Skip-the-line available What to See Inside Palazzo Pitti
A room-by-room guide to the Palatine Gallery, the Royal Apartments and the five other collections under one ticket.
One named ticket to Palazzo Pitti opens seven distinct collections, which is both the appeal and the challenge — few visitors see all of them in a single day. This guide walks through what each collection holds and which to prioritise, so you can pace a visit to your own taste rather than wearing yourself out. The Palatine Gallery and the Royal Apartments are the unmissable core; the other five reward whatever time and appetite you have left.
The Palatine Gallery — the unmissable core
Start with the Palatine Gallery. Around 500 paintings are hung across the grand state rooms in the dense seventeenth-century 'quadreria' style — stacked floor to ceiling and arranged by the personal taste of the grand dukes rather than by date or school. The gallery holds the world's largest concentration of works by Raphael, eleven of his paintings, alongside fifteen by Titian and sixteen by Andrea del Sarto, with masterpieces by Tintoretto, Caravaggio and Rubens among them. The rooms themselves are part of the experience, their ceilings frescoed with Medici allegories; this is painting seen in the setting it was collected for, not in a neutral modern gallery.
Because the hang is so dense, give yourself time and don't try to read every label. Pick out the Raphael portraits and Madonnas, find the Titians, and let the rest wash over you as the wall-to-wall spectacle it was meant to be. The Palatine Gallery flows directly into the Royal Apartments, so the two are naturally seen together as a single circuit of about two to three hours.
The Imperial and Royal Apartments
Adjoining the Palatine Gallery, the Imperial and Royal Apartments preserve the furnished state rooms used in turn by the Medici, the Habsburg-Lorraine grand dukes and the House of Savoy. Gilded and stuccoed ceilings, thrones, tapestries, silk hangings and period furniture recreate the look of a working royal palace across three dynasties. After the picture-dense Palatine Gallery, the apartments give a sense of how the palace was actually lived in — the human counterpart to the art on the walls next door.
The apartments are part of the same circuit and add perhaps half an hour to the Palatine Gallery visit. Together they are the part of Pitti that no visitor should skip; if you have only two hours in the palace, this is where to spend them.
The Treasury, Modern Art, Costume and Russian Icons
The remaining collections let you tailor the visit. The Treasury of the Grand Dukes — the Tesoro dei Granduchi, long called the Silver Museum — fills richly frescoed ground-floor halls with the Medici's hardstone vases, cameos, jewels, ivories and goldsmiths' work, and is a highlight for anyone who loves the decorative arts. The Gallery of Modern Art occupies the upper floor with Italian painting and sculpture from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century, strong in the Macchiaioli — Tuscany's pre-Impressionist painters of light and everyday life.
Two more collections round out the palace: the Museum of Costume and Fashion, one of Italy's most important fashion museums, tracing dress from the eighteenth century to today; and the Museum of Russian Icons, opened in 2022, with one of the largest collections of Russian icons outside Russia, assembled by the Lorraine grand dukes. The Palatine Chapel, the private chapel of the court, completes the ticket. Most visitors choose one or two of these to add after the Palatine Gallery and Royal Apartments; together with the Boboli Gardens, the full complex is comfortably a half-day or more.
Frequently asked
What is the most important thing to see in Pitti Palace?
The Palatine Gallery — around 500 paintings hung in seventeenth-century 'quadreria' style, holding the world's largest concentration of Raphaels plus major Titians and Andrea del Sartos — together with the adjoining Royal Apartments. They are the unmissable core of the visit.
How many collections does the Pitti ticket cover?
Seven: the Palatine Gallery, the Imperial and Royal Apartments, the Gallery of Modern Art, the Museum of Costume and Fashion, the Treasury of the Grand Dukes, the Museum of Russian Icons, and the Palatine Chapel. The Boboli Gardens need the combined ticket.
Can I see everything in one visit?
Few visitors do. The Palatine Gallery and Royal Apartments take 2–3 hours; the other five collections add more. Most people concentrate on the core and choose one or two of the others. The named ticket is valid for the day, so you can pace it.
What is the Treasury of the Grand Dukes?
The Tesoro dei Granduchi (long called the Silver Museum) displays the Medici's hardstone vases, cameos, jewels, ivories and goldsmiths' work in frescoed ground-floor halls — a highlight for lovers of the decorative arts.