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Santo Spirito

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Basilica of Santo Spirito, also known as Basilica di Santa Maria del Santo Spirito, is one of the calmest Renaissance church stops in Florence, right on Piazza Santo Spirito in Oltrarno. Behind the plain facade, you get a Brunelleschian interior, strong spatial balance, and a young Michelangelo's wooden crucifix from 1493.

Start with the free nave visit, then add the museum route for a €2 contribution if you want deeper chapel and sacristy context without overloading your day.
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6 tips for visiting the Santo Spirito

1
Check Wednesday before you cross
If your schedule is tight, verify the day first: visitor access at Basilica of Santo Spirito is closed on Wednesdays. Many first-time visitors lose time crossing from the museum core to Oltrarno on the wrong day. This 10-second check keeps your route clean and stress-free.
2
Aim between Mass starts
If your priority is a calmer visit flow, avoid entry right at service starts. Mass times run at 9 am on weekdays, 9 am and 6 pm on Saturdays, and 9 am, 10:30 am, and 6 pm on Sundays and holidays. Arriving between these moments usually means smoother movement and less waiting.
3
Use the €2 route only if needed
Start with the free church entry, then decide whether to add the museum route with a €2 contribution. If you want a compact stop, the nave alone may be enough; if you want artwork depth, add the extra route on-site. This choice saves money and keeps your energy for later stops.
4
Carry church-ready clothing
Because Basilica of Santo Spirito is an active parish church, keep shoulders and knees covered. If your outfit is borderline, you will need to adjust at the entrance and lose momentum. A light extra layer in your bag keeps entry simple and respectful.
5
Use the ramp-side access
If mobility comfort matters, approach from the right side via Via del Presto di San Martino, where ramp access is available. This route is usually easier than improvising around the square at busy moments. You keep the arrival calm and avoid unnecessary detours.
6
Build a short Oltrarno loop
A practical sequence is Palazzo Pitti, then Basilica of Santo Spirito, then Ponte Vecchio toward Loggia dei Lanzi or Palazzo Vecchio. If your energy drops, take a 10-minute bench break on Piazza Santo Spirito before crossing back, because a calm reset beats museum sprint mode every time.

How to plan a smooth Santo Spirito stop

At Basilica of Santo Spirito, the best strategy is simple: verify day and time first, choose your visit depth second, and only then build your nearby route. This order removes almost all friction.

Plan around Wednesday and service starts

The first decision is calendar control. Visitor access is closed on Wednesday, and liturgical starts can compress entry flow on other days. If you position your stop between service moments, your arrival usually feels calm and predictable.

Choose your depth on-site

This stop works well because you can scale it in real time. Start with free church access, then add the €2 museum route only if you want more art detail and still have energy. That flexibility protects the rest of your day in Florence.

Use an Oltrarno-to-center route

A reliable sequence is Palazzo Pitti, then Santo Spirito, then Ponte Vecchio before continuing to Loggia dei Lanzi or Palazzo Vecchio. Distances are short, transitions are simple, and you avoid zigzagging across the river. This keeps your pace steady instead of rushed.

Keep family and mobility pacing realistic

Families usually do best with a 30 to 45 minute first pass, then decide whether to continue. For limited mobility visitors, the ramp via Via del Presto di San Martino is the key practical choice. A slower entry beats a rushed start every time.

History and art inside Basilica of Santo Spirito

Basilica of Santo Spirito looks restrained from outside, but inside it carries centuries of Florentine religious life, Renaissance planning, and layered artworks. Knowing a few milestones changes what you notice in every chapel bay.

From Augustinians to Brunelleschi

The roots here begin with Augustinian presence from 1233 and a move into this Oltrarno area in 1250. In 1397, the community approved a new major church, and in 1444 work began under Filippo Brunelleschi. He died in 1446, before completion, but his spatial logic still defines the visit today.

Why the interior feels so balanced

Inside, you notice proportion before ornament. The nave rhythm, repeated chapel sequence, and controlled light create a calm architecture that feels almost mathematical, even at busy moments. It is one of the clearest ways to experience Brunelleschian thinking outside the better-known cathedral axis.

Michelangelo's crucifix as a key highlight

One standout work is the wooden crucifix linked to the young Michelangelo from 1493. Seeing it in this church context, rather than in isolation, helps you read how devotion, anatomy study, and Renaissance workshop culture intersected in Florence. For art-focused visitors, this single object often becomes the emotional center of the stop.

Pair the church with nearby Renaissance anchors

After Santo Spirito, you can keep the Renaissance thread alive with Palazzo Pitti, then move toward Ponte Vecchio and optionally Uffizi Gallery. This sequence shifts from quieter sacred space to civic and museum density without long transfers. You get contrast, context, and a coherent half-day narrative.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is entry to Basilica of Santo Spirito free?

Yes. Church entry is free, and the museum route is available with a €2 contribution if you want to see more than the nave.
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Do I need to book online in advance?

No. Reservations are not required for the standard visit route, and online ticket sales are not used for admission at Basilica of Santo Spirito.
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What are the regular visitor hours?

The standard visitor windows are Monday to Saturday from 10 am to 1 pm and from 3 pm to 6 pm, with Wednesday closed. On Sundays and holidays, windows are 11:30 am to 1:30 pm and 3 pm to 6 pm.
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When are Mass times at Santo Spirito?

Mass runs Monday to Friday at 9 am, Saturday at 9 am and 6 pm, and Sundays and holidays at 9 am, 10:30 am, and 6 pm.
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How much time should I plan for this stop?

A quick nave visit usually takes 25 to 40 minutes. If you add the museum route, plan around 60 to 90 minutes.
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Is Basilica of Santo Spirito accessible for limited mobility visitors?

The site is generally accessible, and a ramped approach is available from Via del Presto di San Martino. For easier movement, avoid arriving exactly when services begin.
Read more.

Are photos allowed inside the church?

No. Photography is not allowed on the visitor route inside Basilica of Santo Spirito.
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Which nearby Florence stops pair well with Santo Spirito?

A strong sequence is Palazzo Pitti, then Santo Spirito, then Ponte Vecchio toward Loggia dei Lanzi and Palazzo Vecchio. If you want an art-heavy extension, add Uffizi Gallery later in the day.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Visitor access at Basilica of Santo Spirito runs Monday to Saturday from 10 am to 1 pm and from 3 pm to 6 pm, except Wednesday when the site is closed. On Sundays and holidays, hours run from 11:30 am to 1:30 pm and from 3 pm to 6 pm. Short pauses can happen around liturgical functions.

tickets

Church entry is free. The museum route is available with a €2 contribution, and no reservation is required. Tickets are not sold online for this visit route, and third-party portals are not used for authorized on-site admission.

address

Basilica di Santa Maria del Santo Spirito
Piazza Santo Spirito, 30
50125 Florence, Italy
Phone: +39 055 210030
Email: info@basilicasantospirito.it

accessibility

The site is generally accessible, and ramp access is available from the right side via Via del Presto di San Martino. If you want easier movement at entry, avoid arriving exactly at service start times, when flows can tighten near the doors.

how to get there

From Ponte Vecchio, the walk to Piazza Santo Spirito usually takes about 8 to 10 minutes through Oltrarno. A practical loop is Palazzo Pitti first, then Santo Spirito, and then Loggia dei Lanzi or Palazzo Vecchio after crossing back toward Piazza della Signoria. From Santa Maria Novella, walking is usually the simplest approach in the historic center.

dresscode

As in other active churches in Florence, modest clothing is expected. Keep shoulders and knees covered, and maintain a low voice near liturgical activity so you can enter smoothly and respectfully.

photography and filming

Photography is not allowed on the visitor route inside Basilica of Santo Spirito. Keep your phone away in the nave and chapels, especially during liturgical moments, so the space stays calm for everyone.
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