Tours and Tickets to Experience Brera Art Gallery (Pinacoteca di Brera)
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Brera Art Gallery (Pinacoteca di Brera)

Flash photography isn’t allowed inside the Brera Pinacoteca, but the surround neighborhood is one of the most photogenic in the city, so bring your camera anyway.
A visit of the museum and tour of Brera requires a bit of walking, so wear comfortable shoes and dress for the weather.
The Pinacoteca is accessible to people with limited mobility via an entrance with an elevator, which is located at Via Fiori Oscuri, 2.
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There are plenty of ways to experience the Brera Art Gallery (Pinacoteca di Brera). Looking at ratings and reviews previously given by customers, these are the best tours available right now:
Admission tickets for the Brera Art Gallery currently start at €15 for adults, while visitors under 18 years of age enter for free. Family tickets for adults accompanied by up to five children start at €10. Combined tickets that include entry to the art gallery plus Palazzo Citterio are €20 for adults aged 18 and up.
Yes, the gallery is fully accessible. The entrance at 2 Via Fiori Oscuri has a wheelchair lift, and there’s an elevator to reach each floor inside. Two mobility scooters are available for loan at the ticket office. There are also tactile bas-reliefs of some of the works for visitors with impaired sight.
The Brera Art Gallery is one of Milan’s premier art collections and tickets often sell out. Book your tickets in advance to secure your timed entry spot and avoid disappointment, especially if you plan to visit on a weekend or in the high tourist season between May and September.
Most visitors take 2–3 hours to cover the Brera Art Gallery’s collection, but you can pop in to check off just the highlights—including The Kiss by Francesco Hayez and Raphael’s Marriage of the Virgin—in about 1.5 hours. Weekend and midday crowds may slow your pace inside, so visit on a weekday morning if you’re pressed for time.
This popular museum is most crowded around midday on weekdays and Saturdays and Sundays; the Brera Art Gallery is closed on Mondays. Admission is free on the first Sunday of each month, which tends to be the busiest time to visit. Book your tickets for a weekday morning to enjoy the collection at its quietest.













































































































































