Milan and Florence in 5 Days 2026: Style to Renaissance
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: June 2026.
Milan and Florence make a smart five-day pairing, linked by a fast train of under two hours, the stylish modern north meeting the Renaissance heart. Two days in Milan for the Duomo and Leonardo, then three in Florence, with room for a Tuscan day trip. Sort the Last Supper first: it sells out weeks ahead, so book it before anything else or accept you will skip it. Then enjoy the swing from design to David.
No car; the high-speed train links the two in under two hours. Book the Last Supper and the Duomo rooftop in Milan and the Uffizi and Accademia in Florence well ahead, and base centrally.
5-Day Milan and Florence Itinerary
Days 1-2: Milan
The Duomo and its rooftop, the Galleria and La Scala, the Sforza Castle, the Navigli aperitivo, and, if booked, Leonardo's Last Supper. Style and art in two days.
Day 3: Train to Florence
An under-two-hour fast train south to Florence, then an afternoon easing in: the Duomo and its dome from outside, the Ponte Vecchio, and a first gelato. The Renaissance begins.
Days 4-5: Florence and Tuscany
The Uffizi and the Accademia's David, a Duomo dome climb, and a Tuscan day trip to Siena or a Chianti tasting. Art and hills to finish.
Q&A: Milan and Florence in 5 Days
Is 5 days enough for Milan and Florence?
Yes: two days for Milan's compact highlights and three for Florence and a Tuscan day, linked by a quick train. Milan is more a stylish stopover, so giving Florence the extra time makes sense.
How do I get between them?
By high-speed train in under two hours, city center to city center; book ahead for the best fares. No car is needed, and driving in either city is a costly mistake.
Must I book the Last Supper?
Yes, weeks ahead; it admits tiny timed groups and sells out fast. Book it the moment your dates are set, or plan to skip it without building your Milan days around it.
Can I add a Tuscan day trip?
Easily; from Florence, Siena and San Gimignano or a Chianti wine afternoon are simple by tour or train-and-bus. It adds rolling countryside to the city days.
When should I go?
Spring and fall for comfortable weather and lighter crowds, though fashion and design weeks spike Milan prices. Summer is hot and packed; winter is quiet with short museum lines.