Skip to main content
Florence · Fiesole

Area Archeologica di Fiesole

This Roman archaeological site sits on a hill 8km northeast of Florence, featuring one of Italy's best-preserved ancient theaters from the 1st century BC.

Area Archeologica di Fiesole, Florence · Fiesole
Category
Museum
Duration
1h 15m
Best Time
Any time
Entry
€€
Rating
4.7 (38)
The place

About Area Archeologica di Fiesole

This Roman archaeological site sits on a hill 8km northeast of Florence, featuring one of Italy's best-preserved ancient theaters from the 1st century BC. You'll explore genuine Roman baths with intact heating systems, an Etruscan temple foundation, and a small museum packed with burial objects and everyday Roman artifacts. The theater still hosts concerts during summer months, making it one of the few ancient venues where you can actually watch performances as Romans did 2,000 years ago.

The visit flows naturally from the museum through the excavated areas to the spectacular theater carved into the hillside. You'll walk on original Roman stones and peer into bath chambers where citizens once relaxed after gladiator games. The setting feels intimate rather than overwhelming, with olive trees framing ancient walls and Florence's dome visible in the distance. The theater's acoustics are remarkable: even whispers from the stage carry clearly to the top rows.

Most guides oversell this as a major archaeological site, but it's actually quite small and you'll see everything in about an hour. Entry costs 10 EUR (7 EUR reduced), which is fair given the quality of preservation. Skip the audio guide and spend that money on the combined ticket with Bandini Museum instead. The views alone justify the trip from Florence, especially in late afternoon when the light hits the ancient stones perfectly.

Get Ticketsvia GetYourGuide · prices may vary
Book ahead

Skip the Queue

Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.

Search on Viator →Search on GetYourGuide →

Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.

The details

Practical bits

WalkingMinimal walking
The place

Getting there

Address
50014 Fiesole, Metropolitan City of Florence, Italy
Neighborhood
Fiesole
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

Enter through the main gate on Via Portigiani and head straight to the theater first while the light is good for photos, then work backwards to the museum

Most visitors rush through the Roman baths section, but look for the hypocaust heating system underneath: you can still see the channels that circulated hot air

Climb to the very top row of the theater for the best panoramic shot of Florence: it's the only spot where you get both ancient stones and the cathedral dome in one frame

Plan for about 1h 15m.

Area Archeologica di Fiesole is in the Fiesole neighborhood of Florence. The address is 50014 Fiesole, Metropolitan City of Florence, Italy. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Closed on Tuesday. Check the official website for holiday closures and special hours.

Around the corner

Nearby in Fiesole

Explore all →
Parco di Montececeri
Park & Garden

Parco di Montececeri

Parco di Montececeri sprawls across 160 hectares of hillside above Florence, combining dense Mediterranean woodland with some of the best panoramic views you'll find anywhere in Tuscany. You'll walk through groves of oak, pine, and cypress trees along well-marked trails that wind past ancient stone quarries and open meadows. The park sits where Leonardo da Vinci supposedly tested his flying machine designs in the 1500s, though honestly, that's more legend than documented fact. The main trail network takes you through surprisingly varied terrain for such a compact area. You start climbing immediately from the entrance, but the shaded paths keep things comfortable even in summer heat. The stone quarries appear suddenly as you round bends, these massive carved chambers that feel almost cathedral-like. When you emerge onto the viewpoints, Florence spreads out below with the Duomo, Palazzo Vecchio, and Arno River perfectly framed by rolling hills. Most guides oversell this as a quick stop, but you need at least two hours to appreciate it properly. The trail markings can be confusing near the quarries, so download the park map beforehand. Skip the crowded main viewpoint area and continue 10 minutes further to the meadow clearing where you'll have the panorama mostly to yourself. Free admission makes this one of Florence's best value experiences.

1.5-3 hoursExplore
Museo Bandini
Museum

Museo Bandini

Museo Bandini sits in a 14th century palazzo in Fiesole and holds one of Tuscany's finest collections of medieval and early Renaissance art. You'll find masterpieces by Taddeo Gaddi, Bernardo Daddi, and Lorenzo Monaco, plus exceptional della Robbia ceramics and wooden sculptures that most Florence museums don't have room to display. The collection spans three centuries of Tuscan religious art, from Byzantine influenced panels to early Renaissance innovations. The museum feels like exploring a private collector's home rather than a formal institution. You'll move through intimate rooms where each piece gets proper breathing space, unlike the packed galleries downtown. The lighting is excellent, letting you study the intricate details in tempera paintings and glazed terra cottas. Most rooms stay blissfully quiet, with maybe five other visitors wandering the same spaces. Honest talk: this isn't a quick photo stop, it's for people who actually want to look at art. The collection quality rivals the Uffizi for this period, but you'll spend 15 minutes studying pieces instead of fighting crowds for a glimpse. Entry costs 10 EUR, or 15 EUR combined with the Roman theater next door, which is absolutely worth the extra 5 EUR. Skip the audio guide and use that money for a coffee in the palazzo's courtyard afterward.

1-1.5 hoursExplore
More on Florence

From the blog

View all →
Ready for Florence?

Let DAIZ plan your Florence days

Tell us how long you've got and what you're into. We'll build a day-by-day plan, with the bookable bits ready to lock in.

Plan my Florence tripFree · no signup to start
Plan your Florence trip