TheOneToGo Trip Planner
Milan Itinerary Planner
Plan a Milan trip in a few taps. TheOneToGo builds an honest, day-by-day itinerary from the places actually worth your time, groups each day so it is walkable, and tells you what to skip. Nothing is placed for payment.
The stops we'd build a Milan trip around
One honest pick per place, and why. Open any for the full verdict. The planner arranges these into your days for you.
- Duomo di Milano Worth it
Go, but do not treat it as a quick facade photo.
- Museo del Cenacolo Vinciano Worth it
Book it if you can get a sensible time slot.
- Castello Sforzesco Worth it
Castello Sforzesco is worth it, but not because every room is equally strong.
- Pinacoteca di Brera Worth it
Brera is one of Milan's best cultural stops, but it is not a casual crowd-pleaser.
- Teatro alla Scala Worth it
La Scala is worth it if you want Milan beyond shopping and cathedral photos. The museum is good but not life-changing.
- Museo Nazionale Scienza e Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci Worth it
This is one of Milan's best non-art museums, but it is not a quick checklist sight.
- Cimitero Monumentale di Milano Worth it
Cimitero Monumentale di Milano is worth it if you want a Milan visit with atmosphere, strong art, and fewer crowds than…
- Fondazione Prada Worth it
Fondazione Prada is worth the trip if you want Milan at its most controlled, strange, and intellectually prickly.
Good to know before you plan
Where we would spend carefully, or not at all.
- Navigli Worth it with caveats Navigli earns an evening: a free walk, good canal photos, and that aperitivo buzz. The catch is simple. The tables you see first are usually priced for the location, and the whole area can turn touristy fast.
- San Siro Stadium Worth it with caveats San Siro is worth it for football fans and anyone who likes architecture, and more so while its future is still unsettled. For everyone else, look at the exterior for free or put the time into central Milan's stronger sights.
- Duomo Rooftop Terraces Worth it with caveats The rooftop is the part of the Duomo I would do first, because walking next to the spires sticks with you in a way that just stepping inside the cathedral does not.
Milan planner FAQ
How does the Milan itinerary planner work?
Tell it your dates, pace, party and interests. It builds a day-by-day Milan plan only from places we have actually reviewed, like Duomo di Milano, groups each day so it stays walkable, and flags the tourist traps to skip. You can regenerate, save and share it.
What is worth booking ahead in Milan?
Duomo di Milano is the one most people should book in advance. Go, but do not treat it as a quick facade photo.
How many days do you need in Milan?
Two to three days covers the essentials for most travelers. The planner lets you set anywhere from one to seven days and fills each one around what is genuinely worth your time in Milan.
Is the Milan planner free?
Yes. No sign-up, and we never take payment to place anything in your plan. You book tickets through trusted partners at the same price as their own sites.
Want to browse instead? See everything to do in Milan, or read how we pick.