Villa Farnesina
Villa Farnesina is Rome's best-preserved Renaissance villa, built by wealthy banker Agostino Chigi in 1506 as his private party palace.
About Villa Farnesina
Villa Farnesina is Rome's best-preserved Renaissance villa, built by wealthy banker Agostino Chigi in 1506 as his private party palace. The walls explode with frescoes by Raphael, Baldassarre Peruzzi, and Sebastiano del Piombo - this isn't museum art behind glass, it's immersive decoration covering every surface. You'll see Raphael's sensual Triumph of Galatea, Peruzzi's mind-bending trompe-l'oeil architecture in the Sala delle Prospettive, and the Loggia of Psyche where Chigi once hosted lavish banquets under painted mythological scenes.
The villa feels intimate compared to Vatican crowds - you're walking through actual living spaces where Renaissance Rome's elite once dined and socialized. Each room flows naturally into the next, with frescoes that seem to extend the architecture beyond the walls. The Sala delle Prospettive particularly impresses visitors as fake columns and balconies create impossible views of 16th-century Rome. You'll spend most time craning your neck upward, and the smaller scale means you can examine details other museums would rope off.
Entry costs €12, making it expensive for what's essentially five decorated rooms, but the quality justifies the price. Most guides oversell the ground floor loggia - the upper floor Sala delle Prospettive delivers the real wow factor. Skip the audio guide (€6 extra) since English descriptions on wall panels cover the basics adequately.
Skip the Queue
Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.
Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.








