Florence Boboli Gardens Tickets
About this activity
Skip the Line — No waiting in line at the entrance
Smartphone tickets accepted
- Your booking is confirmed immediately
Experience Highlights
See the Boboli Gardens in Florence with these fast-track tickets. Avoid the queues to enter the largest gardens in this Italian city surrounded by art. At 45,000 square metres, you'll be able to enjoy numerous sculptures and a wonderful landscape just behind the Pitti Palace.
In addition to these well-kept, geometrical garden walks, you'll also have access to the lesser-known Bardini Gardens with these tickets. Another opportunity you'll have with this pass is for the Porcelain Museum, with wonderful pieces of Renaissance art.
- Avoid the queues with these fast-track tickets to the Boboli Gardens in Florence.
- Enjoy the largest gardens in Florence at 45,000 square metres, filled with sculptures and an Egyptian obelisk.
- Get admission to the Bardini Gardens with these tickets, as well as the Florence Porcelain Museum to continue admiring Renaissance art.
What’s included
- Entrance to the Boboli Gardens in Florence
- Entrance to the Porcelain Museum
- Entrance to the Bardini Gardens
- Audio guide
Select date and time
Plan to arrive at least 15 minutes before your start time to ensure everything runs smoothly
Step by Step
Discover the Boboli Gardens in Florence with these priority tickets. You can avoid the long queues to enter the largest gardens in this Italian city, which is characterised by being surrounded by Renaissance art history. This place is one of the best examples of this style with the different sculptures inside. You will also have access to the Bardini Gardens and the Porcelain Museum.
Located just behind the Pitti Palace in the heart of Florence, this 45,000 square metre garden is a journey into Renaissance art. You will get away from the hustle and bustle of the city to immerse yourself in true calm amidst manicured, geometric gardens.
The Medici family bought the Palazzo Pitti in 1550, where this park was only a part between the palace and the Forte di Belvedere. It was later extended and in 1766 it was opened to the public.
It is made up of fountains, pergolas, grottoes and a small lake, as well as dozens of statues. An ancient amphitheatre stands out and in the centre of the gardens there is an Egyptian obelisk. You can also see the fountain of Neptune and the fountain of the Ocean by Giambologna, clearly inspired by antiquity.
These tickets also give you access to:
- The Bardini Gardens: a smaller, lesser-known garden right next door that was recently opened to the public.
- Porcelain Museum: a nearby space displaying the collection of Florence's ruling families.