Ten days in Tuscany, no car required
A train-first 10-day system for Florence, Pisa, Lucca, Arezzo, Siena, San Gimignano, Montepulciano and Pienza, with smart bus links for the classic hill towns, layered Google Maps, and curated food sheets.
Peek inside the guidesNot sure yet? Start with our free Milan guide, same format, same depth, same maps. See the quality first.
Why is Milan free? We know there are a lot of AI-generated travel guides out there. We wanted you to see what a real, hand-curated guide looks like before you spend a cent.
Download the Milan in 2 Days guide, it’s the exact same format, depth, and quality as our Tuscany guide. Once you open it, you’ll feel the difference.
What every guide looks like inside
These screenshots are from our free Milan guide, the exact same format, depth, and quality you’ll get in the 10-day Tuscany system.
Tuscany without a car shouldn’t feel like a research project
“Can I really do Tuscany by train?”
Yes, but most blogs assume you’ll rent a car. Trains cover the cities; buses fill the hill-town gaps. Knowing the difference up front changes everything.
“Florence or Siena as my base?”
Pick the wrong one and you’ll waste hours backtracking. The split-base logic is the single biggest decision shaping a no-car Tuscany trip.
“What sells out, and how far ahead?”
Duomo Dome, Uffizi, Accademia, Pisa Tower, Siena Cathedral, you don’t want to find out at the door that today is fully booked.
Ten days across Tuscany, no car required
You’re getting two full PDF guides covering 8 destinations, plus maps, food sheets, and the planning tools that tie everything together into one simple system.
Florence Base + Day Trips
Florence as your first base, plus Pisa, Lucca, and Arezzo as the strongest rail-based day trips in Tuscany.
- 180-page step-by-step PDF
- 3 full days in Florence (Duomo, Uffizi, Accademia, Oltrarno)
- Pisa + Lucca combo day trip
- Arezzo east-Tuscany day
Siena Base + Hill Towns
Siena as your second base for the slower, more scenic stretch, with smart bus links to the classic hill towns.
- 128-page step-by-step PDF
- 2 full days in Siena (Campo, Duomo, art)
- San Gimignano hill-town day
- Montepulciano + Pienza in Val d’Orcia
Transport Playbooks
The pages that turn “how do we get there” into a non-question. Trains for the cities, buses for the hill towns, no car needed.
- Florence (FLR) and Pisa (PSA) airport playbooks
- Florence → Siena transfer day
- Bus-link logic for San Gimignano + Val d’Orcia
- Ticket validation rules + tap-out buses
10-Day Master Plan
The pages that tie everything together and make you feel in control of your entire trip.
- Master booking timeline (30/60 day windows)
- Transfer-day checklists
- Tuscany packing list (season by season)
- Printable budget tracker
Google Maps and Layers
Color-coded pins organized by day across all 8 destinations. Toggle layers on/off. Open on your phone in one tap while walking.
- Day routes, food, detours, toilets, viewpoints
- Day-by-day layer toggle
- Two map files: one for Days 1-5, one for Days 6-10
Tuscany Food Spreadsheet
One master sheet covering all 8 destinations. Sortable by area, cuisine, budget, with dietary tags and honest notes.
- Trattorias, wine bars, cafés, gelato
- Filter by GF, vegetarian, vegan
- Budget ($) to fine dining ($$$$)
Two PDF guides, the master plan, layered maps, and the Tuscany food sheet, all in one bundle.
10 days that actually make sense
Arrival and first orientation
Check in, take a short walk, easy first dinner. Light arrival day so the rest of the trip stays smooth.
Duomo, Uffizi and Oltrarno
The big highlights, smartly sequenced. Bell tower early, Uffizi at your best energy, sunset on Ponte Vecchio.
Deeper Florence and Accademia
San Marco, Mercato Centrale, Medici Chapels, Santa Croce, and the David, paced for a slower wander.
Tuscany’s easiest classic day trip
Pisa first thing for the Tower, then slow down in Lucca’s walled center later in the day.
East Tuscany day trip
Piero della Francesca frescoes, the upper town, and a calmer rhythm before transferring south.
Transfer and Siena atmosphere walk
Smooth morning transfer, then ease into Siena: Piazza del Campo, Palazzo Pubblico, Torre del Mangia.
Siena Duomo, art and Saint Catherine
The Duomo complex, Pinacoteca, Santa Maria della Scala, plus long piazza breaks built in.
The classic hill town day
Early bus from Siena, towers and piazzas without the day-tripper crush, return when the light gets golden.
Postcard Tuscany in Val d’Orcia
Montepulciano as your main stop, Pienza added if the timing feels comfortable. Wine, views, and the Renaissance “ideal city.”
Smooth finish from Florence or Pisa
Departure playbook: where to sleep your last night, T2 tram timings, Pisa Mover hours, buffer-time rules.
DIY planning vs. the Tuscany bundle
| Feature | DIY planning | Ten Days in Tuscany |
|---|---|---|
| Train-first routing across 8 places | ✗ Unlikely | ✓ Built in |
| Florence vs. Siena base logic | ✗ Guess work | ✓ Explained |
| Bus links for hill towns | ✗ Buried in forums | ✓ Step-by-step |
| What to book and when (30/60 days) | ✗ Maybe | ✓ Full timeline |
| Layered Google Maps | ✗ Make your own | ✓ Ready to use |
| Food picks across 8 destinations | ✗ Random blogs | ✓ One curated sheet |
| Hours spent planning | 30–50 hours | Under 1 hour |
Purchase to planning in 3 minutes
Download
Instant access to both PDFs, both maps, and the food spreadsheet right after checkout.
Plan
Use the booking timeline to lock in Duomo, Uffizi, and Pisa Tower 30-60 days out. Save the maps to your phone.
Walk
Follow the day-by-day plan on the ground. Toggle map layers as you go. No car, no chaos.
Join 70,000 Italy travelers (and counting)
“We did Tuscany without renting a car and didn’t miss it once. The bus timings for San Gimignano alone were worth the price.”
“The Florence-then-Siena base logic finally made the trip click. We weren’t backtracking, we were actually exploring.”
“Montepulciano in the morning, Pienza in the afternoon, all perfectly timed. We followed the plan and ate better than we ever have in Italy.”
Ciao, I’m Maria
A techie by day and an Italy explorer at heart, I’ve been living in Rome for over 10 years. My happiest days involve unhurried strolls through hidden courtyards, bites at bustling markets, and dinners in tiny trattorie with handwritten menus.
With a small team of local friends and contributors spread across Italy, I share calm routes, authentic eats, and small discoveries, one market, meal, and neighborhood gem at a time. Our four-legged travel CEO, Gioia, keeps us honest about the city’s best-kept secrets.
These guides aren’t AI-generated lists. Every restaurant, every route, every timing note comes from walking these streets ourselves, year after year.
Is this guide right for you?
✅ Perfect if…
- You want to do Tuscany without renting a car
- You’d rather take trains and the occasional bus than wrestle with parking and ZTLs
- You want the highlights without spending half your trip queuing or backtracking
- You like guidance but still want freedom for slow lunches, wine tastings, and wandering
- You want something phone-friendly you can use on the go (or print)
🚫 Not a fit if…
- You want a packed 6am–11pm schedule with zero flexibility
- You’re planning a self-drive trip with multiple agriturismo stops in the countryside
- You’re going to Tuscany for less than 5 days (the system is built around the full 10-day arc)
- You prefer fully guided group tours
Frequently asked questions
Correct. The whole system is built train-first, with smart bus links where the hill towns require them. Florence is the regional rail hub for Pisa, Lucca, Arezzo, and Siena. Buses fill in for San Gimignano and Val d’Orcia (Montepulciano + Pienza). The transport playbooks walk you through every connection.
You can adapt it. The cleanest shorter version is 7 days: keep Florence (Days 1-3), Pisa+Lucca (Day 4), the Florence-Siena transfer (Day 5), Siena (Day 6), and one hill-town day (Day 7). The guide is structured so you can drop Arezzo, San Gimignano, or Val d’Orcia without the rest collapsing.
Because 300+ pages on a phone is unwieldy. We split the trip into Days 1-5 (Florence base) and Days 6-10 (Siena base) so each PDF is faster to scroll, easier to search, and matches the natural break in the trip when you change cities.
Yes. Hours, ticket links, transport schedules, and restaurant recommendations are all current for 2026. We update the guides regularly.
Yes. Open in Google Maps on iOS or Android, one tap and you’re navigating. You can toggle day layers on and off so you only see what’s relevant. The guide also explains how to download standard offline Google Maps for each city as a backup.
Yes, especially because the train-first approach means no driving fatigue. If you’re traveling with very young kids, you might want to trim one major activity per day and skip the longer hill-town days (San Gimignano, Val d’Orcia) in favor of more time in Florence and Siena.
The food spreadsheet marks gluten-free, vegetarian, and vegan-friendly options. Tuscany is surprisingly accommodating once you know where to look, and the sheet filters help you find places fast.
Because this is an instant digital download, all sales are final. But if you have trouble accessing your files or the maps, reply to your confirmation email or contact hello@italyonfoot.com and we’ll help right away.
Absolutely, that’s exactly why we made our Milan in 2 Days guide completely free. Same format, same depth, same maps. Download it first and see for yourself.
