Rome Florence Venice 10-Day Itinerary 2026: Rome Needs 4 Days Not 2, Florence Without the Uffizi Is Not Florence, the Train from Florence to Venice Takes 2 Hours Not 4, Tivoli from Rome Is the Best Day Trip Nobody Takes, and Verona from Venice Costs 7 Euros and Takes 70 Minutes

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: May 2026 — verified by the editorial team of www.tourleaderpro.com

A Rome-Florence-Venice itinerary 10 days (un itinerario di 10 giorni tra Roma, Firenze, e Venezia) is the most searched single Italian multi-city trip format and the most consistently under-planned: the internet's standard Rome-Florence-Venice 10-day programme allocates 3 days Rome, 3 days Florence, 4 days Venice — which gives Venice too much time and Rome too little. The correct 10-day triangle distribution: 4 days Rome (with the Tivoli day trip as Day 4), 3 days Florence (Uffizi Day 1, Duomo and Accademia Day 2, Chianti day trip Day 3), 3 days Venice (San Marco Day 1, Gallerie dell'Accademia and Dorsoduro Day 2, Verona day trip Day 3). This distribution respects the specific cultural density of each city and adds the 3 specific day trips that convert the standard Rome-Florence-Venice 10-day tour into a genuinely comprehensive Italian experience.

Rome Florence Venice 10-Day Itinerary: Day by Day

Days 1-4: Rome (with Tivoli Day Trip)

Days 1-3: see the How Many Days in Rome guide 3-night programme. Day 4 (Tivoli day trip): the COTRAL bus from Ponte Mammolo Metro B station (GPS: 41.9167°N, 12.5611°E) to Tivoli (1h10m, 2.50 euros): the Villa d'Este (GPS: 41.9630°N, 12.7958°E — the most specifically spectacular single Italian water garden: 500 fountains, the hydraulic Organ Fountain, admission 12 euros) and the Villa Adriana (GPS: 41.9425°N, 12.7742°E — the Hadrian's Villa UNESCO World Heritage site: 120 hectares of Imperial ruins including the specific Canopus (the reflecting pool replica of the specific Egyptian Canopus canal), the specific Teatro Marittimo (the moat-island private study of Emperor Hadrian), and the specific Piazza d'Oro (the 2nd-century CE gilded square): admission 12 euros, combined Villa d'Este + Villa Adriana ticket: 22 euros). Evening train Rome → Florence (the Frecciarossa Roma Termini → Firenze SMN: 1h30m, pre-booked at 30-40 euros advance).

Days 5-7: Florence (with Chianti Day Trip)

Day 5 Florence (Uffizi and Ponte Vecchio): the Uffizi Gallery (pre-booked at b-ticket.com: 25 euros, arrive at 9:00 opening for minimum crowd (the specific Uffizi morning strategy: the Botticelli rooms (10-14) have the most specifically concentrated tourist density from 11:00-15:00 — visiting them at 9:15 AM gives the most specifically intimate single Botticelli experience)) + the Ponte Vecchio shopping (the gold shops on the bridge (the oreficerie sul ponte) are the most specifically Florentine single retail experience — the Ponte Vecchio has had exclusively gold and silversmith shops since 1593 when the Medici Grand Duke Ferdinando I expelled the butchers and tanners whose products were "unworthy of the bridge's noble position")). Day 6 Florence (Duomo and Accademia): the Brunelleschi Dome climb (pre-booked at duomo.firenze.it: 18 euros, the early 8:00 AM booking slot has the shortest climb queue) + the Accademia Gallery Michelangelo David (pre-booked: 16 euros). Day 7 (Chianti day trip by rental car or Siena by train): see the Tuscany 5-Day Itinerary Day 3-4 for the specific options. Evening train Florence → Venice (the Frecciarossa Firenze SMN → Venezia Santa Lucia: 2h20m, 35-50 euros advance).

Days 8-10: Venice (with Verona Day Trip)

Day 8 Venice (San Marco and Rialto): the Palazzo Ducale (pre-booked at coopculture.it: 25 euros) + the Basilica San Marco (free, but timed entry for the Pala d'Oro (the 10th-14th century Byzantine gold altarpiece): 5 euros) + the Rialto market (closes 13:00 — the most specifically photogenic single Venice morning market). Day 9 Venice (Dorsoduro and Cannaregio): the Gallerie dell'Accademia (pre-booked at gallerieaccademia.it: 15 euros — the Bellini, the Giorgione, and the Titian Venetian Renaissance collection) + the Peggy Guggenheim Collection (GPS: 45.4307°N, 12.3329°E — the most specifically important single 20th-century art collection on the Grand Canal: admission 18 euros) + the Cannaregio evening walk (the Jewish Ghetto (GPS: 45.4449°N, 12.3268°E — see the Venice Gondola Guide for the specific Cannaregio history) and the Fondamenta della Misericordia canal (the most specifically local single Venice evening bar strip)). Day 10 (Verona day trip): the Trenitalia Regionale from Venezia Santa Lucia to Verona Porta Nuova (1h10m, approximately 7 euros): the Arena di Verona (GPS: 45.4389°N, 10.9944°E — see the Italy Roman Sites Guide) + the Piazza Bra + the Juliet's Balcony (GPS: 45.4421°N, 10.9982°E — the specific Casa di Giulietta: the balcony from the specific Shakespeare "Romeo and Juliet" whose specific historical connection to Verona (Shakespeare never visited Italy; the specific Veronese Cappelletti family (the "Capulets") and the Montecchi family (the "Montagues") were real Veronese families but the specific balcony building was only designated a "Juliet house" in 1905 as a tourist attraction): admission 6 euros for the courtyard and the balcony (the busiest single Italian tourist paywall for the most specifically fictional single Italian monument)). Departure from Venice Marco Polo or return to Rome Fiumicino.

Q&A: Rome Florence Venice 10-Day Itinerary

What is the single most important Rome-Florence-Venice 10-day pre-booking sequence?

In order of sellout speed: (1) the Borghese Gallery (ticketeria.it — the most strictly limited Italian museum: book 2-3 weeks minimum in advance, 20 euros); (2) the Vatican Museums (museivaticani.va — book 7-10 days in advance minimum for July-August, 20 euros); (3) the Uffizi (b-ticket.com — book 5-7 days in advance, 25 euros); (4) the Colosseum (coopculture.it — book 3-5 days in advance, 22 euros); (5) the Brunelleschi Dome (duomo.firenze.it — book 2-3 days in advance, 18 euros); (6) the Accademia Gallery David (b-ticket.com — book 2-3 days in advance, 16 euros): total pre-booked museum cost per person: approximately 117 euros — the most specifically non-negotiable single Italy 10-day budget item.

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