Florence Pass Calculator: Firenze Card Worth It? (2026)
Florence pass math is really about the Firenze Card: a 72-hour museum pass covering 60+ sites. It wins when you pack museums into three days, but the two everyone wants, the Uffizi and the Accademia, are cheap enough alone that a light itinerary should just book them. Tick your list and see.
1. Who's going, and for how long?
Days matter for unlimited passes; pick-a-number passes give you weeks.
2. What do you want to see?
Gate prices are our researched baselines (as of July 2026).
Live prices for the attractions you ticked above. Buying these one by one is the honest option whenever a pass doesn't beat the gate.
Prices per person in USD unless noted. Children priced at each operator's child rate where published; gate-price child tickets estimated at 80% of adult. Choice-slot menu rules are simplified; the linked booking pages have the exact menus.
How the Florence passes actually work
Is the Firenze Card worth it?
It pays off when you do a lot of museums in three days. The Uffizi is about $32 and the Accademia about $22, so two big galleries plus the Palazzo Vecchio, Pitti Palace and Bargello can clear the 85-euro price. A two-museum visit will not, and you should just book those tickets.
Does the card cover the Duomo dome climb?
No. The cathedral complex, including Brunelleschi's Dome, Giotto's Bell Tower and the Baptistery, is sold separately through the Duomo's own tiered passes and is not on the Firenze Card. We price it as an uncovered ticket.
Does the Firenze Card include buses?
Not any more. It used to bundle a transit add-on, but the current card does not include public transport. Florence's historic centre is small enough to walk, so for most trips that changes little.