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Why does nobody queue for the best sculpture in Florence?

The Bargello sits three minutes from Palazzo Vecchio in a 13th-century fortress that once served as the city prison and execution yard. Inside are Donatello's bronze David, Michelangelo's Bacchus and the two competition panels that arguably started the Renaissance, all hanging in rooms you can often have to yourself. This guide covers the ticket, the opening hours that trip people up, and what actually to look for once you're inside.

Donatello's bronze David in the Bargello sculpture collection, one of the museums in Florence, Italy
4.6★794 reviews
$21per person
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Donatello's bronze DavidMichelangelo's Bacchus, carved at 221401 competition panels on one wallRarely crowded4.6★ from 794 travelers
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About This Experience

Location
Via del Proconsolo 4, 50122 Florence
Getting there
3 minutes on foot from Palazzo Vecchio, 5 minutes from the Duomo
Opening Hours
Daily 8:15 to 13:50, longer in high season, with rotating Monday and Sunday closures through the month
Admission
$21 for reserved entry; the door price is €10 if you're willing to risk a closed day
The Setting
A 13th-century fortress that was the city's prison and execution yard before it held sculpture
Highlights
Donatello's bronze David, Michelangelo's Bacchus, and the Ghiberti and Brunelleschi competition panels from 1401

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Dates and current pricing for the reserved entry ticket, pulled straight from the booking platform.

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Which Bargello Museum Ticket to Pick

There is one product to consider here: a $21 reserved entrance ticket. It gets you into the museum on a fixed date and time slot, nothing more, no guide and no audio commentary bundled in. That's not a gap in the offering; the Bargello's rooms are small enough and the wall text good enough that most visitors don't miss having someone talk them through it.

It suits anyone who already likes sculpture, or who has done the Uffizi and the Accademia and wants a third stop that doesn't come with a queue. It's a poor fit if you're chasing paintings, since this collection is almost entirely bronze and marble, and it's a poor fit for a rushed itinerary where an hour feels like a luxury you can't spare.

What it doesn't cover: there's no guided option sold for this museum at all, so if you want a guide's commentary on the Ghiberti and Brunelleschi panels you'll need to bring your own reading or book a private guide independently. The rotating monthly closures are the real reason to book ahead rather than walk up and pay the €10 door price; check the date before you go, not the day of the week. For a broader look at how the Bargello fits against the rest of the city's collections, the homepage guide to Florence's museums is a useful starting point.

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One product, one straightforward reservation.

What You'll See

Donatello's bronze David, cast around 1440, was the first free-standing nude cast since antiquity, and it looks nothing like Michelangelo's version down the street: young, smirking, wearing a hat and boots and very little else. In the same building, Ghiberti's and Brunelleschi's competition panels from 1401 hang side by side, both depicting the Sacrifice of Isaac. They were the rival entries for the Baptistery doors commission, and many historians point to that one wall as the starting gun of the Renaissance.

Michelangelo's Bacchus, carved when he was 22, shows a drunk god visibly losing his footing, and his Brutus and the Pitti Tondo sit in the same room. Donatello's marble David and his St George are here too, along with strong work by Cellini and Giambologna, including Giambologna's Mercury. The building itself was the Bargello, the police headquarters, and executions took place in the courtyard you now walk through on the way in.

The vaulted gilded interior of the Bargello, one of the best art museums in Florence, Italy for Renaissance sculpture
The Bargello, a former prison that now holds the greatest sculpture collection in Florence.

How a Visit Flows

  1. 8:15 am

    Arrive at opening

    The first slot of the day is the quietest; you can walk straight into the courtyard where executions once took place.

  2. 8:25 am

    Ground floor courtyard

    Look up at the carved coats of arms on the walls before heading into the Michelangelo room off the courtyard.

  3. 8:40 am

    The Michelangelo room

    Bacchus, Brutus and the Pitti Tondo are grouped together; this is where you'll likely have the room to yourself.

  4. 9:00 am

    Upstairs to Donatello

    The bronze David and the marble David and St George are the reason most people come; give this room the most time.

  5. 9:20 am

    The competition panels

    Ghiberti's and Brunelleschi's 1401 Sacrifice of Isaac panels hang side by side; read the wall text, the story behind them is most of the point.

  6. 9:40 am

    Cellini and Giambologna

    Finish with the later rooms, including Giambologna's Mercury, before heading back out through the courtyard.

Know Before You Go

Not suitable for

  • Visitors who only want paintings, not sculpture
  • A tight schedule with under 45 minutes to spare
  • Anyone hoping for a guided commentary bundled with the ticket

What to bring

  • Your reserved ticket, printed or on a phone
  • Comfortable shoes for stone floors and stairs
  • A light layer; the old stone rooms stay cool
  • A camera, though flash is typically restricted near the bronzes

Not allowed

  • Large bags and backpacks beyond a small daypack
  • Flash photography near the sculpture
  • Food and drink inside the galleries

Insider Tips

A handful of things make the difference between a rushed pass-through and an hour you'll remember.

  • Book the first slot of the day; the Bargello empties out fastest of any major Florence museum after 8:15
  • Check the specific date's closure status rather than assuming Mondays are safe, the rotation shifts through the month
  • Read the label next to the Ghiberti and Brunelleschi panels before looking at them, the backstory changes what you see
  • Skip the audio guide temptation, there isn't one sold here and the museum doesn't need it
  • Pair it with the Accademia earlier the same morning; both are small enough to fit into one busy day
  • Early closing at 13:50 outside high season catches people out, don't plan it for late afternoon

Where You're Headed

Bargello Museum Tickets FAQ

How much is a Bargello Museum ticket?

The reserved entry ticket is $21. Walking up and buying at the door costs €10, but you risk arriving on one of the museum's rotating closure days.

What are the Bargello's opening hours?

The museum opens daily from 8:15 to 13:50, with longer afternoon hours in high season.

Is the Bargello ever closed?

Yes. Closures rotate through Mondays and Sundays across the month rather than falling on one fixed weekday, so check the specific date before you book or travel.

How do I get to the Bargello Museum?

It's about 3 minutes on foot from Palazzo Vecchio and 5 minutes from the Duomo. Florence has no metro, so everyone in the historic centre walks.

What will I actually see inside the Bargello?

Donatello's bronze David, Michelangelo's Bacchus, Donatello's marble David and St George, and Ghiberti's and Brunelleschi's 1401 competition panels for the Baptistery doors.

Do I need to book the Bargello in advance?

It's worth it. The ticket is cheap relative to the collection, and booking removes the risk of showing up on a closure day or during restricted hours.

Is there a guided tour of the Bargello?

No guided option is currently sold for this museum. The galleries are well labelled, and most visitors manage comfortably without one.

How long should I spend at the Bargello?

An hour is enough to see the highlights properly; sculpture fans who want to read every label can easily spend ninety minutes.

What Visitors Say

★★★★★ ★★★★★
We'd just come from the packed Accademia and walked into an entire room with just us and Donatello's bronze David. Best hour of the trip.
Rachel Kowalski · Canada
★★★★★ ★★★★★
Didn't expect much going in and left thinking the Bacchus was better than half of what we saw at the Uffizi. Booking ahead saved us from a closed-door day too.
Marco Lindqvist · Sweden
★★★★★ ★★★★★
Small museum, huge collection. The two competition panels side by side made the whole Renaissance story click in a way three days of churches hadn't.
Priya Nair · United Kingdom

Ready to see the sculpture everyone else skips?

Slots on the quiet early hours book out first once the rotating closure dates are set.

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