Scoppio del Carro 2026: Florence's Easter Cart Explosion — History, Logistics, and the Best Positions for Watching
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
The Scoppio del Carro (the Explosion of the Cart) is the most theatrical public event in Florentine civic life — more theatrical than the Calcio Storico, more rooted than the Palio (which is Sienese), and more specific to Florence than any other recurring annual event. The tradition as officially documented begins in 1103 (the Florentine merchant Pazzino de' Pazzi returned from the First Crusade with three stones from the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem and used them to light the Easter fire, establishing the Pazzino family as the custodians of the Easter flame in Florence — a role the Pazzi continued until their political elimination following the 1478 Pazzi Conspiracy against the Medici, after which the Comune assumed the tradition). Whether the tradition is genuinely 900 years old or whether the 1103 date is the standard Italian compression of historical origin stories into a memorable foundation myth is a question that Florentines regard as beside the point — the Scoppio del Carro exists, has existed in its current form for at least 400 years, and will continue to exist.
How the Scoppio del Carro Works
The Brindellone's Procession
The Brindellone (the three-story wooden float filled with fireworks — the name means approximately "big rag doll" or "big dangler" in Florentine dialect, a reference to its swaying progress through the streets) departs from the Porta a Prato (on the western edge of the historic center, near the Arno) in the early morning on Easter Sunday, drawn by two pairs of white oxen dressed in garlands and red cloth. The procession route follows Via Panzani to Piazza Santa Maria Novella, then continues to Piazza del Duomo — arriving approximately 10:00-10:30am. The white oxen are a specific ceremonial element: the same pair of oxen is used each year if still alive (a different pair if not), selected for their specific white color and calm temperament. The arrival of the Brindellone in Piazza del Duomo, with the white oxen steaming in the spring morning air and the crowd parting to allow the wagon through, is the most specifically Florentine visual spectacle of the year.
The Colombina and the Explosion
Inside the Cathedral, the Easter Sunday Mass begins. At the moment of the "Gloria" (the first "Gloria" of the Easter season, which the Catholic liturgy suppresses throughout Lent and restores at Easter — this moment is also when the church bells ring for the first time since Holy Thursday) the Archbishop of Florence lights a mechanical dove (the Colombina — a dove figure with a burning fuse) at the high altar and releases it along a wire that extends through the open main doors of the Cathedral to the Brindellone in the piazza. The Colombina travels 90 meters on the wire in approximately 8 seconds, reaches the wagon, ignites the fuse train, and the fireworks begin. A successful explosion (all the fireworks ignite in sequence, the colombina completes her return journey to the altar) is a good omen; the specific Florentine agricultural reading is that the year's harvest will be good. An unsuccessful explosion is a bad omen — and has in documented history been followed by historically significant disasters (whether by causal connection or retrospective narrative attribution is a matter of perspective).
Q&A: Scoppio del Carro Florence 2026
Where should I stand to watch the Scoppio del Carro?
The Piazza del Duomo is the primary location — the explosion happens directly in front of the Cathedral facade with the Brindellone parked between the Cathedral and the Baptistery. The best positions: on the Cathedral steps (facing the Brindellone — arrive by 8:30am to secure space); at the Baptistery doors (position facing the wire that connects to the Cathedral interior — you can see the Colombina emerge); and on the south side of the piazza near the Campanile (elevated view of the Brindellone and the surrounding crowd). The crowd reaches approximately 40,000 people in the piazza by 10:00am; arrive by 9:00am for any interior-Piazza position.
When exactly does the explosion happen?
Easter Sunday 2026 (April 5) at approximately 11:00am — the exact time depends on the progress of the Easter Sunday Mass inside the Cathedral, which begins at 10:30am. The "Gloria" typically occurs 25-35 minutes into the Mass. From 2024, the Comune di Florence has been more precise about announcing the expected time in the days before Easter; check comune.fi.it in the week before Easter 2026 for the specific timing announcement.