The Arno divides the city between monumental museum-land and the artisan's Oltrarno. Everyone looks up at Brunelleschi's dome, but the city's true rhythm is found in its workshops, market kitchens, and the evening passeggiata. It's a city built on a human scale, best explored on foot with no particular destination.
The city's real fast food is lampredotto — slow-cooked tripe served from a cart in a bread roll with green sauce.
Look for 'buchette del vino,' small Renaissance-era arches used for selling wine directly to passersby, a tradition revived in recent years.
The Oltrarno, 'across the Arno,' isn't just a direction; it's the center of artisan life, from shoemakers to picture framers.
Stay above the workshops of Via Maggio, where morning light illuminates the daily theatre of artisan Florence waking up.
OltrarnoBehind a nameless stone arch, a Renaissance palazzo reveals frescoed ceilings and a walled courtyard where breakfast is a quiet ritual.
OltrarnoLess a hotel, more the townhouse of a worldly collector, with a library that invites you to cancel your afternoon plans.
Santa Maria NovellaThe city's largest private garden is your own. A Renaissance palazzo with a secret pool, hidden in plain sight.
Centro StoricoJoin the queue on Via dei Neri for La Favolosa, the schiacciata that became a global phenomenon. It is worth the wait.
Santa CroceSince 1869, a kitchen devoted to butter. Order the artichoke and the chicken breast; they are sacraments, not suggestions.
Santa Maria NovellaWhere Florence learned to drink third-wave coffee. Order a single-origin pour-over and witness a quiet, caffeinated heresy.
Santa CroceLunch only, since 1953, and the menu is whatever the Colzi family cooked that morning. You'll share a table for a bowl of ribollita that tastes exactly as it should.
San LorenzoIn a whitewashed, vaulted room, proof that Tuscan cooking can evolve. The beef cheek braised in Brunello is a revelation.
OltrarnoLet the owners pour you a wine from a producer you've never heard of. This tiny enoteca is a library of small-batch Italy.
OltrarnoCocktails in a 16th-century palazzo with a retractable glass roof. Each drink is choreographed theatre.
Centro StoricoJust inside a medieval city gate, a wall of wine hundreds of bottles deep. The perfect place to understand Chianti Classico with a plate of crostoni.
San NiccoloFind the heavy velvet curtain, descend into the candlelit cellar, and let the 21st century dissolve in smoke and amaro.
OltrarnoTake the Secret Passages tour to walk through Vasari's hidden corridors, seeing the Salone dei Cinquecento from above.
Duomo / Centro StoricoClimb the hill for sunset. Stay for vespers at 5:30 PM to hear the monks' Gregorian chant fill the 11th-century basilica.
Bellosguardo / San Niccolo HillsEscape the city's stone and heat in the Medici's vast Renaissance garden. Find the grottoes and the view from the Kaffeehaus pavilion.
Oltrarno (Santo Spirito / San Frediano)Florence's essential sculpture collection, minus the crowds. See Donatello's bronze David, the first freestanding nude since antiquity.
Duomo / Centro StoricoThe Ponte Vecchio is framed in the window. A real jazz trio plays nightly. It's the rare view-bar that delivers on both.
San NiccoloHear Florence's future sound unfold in a vast, revitalized tobacco factory, where live bands and electronic acts fill the industrial-chic space.
CascineSip a spritz surrounded by books as curated DJ sets provide an intimate, eclectic soundtrack for Florence's literary-minded listeners.
Oltrarno- Buy museum tickets online, in advance. The Uffizi and Accademia queues are not a suggestion; they are a certainty.
- The 'coperto' is a cover charge per person, not a tip. Tipping is appreciated but not obligatory; rounding up the bill is common.
- Look for 'gelato artigianale'. If the gelato is piled high in fluorescent mounds, walk away. True gelato is stored in covered metal tins.
- An espresso is meant to be drunk standing at the bar ('al banco'). The price often doubles if you sit at a table.
- The most important meal you haven't heard of is 'merenda' — the mid-afternoon snack. A small piece of schiacciata will tide you over until a fashionably late dinner.
- Use the small, electric 'bussini' to navigate the narrow city center streets when your feet give out. They reach places larger buses cannot.
Where Things Are
Four neighborhoods to orient your first visit
Duomo / Centro Storico
The Duomo's dome dominates; marble-striped streets, museums, and quick espresso bars.
Oltrarno (Santo Spirito / San Frediano)
Artisan workshops, piazza life, and the best aperitivo across the Arno.
Santa Croce
Basilica quarter with leather shops, nightlife bars, and Sant'Ambrogio market.
San Lorenzo / San Marco
Market buzz at Mercato Centrale, Medici Chapels, and student trattorie.
