Skip to main content
Florence · Palazzo Pitti & Boboli

Museo delle Porcellane

The Museo delle Porcellane houses one of Europe's finest porcelain collections inside the Casino del Cavaliere, a neoclassical pavilion perched at Boboli Gardens' highest point.

Museo delle Porcellane, Florence · Palazzo Pitti & Boboli
Category
Museum
Duration
45 minutes
Best Time
Any time
Entry
€€
Rating
4.1 (238)
The place

About Museo delle Porcellane

The Museo delle Porcellane houses one of Europe's finest porcelain collections inside the Casino del Cavaliere, a neoclassical pavilion perched at Boboli Gardens' highest point. You'll find exquisite pieces from the Medici and Lorraine dynasties spanning three centuries, including delicate Capodimonte figurines, ornate Sèvres dinner services, and rare Chinese export porcelain that arrived via 18th-century trade routes. The real bonus here is the panoramic terrace overlooking Florence's terracotta rooftops and distant hills.

The museum feels intimate and almost residential, like wandering through a noble family's private dining rooms. Each gallery flows naturally into the next, with pieces displayed in elegant glass cases that let you examine intricate hand-painted details and gilded edges up close. The quiet atmosphere and cool marble floors provide welcome relief after climbing through the sun-baked gardens below. Large windows frame postcard views between the porcelain displays, making this as much about the setting as the collection.

Most visitors rush through in 20 minutes, but you're missing the point if you don't spend time on the terrace. The porcelain itself is admittedly niche, skip it entirely if decorative arts bore you. Entry costs about 10 EUR as part of the combined Pitti Palace ticket, though pricing varies seasonally. The steep climb deters many tourists, so you'll often have rooms to yourself, especially in late afternoon when the light hits the displays beautifully.

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 place

Getting there

Address
50125 Florence, Metropolitan City of Florence, Italy
Neighborhood
Palazzo Pitti & Boboli
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

Enter through the main Boboli entrance near Pitti Palace and follow signs uphill to Casino del Cavaliere, the small white building at the gardens' peak

Most visitors photograph the porcelain displays, but the real Instagram shots are from the outdoor terrace facing north toward the Duomo and Santa Croce

Visit after 4pm when tour groups have moved on and the western light makes both the porcelain and city views dramatically more photogenic

Plan for about 45 minutes.

Museo delle Porcellane is in the Palazzo Pitti & Boboli neighborhood of Florence. The address is 50125 Florence, 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.

Around the corner

Nearby in Palazzo Pitti & Boboli

Explore all →
Giardino Bardini
Landmark

Giardino Bardini

Giardino Bardini climbs the hillside behind Palazzo Pitti, offering panoramic views of Florence without the crowds at Piazzale Michelangelo. You'll find formal baroque parterres, a wisteria pergola that explodes in purple blooms each April, and Renaissance statues scattered along terraced paths. The garden's baroque staircase descends dramatically to a belvedere where the entire city spreads out below you, from the Duomo to the Arno. The visit flows naturally downhill through three distinct garden styles: English woodland at the top, formal Italian parterres in the middle, and agricultural terraces near the bottom. The wisteria tunnel becomes magical in late spring when purple cascades drape overhead, but even without blooms the stone pergola frames city views. You'll have the place mostly to yourself, especially compared to the packed Boboli Gardens next door. Most guides don't mention that Bardini closes earlier than other gardens (6:30pm in summer), so plan accordingly. The combined Boboli and Bardini ticket costs €18, but it's worth skipping Boboli and buying the Bardini-only ticket for €10. The best views are from the belvedere at the bottom, not the villa at the top. Visit during late afternoon when the city is bathed in golden light, and bring water since there's nowhere to purchase drinks inside.

1-1.5 hoursExplore
Forte di Belvedere
Viewpoint

Forte di Belvedere

Forte di Belvedere delivers the best panoramic views in Florence from its star-shaped bastions perched above Palazzo Pitti. You'll get 360-degree perspectives over the Duomo, Palazzo Vecchio, and rolling Tuscan hills that no other viewpoint matches. The fortress itself is striking: massive stone walls built in 1590 create dramatic geometric patterns, while contemporary art installations rotate through the interior spaces. The experience feels like climbing onto Florence's crown. You'll walk along the fortress walls, peering through ancient gun ports before emerging onto open terraces where the entire city spreads below. The scale hits you immediately: Florence looks like a Renaissance painting from up here. Wind whips across the exposed bastions, and you can hear church bells echoing from dozens of towers below. Most guides don't mention that entry is free when there's no exhibition (usually winter months), making it Florence's best value viewpoint. Skip the interior displays unless you're genuinely into contemporary art, they're often mediocre. The sunset crowds can be intense in summer, but early afternoon light actually shows off the city's architecture better anyway.

45 minutes to 1 hourExplore
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