Italy
Florence
Renaissance beauty, slower pace, and a genuine quality of life — at a lower price than Milan
Family budget at a glance
The all-in range matches the FAQ answer for "How much does a family typically need per month here?" The other cards are single-line benchmarks — they don't add up to that total (school fees and other costs are separate).
All-in / month (family of 4)
~$4,000–$6,000 / month
3-bed family home
~$1,620 / month
Dinner for 2 (mid-range)
~$54
Nanny
~$14 / hr
Florence offers an extraordinary quality of life for families who want authentic Italian living without Milan's cost or pace. It has excellent food, outdoor space, proximity to Tuscany, and a growing international community. The trade-off is a very limited international school choice and a tourist-heavy city centre — most expat families with children live in quieter residential outer neighbourhoods.
Action checklist
Concrete steps to make this move happen, in order.
Click any step to jump to that section ↓
- 1EU/EEA citizens: register your dichiarazione di residenza (address registration) at the Ufficio Anagrafe (civil registry office within your local Comune — city hall) within 90 days of arrival
- 2Non-EU citizens: apply for your Permesso di Soggiorno (residence permit) at your local Questura (police headquarters) within 8 working days of arrival
- 3Get your Codice Fiscale (Italian tax code — required for renting, banking, and school enrolment) at any Agenzia delle Entrate (tax authority) office
- 4Research international school options carefully — Florence has very limited English-medium school choice; apply at least 12 months ahead
- 5Start your housing search 6–8 weeks before your move — look beyond the historic centre for family-friendly neighbourhoods with more space
- 6Register with your local ASL (Azienda Sanitaria Locale — local health authority) to access Italy's SSN (Servizio Sanitario Nazionale — public health system)
- 7Open an Italian bank account — Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit operate in Florence
- 8Find a nanny or nursery as early as possible — asili nido (public nurseries) in Florence have waiting lists
Family fit
Great for
- Families seeking an authentic Italian lifestyle in one of Europe's most beautiful cities
- EU/EEA families who can use the Italian state school system or are homeschooling
- Parents working remotely or in Florence's fashion, design, education, or tourism sectors
- Families who want Tuscany on the doorstep — countryside, hiking, wine country, and coastal access within 1–2 hours
Watch out for
- International school choice is very limited — there are only a handful of English-medium schools and places fill quickly
- The historic city centre is crowded with tourists year-round — most expat families with children live in the quieter outer neighbourhoods
- Summer (June–August) is very hot and humid — the city is at its least liveable for families with young children
- Italian bureaucracy applies here as everywhere — the Permesso di Soggiorno and school registration processes require patience
Climate & seasons
Monthly normals (2001–2020) · MERRA-2 (NASA POWER)
Rainy-day counts are approximate (from monthly rainfall).
- HottestJul · 35.3°Cmean daily high
- CoolestJan · -6.2°Cmean daily low
- WettestNov · 96.3 mmmonth total
- DriestJul · 32.6 mmmonth total
- Low
- -6.2°C
- Rain
- 54.6 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- -5.5°C
- Rain
- 65.2 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- -3.7°C
- Rain
- 62.9 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- -0.2°C
- Rain
- 56.7 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- 4.4°C
- Rain
- 62.6 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- 8.9°C
- Rain
- 44.4 mm
- Wet days
- ~4
- Low
- 12.2°C
- Rain
- 32.6 mm
- Wet days
- ~3
- Low
- 11.6°C
- Rain
- 40.3 mm
- Wet days
- ~3
- Low
- 7.1°C
- Rain
- 66 mm
- Wet days
- ~6
- Low
- 2.8°C
- Rain
- 84 mm
- Wet days
- ~7
- Low
- -2.2°C
- Rain
- 96.3 mm
- Wet days
- ~8
- Low
- -5.1°C
- Rain
- 69.8 mm
- Wet days
- ~6
| Month | Typical high | Typical low | Rain (total) | Rainy days (~) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 11.6°C | -6.2°C | 54.6 mm | 5 |
| Feb | 12.7°C | -5.5°C | 65.2 mm | 5 |
| Mar | 17.8°C | -3.7°C | 62.9 mm | 5 |
| Apr | 21.8°C | -0.2°C | 56.7 mm | 5 |
| May | 26.5°C | 4.4°C | 62.6 mm | 5 |
| Jun | 32.5°C | 8.9°C | 44.4 mm | 4 |
| Jul | 35.3°C | 12.2°C | 32.6 mm | 3 |
| Aug | 34.7°C | 11.6°C | 40.3 mm | 3 |
| Sep | 29.8°C | 7.1°C | 66 mm | 6 |
| Oct | 23.7°C | 2.8°C | 84 mm | 7 |
| Nov | 17.2°C | -2.2°C | 96.3 mm | 8 |
| Dec | 12.5°C | -5.1°C | 69.8 mm | 6 |
Family notes
- Warmest month on average: Jul (mean daily high ~35°C); coolest: Jan (mean daily low ~-6°C).
- Most rainfall on average: Nov (~96 mm total); driest: Jul (~33 mm).
- Mean daily highs reach about 32°C or more in Jun, Jul, Aug — plan air-conditioning, shade, and limited midday outdoor time for babies and young children.
- Peak months can average above 35°C for daily highs — schedule playgrounds, walks, and errands for mornings or evenings when possible.
- Winter nights can dip near freezing (Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, Nov, Dec) — reliable home heating and warm layers for school commutes matter for children.
These values are long-term monthly climatologies from NASA POWER (MERRA-2 reanalysis) for the nearest model grid cell to these coordinates — not a single city-centre weather station. Spatial resolution is about 50 km; coastal belts, hills, and dense urban cores can differ. Precipitation is corrected MERRA-2 rainfall; rainy-day counts are approximated from monthly totals.
Grid cell used: 43.779°, 11.246° (WGS84)
Visa options
Reviewed Mar 2026
Reviewed Mar 2026
EU/EEA citizens move to Italy freely — only a Codice Fiscale and address registration are needed after arrival. Non-EU families need a D visa before travelling. Italy's Digital Nomad Visa (launched 2024) covers non-EU remote workers earning at least $30,240/year.
Tap the ? next to a term for a quick definition.
EU / EEA citizens
Move freely to Italy with no visa. First steps after arrival: Codice Fiscale and dichiarazione di residenza.
Schengen Tourist (non-EU)
Valid for a scouting trip. No right to work, no extensions, cannot be converted to residency from inside Italy.
Italy Digital Nomad Visa (non-EU remote workers)
For non-EU remote workers earning at least $30,240/year from non-Italian employers or clients. Apply at an Italian consulate before travelling.
EU / EEA citizens — what to do after arriving in Florence
- No visa, permit, or income threshold required — EU/EEA passport holders have full freedom of movement in Italy.
- Get your Codice Fiscale (Italian tax code — required for every transaction) at any Agenzia delle Entrate (tax authority) office within your first week. Bring your passport.
- Register your dichiarazione di residenza (address registration) at the Ufficio Anagrafe (civil registry office, part of your Comune — city hall) within 90 days. Bring your passport, Codice Fiscale, and rental contract.
- Register with your local ASL (Azienda Sanitaria Locale — local health authority) to access the SSN (Servizio Sanitario Nazionale — public health system).
- After 5 years of continuous legal residence, you can apply for a permanent EU residency permit.
Schengen Tourist — what it allows and what it does not
- 90 days maximum across the entire Schengen Area in any 180-day period.
- No right to work — this includes remote work for a foreign employer.
- Cannot be converted to residency from inside Italy — you must apply for a long-stay D visa at an Italian consulate before travelling.
- Good use: 2–3 weeks scouting Oltrarno, Gavinana, and the areas around Campo di Marte and Rifredi for family housing.
- Do not attempt long-term stays on rolling tourist entries — Italian immigration enforces Schengen limits.
Italy Digital Nomad Visa — how to apply
- Income requirement: at least $30,240/year from remote employment or freelance work for non-Italian clients.
- Required documents: passport, proof of remote employment or freelance contracts, 3 months of bank statements, and private health insurance valid in Italy.
- Apply at the Italian consulate in your home country before travelling — you cannot switch to this visa from inside Italy on a tourist entry.
- After arriving, apply for your Permesso di Soggiorno (residence permit) at the local Questura (police headquarters) within 8 working days.
- Get your Codice Fiscale at any Agenzia delle Entrate office immediately — required before renting, banking, or enrolling children in school.
Get your Codice Fiscale within the first week — without it you cannot sign a rental contract, open a bank account, or register children in school.
Registration & Codice Fiscale
Reviewed Mar 2026
Reviewed Mar 2026
- Get your Codice Fiscale (Italian tax code — a personal ID number required for every transaction in Italy) at any Agenzia delle Entrate (tax authority) office. Bring your passport. Issued on the spot.
- Register your dichiarazione di residenza (address registration) at the Ufficio Anagrafe (civil registry office within your Comune — city hall) within 90 days if you are EU/EEA. Bring your passport, Codice Fiscale, and rental contract.
- Non-EU residents must apply for a Permesso di Soggiorno (residence permit) at the local Questura (police headquarters) within 8 working days of arrival.
- Apply for your SPID (Sistema Pubblico di Identità Digitale — Italy's digital identity for accessing government services online) after registration.
- Register with your local ASL (Azienda Sanitaria Locale — local health authority) to activate your tessera sanitaria (health card) and SSN (public health system) access.
Get your Codice Fiscale within the first week — without it you cannot sign a rental contract, open a bank account, or register children in school.
Banking
- Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit are Italy's two largest banks and operate in Florence. Both are suitable for expat families with English-language service available at larger branches.
- To open an account you need: passport, Codice Fiscale, and proof of Italian address (rental contract or utility bill).
- N26 (Germany-based neobank) operates in Italy and is a good bridge option while waiting for a traditional account — open online with just a passport.
- Wise and Revolut are widely used for international transfers and currency exchange while your Italian account is being set up.
- Florence is more cash-reliant than northern European cities — keep $110–$215 in cash for markets, small restaurants, and services.
You need your Codice Fiscale and proof of address before any Italian bank will open an account — get both in week one.
Housing
Florence is significantly more affordable than Milan. Most expat families with children live outside the tourist-heavy historic centre in the quieter residential neighbourhoods of Oltrarno, Gavinana, and the areas around Campo di Marte.
Where to search
These are local rental platforms — this is where residents rent long-term housing (cheaper than Airbnb).
Search 'Firenze' or the neighbourhood name inside each platform to filter local listings.
Tip: arrive with a short-stay Airbnb booked for the first 2–3 weeks — Florence's long-term rental market requires in-person viewings and a Codice Fiscale before you can sign a contract.
Typical monthly rents
- 1-bed apartment, Oltrarno or Campo di Marte: $970–$1,510/month
- 2-bed apartment, Gavinana: $1,190–$1,730/month
- 3-bed apartment, Rifredi: $1,510–$2,160/month
- 3-bed house, Fiesole area (hills): $1,730–$2,700/month
Best areas for families
What you need to rent
- Valid passport
- Codice Fiscale (Italian tax code — required on all rental contracts)
- 3 months of bank statements or employment contract
- 2–3 months deposit is standard in Florence
- Rental contracts are typically 4+4 years or 3+2 years — confirm the type before signing
Schools
Florence has very limited international school options. Most expat families with school-age children research the school situation carefully before committing — and some choose Milan or Lisbon specifically because of better school choice.
Public system
Italian state schools in Florence are free and well structured but all instruction is in Italian. State schools work well for families who are committed to long-term Italian integration or whose children already speak Italian. For most newly arrived English-speaking families, it requires a transition period.
International options
Florence has a small number of international and bilingual schools, primarily IB and Italian-American curriculum. Places are very limited and demand is high. Fees range from roughly $8,640 to $19,440 per year. Apply 12–18 months ahead.
Language notes
Italian state schools teach entirely in Italian. International schools teach in English or a bilingual format. Children typically need 1–2 years to reach full academic fluency if entering the state system without Italian.
Contact international schools before booking your move — Florence has fewer options than Milan and places fill quickly. If no place is available, assess whether the state school system is a workable transitional option.
Education options
IB curriculum international schools
The primary English-medium option in Florence. Very limited places — apply well in advance.
Italian state schools
Free for all residents. All instruction is in Italian. A viable long-term option for families committed to integration — many expat children who attend from a young age become fluent within 1–2 years.
Childcare
Florence has both public and private nursery options. Public asili nido are subsidised and popular but oversubscribed. Private nurseries offer more availability.
Daycare & nurseries
- Asilo nido (nursery — Italian term for state-run or authorised nursery for children 0–3) accept children from 3 months old. Public asili nido in Florence are income-tested and subsidised but have waiting lists — apply as early as possible
- Private asilo nido fees: roughly $650–$1,080/month — more affordable than Milan
- Scuola dell'infanzia (Italian preschool for children 3–6) is free or very low cost in the state system after residency registration
- Visit nurseries in person — quality varies between private providers and inspections are your best filter
Nanny & au pair
- Full-time nannies charge roughly $11–$16/hr — more affordable than Milan
- Many English-speaking nannies are available in Florence due to its international community and university presence
- Part-time and after-school arrangements are common for families whose children attend state school
- Start your nanny search 6–8 weeks before arrival — good candidates fill quickly in the expat community
Where to find childcare
- Babysits.com — Italian childcare platform used by expat families in Florence
- Bakeca.it — Italian classifieds widely used for nanny listings in Florence and Tuscany
- Search 'Florence Expat Families' or 'Firenze Expat Parents' on Google — community groups for personal recommendations
Healthcare
Reviewed Mar 2026
Reviewed Mar 2026
- Italy's SSN (Servizio Sanitario Nazionale — public health system) covers all registered residents including EU/EEA citizens and non-EU residents with a valid Permesso di Soggiorno.
- Register with your local ASL (Azienda Sanitaria Locale — local health authority) after completing residency registration. Bring your passport, Codice Fiscale, and proof of address. You will receive a tessera sanitaria (health card) and be assigned a GP.
- GP and specialist visits through the SSN require a small co-payment (ticket) of roughly $16–$43 per visit. Emergency care is covered at no cost.
- Private healthcare is available in Florence for faster access and English-speaking doctors. A private GP consultation costs roughly $76–$140.
- Ospedale Careggi (the main university hospital) and Ospedale Meyer (Florence's dedicated children's hospital) are the two most recommended hospitals for families in the city.
Register with your local ASL (Azienda Sanitaria Locale) within the first month — this activates your access to Italy's SSN (public health system) and assigns you a GP.
Safety
- Violent crime is rare in Florence — the city is generally very safe for family day-to-day life
- Pickpocketing is the main risk — concentrated in the historic centre (Duomo, Ponte Vecchio, Santa Croce) and on crowded buses. Keep bags in front in tourist areas
- Traffic is a genuine hazard — Florence's narrow historic streets and active scooter and bike culture require road awareness with children
- Summer heat is a real health risk — Florence in July–August is intensely hot; limit outdoor midday activity for young children and keep them hydrated
- Residential neighbourhoods (Oltrarno, Gavinana, Rifredi) away from the tourist centre are quiet, low-traffic, and very safe for families
FAQ
Is Florence good for families?
Yes — Florence is an excellent city for families who want high quality of life in a beautiful, manageable-sized city. Strong international schools, good healthcare, a relaxed pace, and significantly more affordable than Milan.
How much does a family typically need per month here?
Budget $4,000–$6,000/month for a family of four. Rent for a 3-bedroom outside the historic centre runs $1,500–$2,500/month — good value by Western European standards.
Is housing hard to find here?
Moderate. Florence has less supply than Milan. Reputable expat areas (Oltrarno, Campo di Marte) move quickly. Tourist demand pushes short-stay prices high — long-term rentals offer much better value but take time to find.
Do children need international school here, or can local schools work?
International school is recommended for non-Italian-speaking families. Italian state schools teach entirely in Italian. Florence has a smaller international school sector than Milan — research what's available before committing to the city.
Is healthcare easy to access as a newcomer?
Same process as Milan: get your Codice Fiscale (Italian tax ID), register residency, then enrol in the SSN (Servizio Sanitario Nazionale — Italy's public health system) at your local ASL. Florence's public hospitals are adequate; private clinics offer English-speaking doctors and faster access.
Do you need a car in Florence?
Partially. Florence is walkable and bikeable in the centre. A car is not needed for daily life inside the ZTL (Zona a Traffico Limitato — the restricted traffic zone in the historic centre). Families in the hills or outer areas benefit from one.
How difficult is the paperwork and bureaucracy after moving?
Same Italian process as Milan — Codice Fiscale, Residenza registration at the Municipio (municipal office), then Permesso di Soggiorno (residence permit) if non-EU. Florence's smaller size means some offices are less backlogged than in Milan, but the process is still slow by Northern European standards.
What usually surprises families after arrival?
Tourist overwhelm in the historic centre. Florence's old town is intensely crowded year-round. Families who rent inside the ZTL find daily life more pleasant than expected; those who assumed the whole city would feel liveable are often surprised. Most long-term expat families rent outside the historic centre.
Sources
Official government, institutional, and public sources.
Community
Expat groups and community forums. Use the search buttons below to find them.
Search 'Florence Expats' or 'Expat Family Florence Italy' on Google — active community with housing, school, and settlement advice
Search: “Florence Expats Facebook group”Search on Google