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Gallerie dell'Accademia in Venice, façade on Campo della Carità. This façade originally was that the Scuola Grande di Santa Maria della Carita. The drawing is…
Venice, Italy Worth it

Gallerie dell'Accademia

If you care about painting at all, this is the most rewarding museum in Venice. Seeing the masters of the Venetian Renaissance gathered and well lit, in a calmer space than the St. Mark's sights, is genuinely worth a couple of hours. If museums are not your thing and you would rather just wander the canals, you can skip it without guilt.

Photo: Didier Descouens (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

This is the deepest collection of Venetian painting anywhere, the place to actually look at Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese, Bellini and Giorgione instead of glimpsing them in dim churches. It sits in Dorsoduro right by the wooden Accademia bridge, away from the worst of the St. Mark's crush, and it is closed Mondays, which trips people up. Set aside a couple of hours and pick a non-Monday.

Is Gallerie dell'Accademia worth it?Worth it

Worth it for

  • Venetian Renaissance painting at its deepest: Titian, Veronese, Bellini, Giorgione
  • A calmer, less mobbed experience than the St. Mark's sights
  • Anyone who likes to slow down and actually look at art

You can skip if

  • Old-master painting does not interest you and a big gallery feels like a chore
  • Your only free day is a Monday, when it is closed

Our pick for Gallerie dell'Accademia

A private guide makes the Accademia click in a way that wandering alone almost never does: the religious and artistic context behind each Titian or Bellini stops being background noise and starts making you look differently at every canvas in the room. The gallery runs quieter than the St. Mark's sights, so there is actually space to stand in front of a Giorgione and hear why it matters, which is the whole point of coming.

If our pick doesn't fit

Official, clunky site

The state museum sells direct at face value, but the booking flow is awkward and non-refundable and you must arrive early with a code, so some find a reseller smoother checkout worth it even though it costs more.

Official tickets

How to visit Gallerie dell'Accademia

A private or small-group guide is the real differentiator here; Venetian Renaissance context is what makes this museum click.

  • Private guide Best experience: a guide turns Titian and Bellini from names into arguments you can follow painting by painting.
  • Guided tour Good middle ground; you get the religious and artistic context without the private-guide price.
  • Self-guided Works only if you've studied Venetian painting beforehand; without context the rooms are beautiful but flat.
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Which ticket should you buy?

Double-check the day before you go: it is closed Mondays, and that single fact derails more visits here than anything else. Pair it with the nearby Guggenheim for a half-day of art in Dorsoduro.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
Standard admission Entry to the full permanent collection across the gallery's rooms Independent visitors who want to explore the art at their own pace
Skip-the-line timed ticket Pre-booked dated entry that avoids the on-site ticket line Weekend or peak-season visitors who want to lock in their day
Guided tour of the highlights A guide walking you through the key masterpieces with context People who want the stories behind the paintings rather than going room by room alone
Campo della Carità, 1050, 30123 Venezia VE, Italy View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

What it is

A gallery in a former religious complex on the south bank of the Grand Canal, holding several centuries of Venetian art from the 1300s through the 1700s across dozens of rooms. If the city's churches show you Venetian painting in situ, this shows you the masterpieces gathered, labeled and lit so you can study them.

It is a serious art museum, not a quick photo stop, and it rewards people who like to slow down in front of paintings. It is also calmer than the headline sights, which is part of the appeal.

Gallerie dell'Accademia - Interior (sala 3) Photo: Didier Descouens (Public domain), via Wikimedia Commons

What to see

The names are the heavyweights of the Venetian Renaissance. Giorgione's The Tempest is small, strange and famous, a painting nobody has fully explained. Veronese's enormous Feast in the House of Levi got him hauled in front of the Inquisition for stuffing a sacred scene with dogs and revelers, and the scale of it in person is something. There is major Titian, late Bellini altarpieces, Tintoretto, and Carpaccio's narrative St. Ursula cycle.

Because the collection is large, do not try to see everything. Hit the marquee rooms, slow down at a handful of paintings that grab you, and let the rest go.

Visiting and tickets

It opens Tuesday through Sunday and is closed Mondays, with last entry roughly an hour before closing. Tickets can be bought on site, but booking online avoids any wait and locks in your day, which matters around the Monday closure.

The location is easy: it is right at the foot of the Accademia bridge, and the Accademia vaporetto stop is essentially at the door. Allow at least 90 minutes to two hours inside if you actually want to look at the art rather than march through.

Gallerie dell'Accademia: FAQs

Mondays. It opens Tuesday through Sunday. People regularly turn up on a Monday and find it shut, so plan around it.

Not strictly, but it helps. You can buy on site, yet booking online skips any line and guarantees your day, which is worth it given the Monday closure and busier weekends.

Giorgione's The Tempest, Veronese's huge Feast in the House of Levi, major Titian and Bellini altarpieces, Tintoretto, and Carpaccio's St. Ursula cycle. Those are the anchors of the visit.

Around 90 minutes to two hours if you want to engage with the paintings. It is a real art museum with dozens of rooms, so do not expect to rush it in 30 minutes and get much out of it.

Take vaporetto Line 1 or 2 to the Accademia stop, which is right at the gallery beside the wooden Accademia bridge in Dorsoduro. It is an easy walk from the San Marco area across the bridge.

Generally no. It draws art-minded visitors rather than the full tourist tide, so it feels calmer than the sights around St. Mark's Square, especially on weekday mornings.

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