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Ponte Vecchio from Ponte alle Grazie / Florence
Florence, Italy Worth it

Ponte Vecchio

Worth a walk, just not at peak midday. It is a free, genuinely historic bridge and the gold-shop setting is one of a kind, but at noon in summer it is a slow shuffle through a crowd. Go early or at night, shoot it from the next bridge over, and it becomes one of the nicer half hours of your trip.

Photo: Ingo Mehling (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

Florence's oldest bridge is a free, open-air sight: a medieval span still lined with little jewelry and gold shops, with the Medici's private corridor running along the top. It is genuinely beautiful and genuinely mobbed, so the move is to see it early or after dark and not at midday in July. The shops are real jewelers, not souvenir stalls, and prices match, so browse without feeling you have to buy.

Is Ponte Vecchio worth it?Worth it

Worth it for

  • A free, atmospheric medieval bridge you can see any time
  • The gold and jewelry shops cantilevered over the Arno
  • Sunset and night views, especially from Ponte Santa Trinita

You can skip if

  • Dense midday crowds are a dealbreaker and you cannot go early or late
  • You are not shopping for fine jewelry and just want to tick the photo
Straight from recent visitors

What travelers flag about Ponte Vecchio

We weighed recent Florence traveler opinion on Ponte Vecchio against the provider reviews. These are the themes that came up again and again.

  • Free to cross, better photographed from afarReported by many

    It costs nothing to walk across, and the honest tip is that the best photo of the bridge is not from on it but from the next bridge along, Ponte Santa Trinita, especially at sunset. On the bridge itself you get jewelry shops and a crowd.

  • Crowded, and watch your pocketsReported by several

    The narrow span jams shoulder to shoulder by midday, which is prime pickpocket territory, so keep your bag in front and go early or after dark when it empties out and lights up. It is a five-minute stop, not a ticketed sight.

Sourced from recent traveler discussions, not provider reviews. We only flag what several visitors independently reported, and the bars show how widely each point came up.

It's free

No ticket needed for Ponte Vecchio

Ponte Vecchio is free to cross any time, and that is the whole visit for most people: a quick walk across the medieval bridge with its gold and jewelry shops overhanging the Arno. The tip locals give is to photograph it from the next bridge along, Ponte Santa Trinita, at sunset, and to go early or late since it jams with crowds midday.

A guided river paddle under the arches or a wider Florence walking tour includes the bridge with more context, but crossing it needs no ticket.

Which ticket should you buy?

Skip the touts and just walk the free bridge early or after dark; if you want the corridor on top, book it as an Uffizi supplement well ahead, since the small timed groups fill up.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
Bridge walk Free, unticketed access to cross and linger on the bridge at any hour Everyone; this is the default way to experience Ponte Vecchio
Vasari Corridor add-on A small-group, timed walk through the Medici corridor above the bridge, booked with an Uffizi ticket History buffs and repeat visitors who want the view from inside the passage
Ponte Vecchio, 50125 Firenze FI, Italy View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

What it is

Ponte Vecchio (literally old bridge) is the only Florence bridge to survive the Second World War, when retreating German troops blew up the others but left this one standing. The current structure dates to the 1340s, and the shops cantilevered out over the water have been part of it for centuries.

Those shops used to be butchers and tanners, whose smell and waste dumped straight into the Arno. When the Medici built their elevated corridor over the bridge in the 1560s, they evicted the butchers and brought in goldsmiths and jewelers, which is why it is all gold and gemstones today.

Ponte Vecchio at dusk, Florence Photo: Martin Falbisoner (CC BY-SA 3.0), via Wikimedia Commons

What to see

The bridge itself is the attraction, and it is free to walk across any time. Stop in the middle where it opens up around the bust of the goldsmith Benvenuto Cellini, look down the Arno, and notice how the shops hang out over the water on wooden brackets. The padlocks people clip to the railings get cut off periodically, so do not expect a wall of them.

Running along the top of the bridge is the Vasari Corridor, the Medici's covered passage between Palazzo Vecchio and the Pitti Palace, which reopened at the end of 2024 after years closed. You cannot see it from the shop level, but you can walk it on a separate timed ticket tied to the Uffizi. For the best photo of the bridge as a whole, go to the next bridge over, Ponte Santa Trinita, and shoot back toward it, especially at sunset.

Ponte Vecchio from Ponte Santa Trinita Photo: Commonists (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

Visiting and access

There is no ticket and no opening hours for the bridge; it is a public street. The shops keep normal retail hours and many close midday and on Sundays. Pickpockets work the densest crowds here, so keep bags zipped and in front of you when it is shoulder to shoulder.

If you want the Vasari Corridor above, that is booked through the Uffizi as a supplement, in small timed groups, and it sells out, so reserve it ahead rather than hoping to walk on. Otherwise, just time your visit for early morning or evening and you will have a far better experience than the midday scrum.

Ponte Vecchio: FAQs

No. The bridge is a public street, free and open at all hours. You only pay if you want the Vasari Corridor that runs along the top, which is a separate timed ticket booked through the Uffizi.

Gold and jewelry, mostly: rings, watches, necklaces, and gemstones from real jewelers. The Medici replaced the original butchers with goldsmiths in the 1500s, and it has stayed that way ever since. Prices are high, so browsing is fine.

It was the only Florence bridge the retreating German army did not destroy in 1944. The common story is that its beauty and history earned it a reprieve, while every other bridge over the Arno was blown up.

Yes, since it reopened at the end of 2024. It runs in small timed groups and is booked as a supplement to an Uffizi ticket, not from the bridge. It sells out, so reserve ahead if you want it.

Early morning or after sunset. Midday in high season the bridge is packed shoulder to shoulder. Early and late you get space, better light, and a calmer walk, plus the lit-up bridge at night is the best view.

The bridge is safe, but it is a known pickpocket spot because of the crush of people. Keep bags zipped and in front of you, watch your phone and wallet in the densest stretches, and you will be fine.

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