Florence skyline at sunrise — the Duomo and Campanile, Tuscany
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Florence's Finest Hotels: Where the Renaissance Never Ended

From the Four Seasons' walled garden to Portrait Firenze's rooftop over the Arno — the definitive guide to staying in the world's most beautiful city

Marco Ferretti Apr 26, 2026 12 min read

Florence is the most concentrated repository of human beauty on earth. Its finest hotels understand that their role is not to compete with the city's art and architecture but to provide a sanctuary from which to experience it.

The Challenge of Florence

Florence presents a unique challenge for hotel designers: how do you create a luxury experience in a city where the competition is Michelangelo, Botticelli, and Brunelleschi? The answer, arrived at by the city's finest hotels after decades of experimentation, is to stop competing and start contextualising. The best Florence hotels are not trying to be more beautiful than the Uffizi — they are trying to be the perfect frame for the experience of the Uffizi.

This means, in practice, that the finest Florence hotels are located in historic palaces and convents, that their interiors reference the city's artistic heritage without pastiche, and that their staff are as knowledgeable about the city's cultural life as they are about their own amenities.

Four Seasons Hotel Firenze: The Garden City

The Four Seasons Florence occupies two Renaissance palaces — the Palazzo della Gherardesca and the Villa della Gherardesca — connected by what is, at 4.5 hectares, the largest private garden in Florence. The garden alone justifies the hotel's position as the finest in the city: a walled paradise of ancient trees, fountains, and manicured lawns that makes the noise and crowds of the city feel like a distant memory.

The hotel's 116 rooms and suites are distributed across both palaces, with the most spectacular occupying the frescoed halls of the Palazzo della Gherardesca. The Il Palagio restaurant, which serves contemporary Tuscan cuisine in a frescoed dining room overlooking the garden, is one of the finest hotel restaurants in Italy.

Portrait Firenze: The Arno at Your Feet

Portrait Firenze, which opened in 2015 as part of the Lungarno Collection, occupies a palazzo on the Lungarno Acciaiuoli — the embankment road that runs along the north bank of the Arno, directly opposite the Ponte Vecchio. The hotel's 36 suites are among the most beautifully designed in Italy: a collaboration between the Ferragamo family's aesthetic sensibility and the Florentine tradition of fine craftsmanship.

The hotel's rooftop terrace, which offers an unobstructed view of the Arno, the Ponte Vecchio, and the hills of Oltrarno, is the finest hotel viewpoint in Florence. In the evening, as the sun sets behind the hills and the city's stone buildings turn gold, it is one of the most beautiful places in the world to be.

The Editor's Verdict

Florence is best experienced slowly. The traveller who spends three days rushing between the Uffizi, the Accademia, and the Duomo will leave exhausted and overwhelmed. The traveller who spends a week, who returns to the same paintings multiple times, who discovers the city's neighbourhood churches and artisan workshops — that traveller will understand why Florence has been drawing visitors from across the world for six centuries.

For this kind of visit, the Four Seasons provides the ideal base: large enough to offer every amenity, secluded enough to provide genuine rest, and staffed by people who understand that the city outside the garden walls is the real destination.

MF
Marco FerrettiItaly Correspondent

Our editors travel extensively to verify every recommendation. All hotel reviews are independent — we accept no payment for editorial coverage.