Museo dell'Opera del Duomo tickets & tours | Price comparison

Museo dell'Opera del Duomo

TicketLens lets you:
Search multiple websites at onceand find the best offers.
Find tickets, last minuteon many sites, with one search.
Book at the lowest price!Save time & money by comparing rates.
Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, often called the Opera del Duomo Museum, is where Florence's cathedral masterpieces finally breathe, from Lorenzo Ghiberti's original Gates of Paradise to Michelangelo's unfinished Pietà Bandini. Inside 28 rooms, the visit feels like walking through the creative workshop behind the Duomo itself.

If you want one easy first booking, choose a private skip-the-line guided entry that combines museum context with reserved Duomo access and saves planning time on busy days.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Private skip-the-line guided entry

This format combines a private guide, museum highlights, and reserved Duomo access, so you get deeper context with less queue risk.
Skip the line Florence Dome Cathedral and Museum private tour
5.0(1)
 
viator.com
Go to offer

6 tips for visiting the Museo dell'Opera del Duomo

1
Choose your pass with intent
If you mainly want the museum and baptistery, the Ghiberti Pass is usually the most efficient value. If your priority is the dome climb, lock a Brunelleschi Pass slot early, because that timed entry controls your whole day and sells out first.
2
Start at the museum entrance
If you booked multiple Duomo monuments, enter Museo dell'Opera del Duomo first from Piazza del Duomo 9. You get the storyline before the busiest routes, and your dome or cathedral stop feels more meaningful instead of rushed.
3
Watch the first-Tuesday closure
The museum is closed for maintenance on the first Tuesday of each month. If you are planning a Piazza del Duomo route, avoid using that day for your core museum stop and place the museum on another date when possible.
4
Travel light for monument checks
If your day includes the dome route, pack light and use the luggage room at Piazza del Duomo 38/r when needed. At busy checkpoints, fewer bags mean faster movement and much less stress between monuments.
5
Use accessibility support early
If mobility comfort is your priority, use the dedicated accessible route and request wheelchair support at the ticket office in Piazza San Giovanni 7. That setup covers museum floors and terrace access, so you can focus on the art, not on stair logistics.
6
Build a smart Florence pairing
If you have half a day, pair this stop with Florence Cathedral and Medici Chapel for one compact Duomo-and-Medici arc. If you want a longer art route, combine with Galleria dell'Accademia or Uffizi Gallery, so you keep walking simple and avoid zigzag transfers.

How to plan a Museo dell'Opera del Duomo visit

A smooth day here is mostly about sequence: choose your pass first, lock your key time slot second, and then build the walking loop around Piazza del Duomo.

Pick the right pass before you lock your day

Choose Brunelleschi Pass if your non-negotiable is the dome climb, because that timed slot structures everything else. Choose Ghiberti Pass if your priority is museum depth with lower time pressure. If you want the broadest monument mix without full-climb commitment, Giotto Pass is often the middle path. Book now.

Build a compact Duomo square loop

Start in Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, then continue to Florence Cathedral while the story is still fresh in your head. If you still have energy after the core Duomo segment, extend toward Medici Chapel or Basilica of San Lorenzo, where the walking distance stays short and your route remains coherent.

Plan around first-Tuesday and holiday changes

If your trip lands on a first Tuesday, plan the museum for another day because it closes for maintenance. On holiday weeks, confirm closures before arrival, especially around December 25, January 1, and Easter Sunday, so your timed entries do not collapse.

Use the accessible route before peak flow

If you travel with limited mobility, set up assistance early at Piazza San Giovanni 7 and enter the museum before late-morning crowd build-up. The lift-connected route keeps movement predictable, so the visit feels calmer and less physically draining.

Why this museum is the Duomo's memory vault

This is where Florence's cathedral history stops feeling abstract. You see the original works, the workshop logic behind them, and the centuries-long arc in one place.

From 1296 workshops to the 2015 relaunch

The story starts in 1296 with the cathedral project and accelerates through the 1401 competition era that produced landmark bronze doors. The museum opened in 1891 and was relaunched in 2015 with a major new layout, so today's visit reads like one continuous timeline rather than a scattered collection.

Masterpieces to prioritize on your first loop

Start with Lorenzo Ghiberti's original Gates of Paradise to feel the scale and narrative ambition up close. Then move to Michelangelo's Pietà Bandini for emotional intensity, and close with Donatello's Penitent Magdalene for a radically different sculptural language in the same Duomo story.

Read the building like an exhibition map

The museum spans about 6,000 m² (64,583 ft²) across three floors and 28 rooms, with a terrace layer that opens the urban context around the cathedral complex. If you move floor by floor instead of jumping to famous works only, the chronology becomes much clearer and the visit feels less fragmented.

Keep momentum with nearby Florence pairings

If you are traveling with family and want shorter transfers, continue from the museum to Palazzo Medici Riccardi or Palazzo Vecchio. If your priority is high-density art time, add Galleria dell'Accademia or Uffizi Gallery, and keep the evening for an easy old-center walk rather than another long museum slot.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I visit Museo dell'Opera del Duomo with a single museum ticket?

Not as a regular online museum-only ticket. Most visitors use one of the Duomo passes; the closest ticket-office-only option is Ghiberti Pass On-site, which covers Museo dell'Opera del Duomo and the baptistery. ICOM members can request a free museum ticket at the ticket office.
Read more.

How much time should I plan for the museum itself?

A focused first visit usually takes 60 to 90 minutes. If you like sculpture and medieval-to-Renaissance history, plan up to 2 hours, especially for rooms with the original Gates of Paradise and Pietà Bandini.
Read more.

What are the main masterpieces to prioritize?

Prioritize Lorenzo Ghiberti's original Gates of Paradise, Michelangelo's Pietà Bandini, and Donatello's Penitent Magdalene. This trio gives you a fast, high-impact read of how the Duomo story moved from Gothic craft to Renaissance experimentation.
Read more.

Is the museum accessible for visitors with limited mobility?

Yes. A dedicated accessible route with lift support serves the main museum path and terrace connections. Wheelchairs can be requested at the ticket office in Piazza San Giovanni 7, which helps reduce same-day friction.
Read more.

Can I change my booked date or time?

Ticket changes are usually allowed once, up to 48 hours before the booked dome entry time. It is worth deciding your day sequence early, because last-minute edits are limited.
Read more.

Are there specific closure days I should watch for?

Yes. The museum is closed for maintenance on the first Tuesday of each month, and the monument network closes on December 25, January 1, and Easter Sunday. For holiday weeks, check the latest notice before heading to Piazza del Duomo.
Read more.

Where do I store bags if I am doing the dome route too?

Use the dedicated luggage room at Piazza del Duomo 38/r before your climb segment. In practice, dropping bags early keeps transitions smoother, so you do not lose momentum between Museo dell'Opera del Duomo and the climbing entry.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Museo dell'Opera del Duomo is open from 8:30 am to 7:00 pm on regular visiting days and is closed for maintenance on the first Tuesday of each month. The Duomo monument network is also closed on December 25, January 1, and Easter Sunday, so check same-week notices before your visit.

tickets

Museum admission is normally bundled into Duomo passes rather than sold as a regular museum-only online ticket:
- Brunelleschi Pass: €30; reduced ages 7-14 €12
- Giotto Pass: €20; reduced ages 7-14 €7
- Ghiberti Pass: €15; reduced ages 7-14 €5
Ages 0-6 are free. Passes are valid for 3 calendar days from the selected date, with one entry per monument. The ticket-office-only Ghiberti Pass On-site covers the museum and baptistery at €15/€5, and ICOM members can request a free museum ticket at the ticket office.

address

Museo dell'Opera del Duomo
Piazza del Duomo, 9
50122 Florence
Italy

how to get there

The museum sits in Florence's pedestrian historic center on the east side of Piazza del Duomo. From Firenze Santa Maria Novella, most visitors walk about 15 minutes through the old center. Taxi drop-off is usually easiest near Piazza San Giovanni, then a short walk to the entrance at Piazza del Duomo 9.

accessibility

A dedicated accessible route with lift support connects key museum levels and terrace access points. Wheelchairs can be requested at the ticket office in Piazza San Giovanni 7. If you need assistance, add a small time buffer before your entry window.

luggage

For dome access routes, bags are handled through the dedicated luggage room at Piazza del Duomo 38/r. Travel light when possible, because simpler bag checks make transfers between monuments faster and less tiring.

dresscode

For church spaces in the Duomo complex, clothing should cover shoulders and knees. If your pass includes cathedral or baptistery stops, carry a light layer in your bag so you do not lose time at the entrance.
How useful was this page?
Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0.
Language
English
Currency
© 2020-2026 TicketLens GmbH. All rights reserved. Made with love in Vienna.