not a single nonstop ride. Use a rough structure:
- Morning: cover the biggest central landmarks (Duomo area, Medici-focused stops).
- Midday: pause for a longer look at squares and the river crossing (Signoria and Ponte Vecchio).
- Afternoon: drift toward Pitti Palace, then set up for your viewpoint climb.
- Late day: Michelangelo Square for the big view, then return and lock up.
Because lockers and a luggage deposit are included, you can also adjust. If you end up lingering somewhere, you can store your bike safely and keep moving on foot for the rest of the block.
This flexibility is the heart of why a bike rental like this can be good value. You’re not locked into a rigid sequence. Your day has room to breathe.
Price and Value: Is $41 for 24 Hours Worth It?
At $41 per person for a 24-hour rental, the question isn’t only the price. It’s what you’re buying with it: time, convenience, and the ability to link multiple major sights in one day.
This package includes a lot of practical items: a comfortable bike, city map, water, locker access, and free luggage deposit. Those are real costs in your time and planning. If you’ve ever tried to manage Florence logistics while also trying to see everything, you know why this matters.
There’s also less transport friction. Instead of planning bus routes or relying on long walks between distant highlights, you’re using your own legs through a shortcut of motion. That keeps you closer to the spots that people actually want to see.
The value drops a little if you strongly depend on a phone mount for navigation, because phone holders aren’t provided. Still, with the paper map and a calm riding pace, the experience should remain straightforward for most people.
Who Should Book This Florence Bike Rental (and Who Might Skip It)
This is a great match if you:
- want an active way to explore Florence without rushing through everything
- like the idea of riding between top landmarks and then hopping off to wander
- are comfortable riding at low speeds through busy areas
- appreciate having a map and a practical storage setup
You might think twice if you:
- strongly need phone navigation with a mount (since phone holders aren’t provided)
- feel uneasy riding in dense pedestrian areas
- want a ride that’s mostly peaceful and car-free (Florence is rarely like that in the center)
Also, about e-bikes: one past customer reported that e-bike availability may depend on booking a guided visit, otherwise the rental is city bikes with a basket. So if an e-bike is essential for your comfort, I’d confirm availability before you assume.
Should You Book This 24-Hour Florence Bike Rental?
I’d book it if you want a simple, high-value day that stitches Florence’s best-known sights into one connected experience. The route makes sense, the included map and water reduce decision fatigue, and the locker setup gives you freedom to take breaks without losing your bike.
If you’re cautious about riding around crowds or you rely heavily on your phone for navigation, adjust your expectations and bring a navigation strategy that doesn’t depend on a mounted phone. Ride slow, use the paper map, and you’ll keep the experience fun instead of stressful.
Bottom line: for $41 and a full day, this is one of those plans that can turn Florence from a list of landmarks into a moving, breathable day.
FAQ
How long is the Florence bike rental?
It runs for 1 day, so you can use the bike for a full 24-hour period.
What’s included in the price?
You get a comfortable bike, a city map, free luggage deposit, and a locker.
Where do I pick up the bike?
Meet at Tourist Point, next to Facile.it, at the GREEN TOUR OFFICE, across from Eataly.
Do I need to bring an ID?
Yes. The agency requires an identity document, which you must bring and leave during the rental period.
Are phone holders provided for navigation?
No. Phone holders are unavailable.
What types of bikes are available?
You can choose from a big variety of bikes, including city bikes and mountain bikes.
Can I cancel and get a refund?
Yes. Free cancellation is offered up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
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