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Boboli Gardens, Italy
Boboli Gardens

Tuscany

Boboli Gardens

How to visit the Boboli Gardens behind Florence's Pitti Palace: which ticket buys you the gardens (and which one bundles the palace and Bardini), when the hill is bearable, and whether it's worth the climb.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Where

Florence, Italy

Opening hours

Daily from 08:15, with seasonal closing: 16:30 (Novโ€“Feb), 17:30โ€“18:30 (Mar & Oct depending on daylight saving), 18:30 (Apr/May/Sep), 19:10 (Junโ€“Aug). Last admission an hour before closing. Closed the first and last Monday of each month, and 25 December. Confirm your date on uffizi.it.

Tickets

Garden only ยฃ9 (โ‚ฌ10) on the day or ยฃ11 (โ‚ฌ13) booked ahead โ€” unusually, the gate price is cheaper than the advance one. Combined Pitti Palace + Boboli, which also covers the Bardini Garden, ยฃ19 (โ‚ฌ22) on the day or ยฃ21 (โ‚ฌ25) ahead. Reduced about ยฃ2.50 (โ‚ฌ3); under-18s free. Conversions at June 2026 rates.

Time needed

1.5โ€“2 hours for the gardens alone at a real pace; add 2โ€“3 hours if you're also doing the Pitti Palace on a combined ticket.

In short

Visiting Boboli Gardens

The Boboli is a formal Medici hillside garden behind the Pitti Palace โ€” terraces, statue-lined avenues, the cypress Viottolone and long views back over the Florence rooftops, not flower beds. Buy a garden-only ticket if that's all you want; the combined Pitti + Boboli ticket bundles the palace and the Bardini Garden next door for not much more. Watch the closure trap: it shuts the first and last Monday of every month.

How to visit without overpaying or arriving on a closed day

The Boboli is the Medici back garden behind the Pitti Palace, and it confuses people because itโ€™s two different visits priced two different ways. If you only want the gardens โ€” the terraced lawns, the statue-lined Viottolone cypress avenue, the amphitheatre with its Egyptian obelisk and the rooftop views back across the Arno โ€” buy the garden-only ticket (โ‚ฌ10 at the Pitti ticket office, oddly cheaper than the โ‚ฌ13 advance price online). If you also want the palace and the smaller Bardini Garden next door, the combined Pitti Palace + Boboli ticket (โ‚ฌ22 on the day, about ยฃ19) folds all three into one and is the better-value choice for a full afternoon.

Two traps catch visitors. First, the Boboli closes the first and last Monday of every month โ€” turn up then and youโ€™re locked out, with no warning unless youโ€™ve checked uffizi.it. Second, this is a hillside, not a flat park: the terraces climb steeply, the main avenues have little shade, and in July and August the midday heat off the gravel is genuinely punishing. Go shortly after the 08:15 opening or in the last ninety minutes before the seasonal close (as early as 16:30 in winter, 19:10 in high summer), with last admission an hour before the gates shut.

A third-day garden, not a first-day one

Allow an hour and a half to two hours for the gardens at a walking pace that lets you actually reach the top terrace and the Kaffeehaus pavilion; add two to three hours if youโ€™ve bought the combined ticket and want the Pittiโ€™s Palatine Gallery too. Donโ€™t build your visit around the Porcelain Museum at the top of the hill โ€” it keeps its own restricted hours and is often shut, so treat it as a bonus rather than a plan.

The Boboli is worth it for green space, long views and an escape from the gallery scrum โ€” but itโ€™s a formal landscape garden, not a flower show, and it earns its place only after youโ€™ve done the Duomo, Uffizi and Accademia. If youโ€™ve two days in Florence and havenโ€™t seen those, skip it. If youโ€™ve a third day, or youโ€™re travelling with anyone whoโ€™s hit their fresco limit, itโ€™s the right antidote: pair it with the Pitti Palace on a combined ticket and treat the climb as the afternoonโ€™s exercise.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Florence city guide.

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Boboli Gardens FAQs

Do you need to book Boboli Gardens tickets in advance?
Not the way you must for the Uffizi or Accademia โ€” the Boboli rarely sells out and you can usually buy at the Pitti Palace ticket office. Booking ahead on uffizi.it mainly skips the on-the-day queue at the gate; oddly the door price (โ‚ฌ10) is cheaper than the advance price (โ‚ฌ13) for the garden alone, so book ahead only if you'd rather not queue.
Is the Boboli Gardens worth it?
Worth it if you want green space, long views over Florence and a break from gallery crowds โ€” it's a proper hillside park, not a quick photo stop. Skip it if you're expecting colourful flower beds, or if you're tight on time and haven't yet seen the Duomo, Uffizi or Accademia. Go for the combined Pitti ticket if you want the palace too; the few extra euros are good value.
What is the best time of day to visit?
Early after the 08:15 opening, or the last 90 minutes before closing โ€” the climb up the terraces is brutal in midday summer heat and there's little shade on the main avenues. Avoid the first and last Monday of the month, when it's shut altogether.

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