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Palazzo Davanzati

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The Palazzo Davanzati, also known as the Museo dell'antica casa fiorentina, is one of the most atmospheric medieval interiors in Florence. Behind its plain facade on Via Porta Rossa, you move from a stone courtyard into painted rooms such as the Sala dei Pappagalli, and the whole house feels closer to lived medieval Florence than a grand palace ever could.

Start with a guided house tour for clearer context on the frescoed rooms, the upper floors, and daily-life details, and book now before you map out the rest of your Florence day.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Guided house tours

Choose a guided house tour if you want medieval domestic life, painted chambers, and the palace's upper-floor story explained clearly instead of piecing it together on your own.
Emotionaltour life in medioeval Florence
5.0(3)
 
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The Florentine House of the 14th Century: 1 hour tour in the Renaissance life
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6 tips for visiting the Palazzo Davanzati

1
Reserve your upper-floor slot early
If the second and third floors matter to you, ask the room staff on the first floor as soon as you enter. Places are limited, and later rounds are the easiest to miss on busy days. That one small move saves the most common same-day frustration.
2
Go guided if medieval Florence is new to you
If your Florence trip has mostly been blockbuster art so far, go guided here. The strongest bookable options explain how a merchant family actually lived on Via Porta Rossa, which makes the rooms feel much richer than a fast independent walk-through. You leave with context, not just photos.
3
Pick your time window by mood
For a calmer, more focused stop, weekday mornings fit the house best. If you want to fold Palazzo Davanzati into a longer old-town loop, later hours pair more naturally with nearby lanes and riverside light. Matching the timing to your day makes this small museum feel easier, not rushed.
4
Plan 60 to 90 minutes
For most visitors, 60 to 90 minutes is the sweet spot, especially if you add an upper-floor round or the staff-led track at 11 am or 4 pm. If your Florence day is already full, keep this stop focused instead of stretching it. That way the house stays vivid instead of tiring.
5
Travel light for the old house
Only small bags fit the mezzanine lockers, and large luggage is not admitted. If you are between hotel check-in and sightseeing, drop the heavier bags first before you return to Palazzo Davanzati. That keeps stairs, thresholds, and room changes much easier.
6
Add one nearby medieval stop
After the house, continue to Orsanmichele for guild sculpture, to Palazzo Vecchio for civic power rooms, or to Ponte Vecchio for an Arno reset. One nearby continuation works better than zigzagging across Florence. You keep the medieval thread without burning time.

How to plan a Palazzo Davanzati visit

A smooth stop here depends less on museum size and more on sequence: choose the right format, claim the upper floors early, and fit the house into a compact old-town loop.

Choose a guided house tour if you want the full story

The strongest bookable options here are guided, and that makes sense: Palazzo Davanzati rewards explanation more than checklist speed. Choose this if you want medieval domestic life, painted chambers, and the upper-floor context turned into one coherent visit instead of disconnected rooms. Book now.

Claim the upper floors as soon as you arrive

Regular entry gets you into the house easily, but the second and third floors work through staff-accompanied slots reserved in person. If those rooms matter to you, ask on the first floor before you drift through the rest of the museum. That one move removes the main friction point before it grows.

Build a compact 60 to 90 minute old-town loop

Most visitors do best by treating Palazzo Davanzati as a focused 60 to 90 minute stop, then continuing on foot to one nearby anchor like Piazza della Signoria or Ponte Vecchio. The museum is small enough to fit neatly into a larger Florence day, but rich enough to deserve your full attention while you are inside.

Adapt the house for families and mobility needs

Families usually do best when they keep the visit short and use the painted rooms as story prompts rather than trying to read every label. For limited-mobility visitors, the elevator and portable ramps help, but older thresholds and tighter circulation still reward a slower pace. A compact plan keeps the visit enjoyable for everyone.

Why Palazzo Davanzati feels so different in Florence

Many Florence museums speak through power, ceremony, or masterpieces. Palazzo Davanzati speaks through habits: where people slept, cooked, displayed status, and moved through a merchant house day after day.

From merchant house to museum

The house was built in the mid-14th century by the Davizzi family, later passed to the Davanzati, and then narrowly escaped demolition before Elia Volpi bought and restored it in 1904. The Italian state acquired it in 1951. That layered rescue history matters, because what you experience today is not a random survival, but a deliberate act of preserving medieval Florence.

A bridge between tower house and palace

Palazzo Davanzati matters architecturally because it sits between two Florentine models: the defensive medieval tower house and the later Renaissance palace. You feel that transition in the courtyard-centered plan and in the way practical domestic spaces coexist with rooms designed to impress. It is an in-between building, and that is exactly why it is so revealing.

Painted rooms that still tell stories

The emotional center of the visit is in rooms such as the Sala dei Pappagalli and the Camera della Castellana di Vergy, where painted surfaces still shape the atmosphere instead of acting like isolated fragments. The walls do not just decorate the house; they explain how memory, status, and storytelling once lived inside it.

The objects make the house feel lived in

Look beyond the headline rooms and notice what makes the house practical: the kitchen placed high to keep smells away, the furniture and ceramics that restore everyday rhythm, the lace collection upstairs, and standout works such as the Coperta Guicciardini. This is why the museum lands so well with repeat visitors: it turns Florence from spectacle into texture.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes Palazzo Davanzati different from other big Florence museums?

It shows domestic medieval Florence, not only public power or blockbuster paintings. If you have already seen Palazzo Vecchio or Uffizi Gallery, this is where the city suddenly feels private, lived in, and human-scale.
Read more.

How much time should I plan for the visit?

For most visitors, 60 to 90 minutes is enough. Stay closer to 1 hour for a compact stop, or move toward 90 minutes if you want the upper floors and a slower look at the painted rooms.
Read more.

Do I need to reserve the upper floors separately?

Yes, in practice you do it on arrival. Ask the room staff on the first floor for the second- and third-floor slot, because those visits run in staff-accompanied rounds and places are limited.
Read more.

Is a guided tour worth it here?

Usually yes. Palazzo Davanzati rewards explanation more than speed, and the strongest bookable products focus exactly on medieval daily life, room stories, and the house's layered history.
Read more.

Is Palazzo Davanzati accessible for wheelchairs or strollers?

It can work, because there is a mobile ramp, an elevator, portable ramps for thresholds, and an accessible restroom on the ground floor. Still, this is a medieval house, so movement is easier if you plan for slower pacing and tighter room transitions.
Read more.

Can I bring luggage or a large backpack inside?

Large luggage is not admitted. Small bags can go into the mezzanine lockers, but if you are carrying airport-style luggage or bulky backpacks, sort that out before you arrive.
Read more.

What should I pair nearby with Palazzo Davanzati?

Strong nearby continuations are Orsanmichele, Palazzo Vecchio, and Ponte Vecchio. Choose one based on your mood: guild sculpture, civic-history rooms, or an outdoor bridge-and-river reset.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

From March 15, 2026, Palazzo Davanzati is open Tuesday to Sunday from 8:15 am to 6:50 pm and closed on Monday. Last admission is 40 minutes before closing, at about 6:10 pm. Staff-led thematic itineraries usually run at 11 am and 4 pm, but are suspended on free-admission days.

tickets

Standard admission costs €8. Reduced admission is €2 for EU visitors from age 18 until their 25th birthday, and entry is free until the 18th birthday. Reservation is optional unless otherwise announced and adds a service fee in the official booking flow. Free admission applies on the first Sunday of each month, April 25, June 2, and November 4; reservations are suspended on free-entry days. A 72-hour cumulative ticket for the Galleria dell'Accademia and all open museums in the Musei del Bargello group costs €38.

address

Palazzo Davanzati
Via Porta Rossa, 13
50123 Florence
Italy

how to get there

The museum sits on Via Porta Rossa in Florence's pedestrian medieval core, a short walk from Piazza della Signoria, Orsanmichele, and Ponte Vecchio. Most visitors reach it on foot as part of a historic-center route rather than as a standalone transport stop.

accessibility

Staff can place a mobile ramp at the main door, and an elevator reaches the upper floors. Raised thresholds between rooms can be bridged with portable ramps on request, and accessible restrooms are on the ground floor. For the tactile route, it is best to arrange the visit in advance if possible.

lockers

On the mezzanine floor, there are 40 small lockers with a €1 deposit. Large bags, suitcases, and oversized backpacks are not admitted, so it pays to arrive light.
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