Florence Duomo tickets can be bought through the Opera di Santa Maria del Fiore at duomo.firenze.it, with three pass options: the Brunelleschi Pass (€8, all-access including the Dome climb), the Giotto Pass (€50, all monuments except the Dome), and the Ghiberti Pass (€80, museum and Baptistery only). The cathedral interior itself is free to enter. Tickets are also available at the official ticket office on Piazza San Giovanni 7, through authorized resellers like Florenceticket, Headout, GetYourGuide and Viator. Avoid street vendors near the Cathedral, since these are common scam sources.
Where Can I Buy Official Florence Duomo Tickets?
Official Florence Duomo tickets are sold through website at duomo.firenze.it (lowest price, instant confirmation), the official ticket office at Piazza San Giovanni 7 next to the cathedral, authorized resellers like Florenceticket, Headout, GetYourGuide, and Viator. The official website is the cheapest option for buyers comfortable booking online, while the ticket office suits visitors who prefer in-person purchases. Street vendors and unofficial websites should be avoided.
Option 1: Official Website (duomo.firenze.it) — Best Choice
The official website run by the Opera di Santa Maria del Fiore is the lowest-cost ticket source and offers the most flexibility. Buyers select the pass type, the date for the Dome climb (if buying the Brunelleschi Pass), and the preferred time slot, then receive an immediate email confirmation with a QR code that scans directly at each monument’s entrance.
Key advantages of booking ticket from the official site include:
- Lowest price — no markup, the prices listed are the prices charged (€30, €20, or €15)
- Instant confirmation — email and QR code arrive within minutes
- Multilingual — Italian, English, Spanish, French, German
- Guaranteed Dome time slot — book the specific time for the climb in advance
- Flexible scheduling — choose any available time slot up to several weeks ahead
- Official customer support — direct contact with the Opera di Santa Maria del Fiore
Option 2: Official Ticket Office (Piazza San Giovanni 7)
The official ticket office sits directly opposite the Baptistery on Piazza San Giovanni, a 1-minute walk from the cathedral. It opens daily, typically from 8:15 AM to 6:45 PM, and sells the same three passes at the same prices as the website.
The ticket office is the right choice for:
- Visitors already in Florence without a pre-booked pass
- Travelers who prefer face-to-face transactions
- Students claiming the €5 Ghiberti Pass discount (only available in person)
- Buyers needing to ask questions about pass options before purchase
The trade-off is wait time. The ticket office can carry queues of 30 to 60 minutes during peak season, and Dome climb slots for the same day are often sold out by mid-morning. Visitors who arrive without booking and find the Dome sold out can still buy the Giotto or Ghiberti Pass and explore the other monuments.
Option 3: Authorized Resellers (Florencetickt, GetYourGuide, Viator, Headout, Civitatis)
Authorized resellers list official Florence Duomo passes with a 10-15% markup added to the base ticket price. The most reliable platforms are GetYourGuide, Viator, Headout, and Civitatis, all of which work directly with the Opera di Santa Maria del Fiore as licensed distributors.
Advantages:
- Familiar platforms for buyers already using them for other tours
- Multilingual support in 10+ languages
- Bundle options that combine the Duomo with guided tours, Uffizi tickets, or city passes
- Free cancellation windows (typically 24 to 48 hours before the visit)
- Mobile-friendly tickets that display in the platform’s app
The markup is the main trade-off. A €30 Brunelleschi Pass typically appears at €34 to €36 on resellers. For most buyers, the convenience justifies the small premium, especially when bundling with a guided tour.
Do You Need to Buy Florence Duomo Tickets in Advance?
Advance booking is not required for free entry to the cathedral interior, which is open to walk-up visitors Monday through Saturday from 10:15 AM to 4:45 PM (closed Sundays). Advance booking is strongly recommended for the Brunelleschi Pass (the all-access pass including the Dome climb), since Dome time slots often sell out 2 to 3 weeks ahead in peak season. The Giotto and Ghiberti passes have more day-of availability but still benefit from advance booking to skip the ticket office queue.
Which Ticket Pass Is Best for Duomo Florence?
The best Florence Duomo pass for most visitors is the Brunelleschi Pass, since it covers all five monuments at the lowest per-monument cost, and the Dome climb is the single most distinctive Florence experience. The Giotto Pass is the right choice for visitors who cannot or do not want to climb 463 Dome steps but still want a climbing experience from the Bell Tower. The Ghiberti Pass is the budget option for visitors with mobility limitations or those who only want the museum and Baptistery. Students qualify for the Ghiberti Pass in person at the ticket office.
Pass 1: Brunelleschi Pass — All-Access Including the Dome
The Brunelleschi Pass is the flagship Duomo Complex ticket and the only pass that includes a Dome climb. The pass covers all five paid monuments:
- Brunelleschi’s Dome climb — 463 steps to the lantern, mandatory timed reservation, close-up view of Vasari’s Last Judgment fresco, and 360-degree panoramic city views from the top
- Giotto’s Bell Tower (Campanile) — 414 steps with resting platforms, no timed slot required, panoramic views of the Dome itself and the city
- Baptistery of Saint John (Battistero) — Byzantine mosaics on the ceiling, the famous Gates of Paradise bronze doors (replica outside, originals in the Museum)
- Opera del Duomo Museum (Museo dell’Opera) — the original artworks moved from the monuments for preservation, including Michelangelo’s Bandini Pietà, Donatello’s Mary Magdalene, and Ghiberti’s original Gates of Paradise panels
- Santa Reparata crypt — the archaeological remains of the 4th-century basilica beneath the current cathedral
Who should buy it: Visitors who want the complete Duomo Complex experience, anyone whose primary goal is the Dome climb, and travelers spending 2 or more days in Florence with time to use all five monuments.
Pass 2: Giotto Pass — No Dome, Everything Else
The Giotto Pass covers four of the five paid monuments, excluding only the Dome climb:
- Giotto’s Bell Tower — the climb is shorter than the Dome (414 vs 463 steps), and the views actually include the Dome itself, which the Dome climb cannot show
- Baptistery of Saint John
- Opera del Duomo Museum
- Santa Reparata crypt
Who should buy it: Visitors who want a climbing experience but cannot or do not want to do the more demanding Dome climb, travelers who could not secure a Dome time slot, photographers who specifically want photos of the Dome (the Bell Tower offers the best Dome-photography angle), and visitors with claustrophobia (the Bell Tower climb feels more open than the narrow Dome staircase).
Pass 3: Ghiberti Pass — No Climbs, Museum and Baptistery Only
The Ghiberti Pass is the budget-friendly, no-climbing option:
- Baptistery of Saint John
- Opera del Duomo Museum
- Santa Reparata crypt
Who should buy it: Visitors with mobility limitations who cannot climb stairs, art and history enthusiasts focused on the museum collections, students using the reduced rate, and budget travelers who want quality cultural access without paying for the climbs.

