Palazzo Pitti & Boboli Gardens Pass
- Boboli Gardens
- Palazzo Pitti & Palatine Gallery
- Palazzo Pitti: Official Audio Guide
- Florence City Audio Guide
Wheelchair accessible
Enjoy Florence's art, history and lush gardens with this convenient pass
Find out moreA wonderfully landscaped sculpture park behind the Pitti Palace, Boboli Gardens is an extravagant mix of nature, architecture, and sculpture – as well as various museums; it's many attractions rolled into one.
These Boboli Gardens tickets allow you to skip the line, and also give access to the Porcelain Museum and the nearby Bardini Gardens. A trip here is a journey deep into the heart of Renaissance perfection.
As you take a passeggiata (stroll) along the geometric paths of this manicured greenspace, you’ll be surrounded by a near-perfect expression of Renaissance ideals: natural beauty, formally ordered, beautifully adorned architecture, and real and simulated ancient structures. In fact, this garden was one of the first landscape projects to define exactly what the Renaissance ideal of natural beauty would be. #trendsetter
A visit here is a great chance to step away from the bustle of the city and appreciate nature – there are some particularly impressive old oak trees. The influence of ancient culture can be seen all through the gardens, from Neptune's Fountain to the Fountain of the Ocean by Giambologna, to Giorgio Vasari's Large Grotto. And of course the Egyptian obelisk from the 13th century BC. And throughout the gardens are sculptures and fountains, making you feel like a duke or duchess.
Your Boboli Gardens tickets also include access to a number of other attractions in and around the area.
The original Renaissance garden, the 111-acre Boboli Gardens were a gift from Cosimo I de' Medici to his wife, Eleonora di Toledo.
The lesser-known Bardini Gardens is a smaller (and quieter) nearby garden, only recently opened to the public.
Located in the Casino del Cavaliere on a hilltop overlooking the gardens, these important and beautiful collections document the taste (and means) of the Florentine ruling class.
Combine Boboli Gardens with other Florence favorites. Some things are better together.