Italy with Kids — A Family Travel Guide日本語

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Florence with Kids: A Real Itinerary

Note: this article contains affiliate links (advertising).

Hello. After Venice, our family (with a young child) spent a few days in Florence. Every photo here is my own. If you're worried that an "art city" might bore the kids, I understand — so here's how it actually went for us.

What you'll find here


1. The joy of Florence: you can walk the whole thing

Compared with Rome and Venice, Florence has a compact center where the main sights are all within walking distance. With kids, that's a real gift — less time spent moving means an easier day all round.

We made a point of heading out early, and the quiet, soft-lit streets of the early morning were the most pleasant part of all.

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The Florence skyline from Piazzale Michelangelo
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Ponte Vecchio at dusk

The Arno at sunset was something special too — the light stretching across the water, a quiet, lovely moment.

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Sunset over the Arno

2. A kid-friendly itinerary

Morning — the Duomo (Santa Maria del Fiore)

Start with the city's symbol, the Duomo. Beyond the white, green, and pink marble of the exterior, the interior is genuinely impressive. Hunting for the unusual single-handed clock (by Paolo Uccello) on the interior wall was a fun little game with our child. If you want to climb the cupola (dome), it usually needs a reservation, so check ahead.

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Photo: the painted ceiling of the Duomo's dome . The interior "Uccello clock" shot shows people, so it's replaced with this face-free view of the dome.

Looking up at the façade from the front, the white, green and pink marble is breathtaking up close. Beside it, Giotto's Campanile reaching for the sky gave me a sense of the city's pride.

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Florence at dusk from Piazzale Michelangelo — the Duomo's dome among the skyline

Santa Maria Novella, on a square just steps from the station, was elegant too, paired with its obelisk.

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Santa Maria Novella and its obelisk

Midday — Palazzo Vecchio

Palazzo Vecchio turned out to be surprisingly kid-friendly. The lavish painted ceilings and the Hall of Maps, with old maps covering the walls, draw an audible "wow" just by looking up. Introducing the highlights like a story kept our child engaged.

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Photo: the painted ceiling and old maps in Palazzo Vecchio's Hall of Maps — (check privacy before publishing)

Afternoon — a taste of Renaissance art

Florence means Renaissance art. The Uffizi and the Accademia (home of Michelangelo's "David") are the famous names, but the popular museums always have lines, so a skip-the-line booking is reassuring. We wandered past paintings by El Greco and others, asking our child "who do you think that one is?" You don't have to understand it all — finding one favorite piece is plenty.

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Photo: an El Greco painting at the museum —

At the Uffizi, the ceiling of the shell-studded "Tribuna" was another surprise.

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The ceiling of the Uffizi's "Tribuna"

And standing before masterpieces we'd only seen in books was something else. We fell quiet together in front of Botticelli's "The Birth of Venus" and "Primavera" — so full of story in the details that hunting for "who's who" with the kids was a delight.

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Botticelli's "The Birth of Venus"
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Botticelli's "Primavera"

🔗 [Affiliate: Book Uffizi / Accademia skip-the-line]


3. A few honest parent Q&As

Q. Will the kids get bored in museums? A. Honestly, long visits are tough. Setting one goal — "let's find your favorite painting" — really helped them focus. The trick is not to be greedy with your time inside.

Q. How many days do I need? A. You can cover the main sights in one or two days. Being so compact, it's an easy city to plan around with children.

Q. What should I book ahead? A. Skip-the-line for the popular museums, and the Duomo cupola climb (if you're climbing). Queuing for these drains both time and energy.

🔗 [Affiliate: eSIM / travel insurance]


4. When to go: Florence by season (hot in summer)

Florence sits in an inland basin and gets genuinely hot in summer. With children I found spring (April–May) and autumn (September–October) the most comfortable. Because the center is compact, there's little escape from the sun in high summer, so timing your day helps.

Rough monthly temperatures (averages only — check the forecast before you travel).

Season Month Typical daytime high Typical night low Note
Spring March ~15°C / 59°F ~5°C / 41°F Still cool some days; bring a layer
Spring Apr–May 19–24°C 8–12°C Blossom and fresh green; lovely
Summer Jun–Aug 30–32°C 17–19°C Hot — go early in the morning
Autumn Sep–Oct 20–26°C 11–15°C As good as spring
Winter Nov–Feb 10–13°C 2–5°C Quiet and cold

As in the main article, early morning is quietest and the light is soft — the easiest time to walk with kids.


5. Museums & the dome, up to date (2026 — please reconfirm)

Florence is a city where the popular museums really do need booking. With kids, avoiding the queues shapes the whole day. Here's what I confirmed as of 2026 (prices and rules change — always verify officially).

Uffizi Gallery - Book via the official site (CoopCulture: tickets.uffizi.it). Reserve at least a month ahead - Rough price: €25. From January 1, 2026, entry from 4:00 pm onward is €16 (the late-afternoon discount is worth considering)

Accademia Gallery (Michelangelo's "David") - Rough price: €16 on its own (booking online adds a €4 reservation fee, so €20). Reserve two months ahead if you can - From March 15, 2026, a combined Accademia + Bargello ticket (€26, valid 48 hours, plus the €4 booking fee) is available — better value if you'll see both

Climbing the Duomo dome - The "Brunelleschi Pass" includes a timed dome climb463 steps, and it sells out fast, so book ahead if you plan to climb (not suitable for small children or strollers)

🔗 [Affiliate: Book Uffizi / Accademia skip-the-line and Duomo complex tickets]

Good-to-know current notes - City (tourist) tax: Florence hotels charge a per-night tax too (amount: please verify) - Price changes: as above, entry fees and booking rules are revised year to year — always check the latest official info before you travel


6. A rough family budget

To give you a feel (euro ballparks; rates move).

Museum entries add up, so picking two or three you really want is kinder to both a child's stamina and your budget. After a day on foot, a plate in a calm trattoria was the best rest of all.

The star of the evening was Florence's own bistecca alla fiorentina (T-bone steak). True to the local saying that the meat "stands on its own," it arrives at a commanding size — from 1.4 kg at the smallest. Grilled boldly over charcoal and served with roast potatoes, we shared one between the whole family. Crisp and charred outside, faintly rosé within, it held its own against the famous steakhouses we know back home, and the kids ate happily.

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Bistecca alla fiorentina — the T-bone steak

This place turned out to have a Japanese chef, and the cooking has a gentle quality that suits a Japanese palate. Our server (a member of the chef's family) looks Italian but speaks fluent Japanese, which made ordering reassuringly easy. We liked it so much we went twice during our stay. The house wine is remarkably cheap, and the braised octopus — a first for us — was tender and deeply savory, a dish we won't forget.

The restaurant: Trattoria Accadì — Borgo Pinti 56, 50121 Firenze, Italy — tel. +39 055 247 8410. (Hours, closing days and reservations can change; please check the official site or Google Maps before you go.)


7. Practical parent notes (museums with kids, packing)

📌 Last updated: July 2026. Entry fees, booking rules and city tax change year to year. Please reconfirm on the official sites and the forecast just before you go.


8. You might also like


All photos were taken by me in March 2026. Prices, hours, and booking details change, so please confirm on the official sites before you go.

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