Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore (Florence Duomo)
Go, and book the dome slot before you arrive. The climb is genuinely worth the burning thighs for the view and the frescoes you pass on the way up, but if heights or stairs are not your thing, do the bell tower or just the free cathedral floor and the museum, and you will not feel cheated.
The dome is the whole point. Brunelleschi figured out how to span it in brick without a wooden frame in the 1420s, and almost nobody had managed anything close since the Romans, so what you are looking at is engineering as much as art. The cathedral floor is free to enter (expect a line), but the dome climb, the bell tower, the baptistery, and the museum all sit behind a paid pass, and the dome in particular needs a fixed date and time you should book a couple of weeks out.
Worth it for
- The dome climb and the rooftop view over Florence
- Brunelleschi's engineering, which still has no equal from its era
- The quiet, well-curated Opera del Duomo Museum
You can skip if
- Stairs, tight spaces, or heights bother you, in which case skip the dome
- You only have an hour and would rather not queue for the free interior
Our pick for Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore (Florence Duomo)
The dome climb is the whole point, and the right guided option gets you up there with a timed slot already locked, a guide who unpacks the engineering story as you ascend past Vasari's Last Judgment frescoes, and the rooftop view over Florence that no street-level photo can prepare you for. Book early in the morning before the heat and the crowds make the 463 steps feel twice as long.
If our pick doesn't fit
The cathedral works sell the only legitimate ticket, and reselling it is banned, but the dome climb needs a timed slot that goes weeks ahead, so book early or you will miss it.
Official ticketsSkips the dome climb and covers the cathedral and baptistery instead, a shorter visit when the ascent is not the goal.
See all options for Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore (Florence Duomo)
What travelers flag about Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore (Florence Duomo)
We weighed recent Florence traveler opinion on the Duomo against the provider reviews. These are the themes that came up again and again.
- The cathedral itself is freeReported by many
Entering the nave of the cathedral costs nothing, though the queue can be long. What you pay for is the combined pass covering the dome climb, the baptistery, Giotto's bell tower, the crypt, and the Opera del Duomo Museum, which is genuinely excellent and the least crowded part.
- The dome climb needs its own reservationReported by many
The catch that catches people out: the dome climb requires a separate timed slot on top of the pass, and those slots sell out days ahead in busy season, so book early. It is 463 steps with no lift and tight passages, not for anyone uneasy with stairs or enclosed spaces.
Sourced from recent traveler discussions, not provider reviews. We only flag what several visitors independently reported, and the bars show how widely each point came up.
Which ticket should you buy?
What it is
Santa Maria del Fiore is Florence's cathedral, finished structurally in the 1400s after well over a century of work, and its red-tiled dome is the thing you will recognize from every postcard. The green, white, and pink marble facade is much newer, a 19th-century redo, which is why it looks crisper than the rest. The complex is run by the Opera del Duomo and includes five separate monuments around the same piazza.
Inside, the cathedral itself is surprisingly bare for its size, since the Medici and the city moved a lot of the art into the museum over the centuries. The payoff is overhead: Vasari and Zuccari's huge Last Judgment frescoes line the inside of the dome, and you see them up close on the climb.
What to see
The dome climb is the headline. It is roughly 460 steps with no elevator, the stairwells get tight and warm, and the last stretch curves with the shell of the dome so the walls lean over you. You pass right alongside the interior frescoes, then come out on a narrow terrace at the top with the best rooftop view in the city. If you are claustrophobic or have bad knees, this is the honest moment to opt out.
Giotto's bell tower next door is a separate climb of a similar height and step count, and many people actually prefer the view from it, because from up there you get the dome itself in your photo. Down at ground level, the Baptistery has gold mosaic ceilings and the famous bronze doors (the originals are in the museum, what you see on the building are copies). The Opera del Duomo Museum holds Ghiberti's real Gates of Paradise and Michelangelo's late, raw Bandini Pieta, and it is calm and underrated compared to the crowds outside.
Visiting and tickets
There is no single ticket for everything. The cathedral interior is free, but the dome, tower, baptistery, museum, and crypt are bundled into passes. The top-tier pass includes the dome climb; a cheaper pass covers the tower, baptistery, museum, and crypt but not the dome. Whatever you buy, the dome climb is the one piece tied to a specific timed slot, and those slots routinely sell out one to three weeks ahead in busy months.
Buy from the official Opera del Duomo site rather than a piazza reseller, and bring ID, since dome tickets are name-linked to stop resale. Note that the monuments occasionally close for maintenance windows (the tower and dome occasionally close for short maintenance windows), so check before you lock in a date.
Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore (Florence Duomo): FAQs
No. Entering the cathedral floor is free, though there is usually a security line. You only pay for the dome, the bell tower, the baptistery, the museum, and the crypt, which are sold as passes.
Roughly 460, with no elevator. The stairways are narrow and the air gets warm, and the final section follows the curve of the dome so the walls slope inward. Skip it if stairs, heights, or tight spaces are a problem.
If you want the classic view, climb the dome. If you want the dome in your photos, climb Giotto's tower instead, since you cannot see the dome while you are standing on it. Both are similar heights and similar step counts.
Yes, in practice. The dome climb is a fixed date and time slot and it sells out one to three weeks ahead in peak season. Book the official Opera del Duomo site and bring ID, since dome tickets are tied to your name.
No. Only the higher pass includes the dome climb. The cheaper pass covers the bell tower, baptistery, museum, and crypt, but the dome is separate and needs its own timed reservation.
Half a day if you do the dome plus a couple of the other monuments, since the climbs are slow and there can be waits. The passes give you a few days to spread the non-dome sites out, so you do not have to cram them into one go.
Explore more in Florence
Plan your trip
- Best time to visit Florence
- Day trips from Florence
- One Day in Florence: The Honest Highlights Walk
- Two Days in Florence: Big Sights Without the Burnout
- Three Days in Florence: The Sights, the Backstreets, and One Day in Tuscany
- Florence with kids: what actually keeps them happy
- Florence at night: the city is better once the day-trippers leave
- Florence when it rains: a city that is mostly indoors anyway
- Uffizi vs Accademia: Which Florence Museum to Pick
- Piazzale Michelangelo vs Bardini Garden for Sunset
- Climb the Duomo Dome or Giotto's Bell Tower?
Worth it, or skip it?
Join the early list. When it launches, expect the occasional short email: the handful of things actually worth your time in each city, the famous ones to skip, and when it's free or cheaper to just walk in. No paid placement.