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Top things to do in Milan, Italy include visiting the Duomo di Milano, a vast gothic cathedral featuring 135 spires that provide panoramic views of the city. Enjoy shopping or dining in the stylish Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II. Art enthusiasts should make sure to visit Santa Maria delle Grazie to see Leonardo's Last Supper, which is only a 10-minute walk from the cathedral.


Milan Cathedral
A towering Gothic marvel in the center of Milan, the Duomo offers stunning architecture and rooftop views. Ascend the terraces to get close to the spires and enjoy sweeping city vistas.
Quick facts: Step onto sun-warmed rooftop terraces and you can see over 3,400 statues towering like a stone forest, with spires that reach into the sky. Climb narrow staircases to feel cool marble beneath your feet as jewel-toned stained glass floods the nave, making the entire place shimmer as daylight shifts.
Highlights: Climb up to the roof and thread your way through 135 spires and about 3,400 carved statues, a stone forest where each saint and gargoyle carries centuries of patina and cool, powdery marble underfoot. High above perches a gilded Virgin about 4.16 meters tall. Local tradition forbade any building from rising above her height, so when modern towers grew taller, little replicas were placed on their roofs to maintain a respectful skyline.


A graceful 19th-century arcade with lofty glass ceilings and sparkling mosaics. Stroll beneath the central dome and explore historic cafés and upscale shops.
Quick facts: Sunlight streams through the soaring glass-and-iron roof, lighting up mosaics and marble that make the interior feel like an elegant indoor piazza. Beneath your feet, a bull mosaic holds a quirky superstition: spinning on the bull's testicles is believed to bring good luck. Cafés and boutiques keep the arcade lively.
Highlights: Beneath the soaring glass-vaulted dome, a tiled bull mosaic is home to a playful ritual: visitors spin three times on the bull's heel for luck. Locals say this practice dates back to the late 19th century. Step onto the black-and-white marble floor where you can smell espresso from century-old cafés. Midday light floods the gold mosaics, turning the entire arcade into a warm, sparkling jewel box.


La Scala Opera House
Famous opera house where musical icons performed. Visit the museum, view original costumes, and enter the ornate auditorium for an immersive experience.
Quick facts: Velvet-clad boxes and a gilded ceiling create a quiet atmosphere where applause can feel like a physical wave. Opera fans proudly say the house has premiered iconic works by composers like Verdi and Rossini. The legendary acoustics allow even a whispered phrase to reach the highest gallery.
Highlights: Opening night on 3 August 1778 featured Antonio Salieri's Europa riconosciuta. The house went on to premiere works by Rossini, Bellini, and Verdi, shaping European opera for centuries. Fans in the highest gallery, the loggione, are famously vocal. They may hiss a singer one moment and throw bouquets or shout bravo the next. The entire auditorium buzzes with red-velvet murmurs and golden box gossip.
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Sforza Castle
A medieval fortress transformed into a museum complex filled with art and history. Walk the ramparts, admire Michelangelo's Pietà Rondanini, and explore the courtyards and galleries.
Quick facts: Wandering through layered courtyards, visitors often discover a surprising collection of art, including Michelangelo’s serene Pietà Rondanini tucked into a quiet hall. Echoes of court footsteps and distant trumpets linger in the stone. A maze of museums lets you move from towering armor displays to intimate Renaissance frescoes without stepping outside.
Highlights: Stand within two meters of Michelangelo’s Pietà Rondanini in the quiet hall and see the unfinished marble up close. You’ll notice chisel marks, rough surfaces, and the figure’s eyes only partially carved. This sculpture was worked on by the artist until his death in 1564. Upstairs, Leonardo’s Sala delle Asse covers a vaulted ceiling in painted mulberry branches so lifelike you can almost smell sap and feel dappled sunlight, creating a painted woodland that turns the fortress into an indoor grove.


Last Supper
View Leonardo da Vinci's iconic Last Supper in its original dining hall. Timed entry allows a brief, focused visit to this delicate fresco.
Quick facts: A hush falls in the refectory as Leonardo's work captures the apostles' shock in a single cinematic moment. His experimental paint layers have made the image unusually fragile, a constant focus of conservation. Visits are strictly limited to short, timed groups to protect the mural after wartime damage and centuries of restoration, making seeing it feel like a rare, almost ceremonial event.
Highlights: During the 1943 bombing, a protective shell of sandbags and a concrete wall was quickly built around the refectory. Traces of smoke and patched plaster still hint at the near disaster that spared Leonardo da Vinci’s mural painted between 1495 and 1498, roughly 460 by 880 centimeters in size. Today, visits are tightly controlled, giving you only 15 minutes in the room with groups of about 25 people. Focus on the perspective trick Leonardo used to place the vanishing point at Christ’s head. This tiny optical secret makes the scene snap into depth when standing on the room’s central line.


An impressive collection of Italian paintings from the Renaissance to the 19th century. Explore bright galleries, then enjoy Brera's cobblestone streets, cafés, and shops.
Quick facts: Under soaring skylights, galleries pulse with masterpieces by Caravaggio and Mantegna where chiaroscuro and delicate brushwork draw visitors into surprisingly intimate moments. Cobblestone streets buzz with artisan shops, bohemian cafés, and an art-school energy that turns evening strolls into a gallery of everyday life.
Highlights: Step into a gallery where Raphael’s “Marriage of the Virgin” from 1504 and Caravaggio’s “Supper at Emmaus” from 1601 hang so close you can see the craquelure patterns. Long-time guides still point out tiny inventory numbers penciled into the canvases from Napoleon’s 1809 reorganization. Around the corner, the neighborhood’s narrow cobbled lanes smell of espresso and frying oil at dusk. Locals gather in tiny piazzas for aperitivo, often starting at 6:30 pm with plates of olives and warm focaccia. Independent dealers and old print shops keep a steady flow of midnight sketching sessions under soft yellow lamps.


Navigli Canals
Canal-side Milan where the aperitivo scene meets a bohemian vibe. Walk the cobbled banks, browse vintage markets, and enjoy a spritz as lights dance on the water.
Quick facts: Evening lights shimmer on the water as the air fills with scents of frying street food. Lively bars and antique shops line the canal banks. A maze of historic waterways and restored locks hosts bustling aperitivo scenes and vintage markets, surprising visitors who expect only museums with its quirky, creative energy.
Highlights: Leonardo da Vinci sketched the hydraulic systems that still manage those canals in his Codex Atlanticus, including wooden lock designs and sluices he tested while working for Ludovico Sforza. At dusk, dozens of bars and old osterie spill onto the stone towpath. Steam from frying pans mixes with the bitter-sweet orange of Aperol spritzes as century-old lamps cast honeyed reflections across the water.


A distinctive pair of tree-covered towers setting a new standard for urban greenery. Explore the piazza gardens and capture photos of dramatic architecture framed by foliage.
Quick facts: Look up and you’ll see more than 900 trees clinging to glass balconies. Their foliage cools the air and muffles city noise like a living air filter. Walking through the surrounding high-rise district, you’ll find gleaming towers, pocket parks, and buzzing cafés where evening aperitivo feels modern and communal.
Highlights: Greenery covers the balconies with about 900 trees and roughly 2,000 shrubs planted by architect Stefano Boeri. The towers smell of pine and rosemary after rain and even host bees and small birds between floors. Nearby, a cluster of glass towers marked by a glowing spire has inspired a nightly LED light ritual that locals time with aperitivo. It is a quirky routine where neighbors meet under the lights to share gossip and swap plant cuttings from their balconies.


Stadio Giuseppe Meazza
Home to AC Milan and Inter, San Siro is steeped in football history and buzzing atmosphere. Take a tour to walk the pitch, visit the museum, and peek into the players' dressing rooms.
Quick facts: Fans feel a thunderous roar as around 80,000 seats surround the pitch, making crowd noise so intense players sometimes call the atmosphere a cauldron. Matchdays turn into living theatre when two rival clubs share the stage. Colors and chants collide in a dizzying display that leaves visitors buzzing for hours.
Highlights: On derby nights the bowl holds around 75,000 people. When A.C. Milan and F.C. Internazionale fans chant in waves, the concrete seems to hum. Flares light up entire sections in red-and-black and blue-and-black. The air fills with smoke and the sweet scent of roasted chestnuts. A quirky tradition sees ultras unfurl giant, hand-painted tifos requiring hundreds of volunteers. These can span an entire stand, sometimes involving more than 3,000 flags or several hundred meters of stitched fabric prepared over days.


Discover Leonardo's models, vintage trains, and interactive exhibits at Italy's largest science museum. Experience hands-on displays, real aircraft, and engineering history.
Quick facts: Stepping into the galleries feels like walking through a giant workshop where gleaming steam engines sit beside scale flying-machine models. Interactive stations invite you to pull levers and set machines in motion. A surprising fact: the collection holds over 15,000 objects across transport, energy, and communication. You can inspect full-scale replicas of a master inventor’s machines alongside original industrial equipment.
Highlights: You can climb into the Enrico Toti submarine, its air thick with oil and cold metal. Peer through a periscope that frames the courtyard like a circular movie screen. Since 1953, the main halls have housed a hands-on workshop of more than 60 reconstructed machines from Renaissance engineering notebooks where wooden gears creak under your fingers. A large wing model lets you feel how air moves across a scaled frame.


Enter a 19th-century aristocrat’s art collection featuring Renaissance masterpieces and stunning armor. Enjoy a unique mix of paintings, décor, and historic weaponry in beautifully frescoed rooms.
Quick facts: The museum displays over 5,000 works collected by Gian Giacomo Poldi Pezzoli, including paintings, armor, and decorative arts. Its collection features masterpieces like Botticelli’s 'Venus and Mars' and exquisite Venetian glassware.
Highlights: A secret highlight is the stunning 19th-century collection of arms and armor shown alongside Renaissance art, creating an immersive experience that blends war and beauty. Visitors can admire frescoed rooms recreated to mimic aristocratic Milanese homes, with intricate ceiling paintings and period furnishings.
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Panettone is a Milanese Christmas icon, originally a tall, domed enriched bread studded with candied fruit and raisins, and artisans once competed to produce the lightest, most aerated loaf.

Tiramisu's origins are debated, but in Milan it became a café staple, prized for the theatrical layering of espresso-soaked ladyfingers and mascarpone that wakes the senses.

Pasticcini means 'little pastries' and Milanese pasticcerie display them like jewels, offering delicate bite-sized cakes and filled pastries designed to be enjoyed with an espresso.

Risotto alla Milanese owes its vivid golden color to saffron. Its creamy texture was traditionally achieved by patient stirring and the addition of beef marrow.

Ossobuco, cross-cut veal shanks braised until gelatinous, gets its bright lift from gremolata, a zesty mix of lemon zest, garlic, and parsley that cuts through the richness.

Cotoletta alla Milanese is a bone-in veal cutlet pounded, breaded, and fried in butter until crisp, and some culinary historians say Milan's golden schnitzel predates similar Viennese dishes.

In Milan, espresso is more than a drink, it is a ritual, often consumed standing at the bar for a quick, intense shot that punctuates the workday.

Aperol Spritz became synonymous with Milan's aperitivo scene, its bright orange hue inviting people to gather outdoors for an easy, low-alcohol drink and small plates before dinner.

Campari was invented in Milan in the 1860s and its bold, bitter flavor helped define the city’s historic cocktail culture, inspiring classics like the Negroni and the Americano.
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Picturesque lake town with villas and ferry rides.
Medieval hilltop old town with panoramic views.
Thermal springs, Scaliger castle and lakeside strolls.
Roman arena, Juliet's house and charming piazzas.
Historic university city with a Romanesque basilica.
National & international long‑distance, Frecciarossa, Italo
Regional lines; Malpensa Express terminal
Regional, suburban lines and some high‑speed connections
Take the Malpensa Express to Cadorna/Centrale; Linate is a short taxi/bus ride; Bergamo has regular airport shuttles.
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Comments (8)
Skip restaurants right by the Duomo, walk toward Brera or Porta Romana for better prices and way better risotto.
Get an ATM 24 or 48 hour pass for public transit, much cheaper than singles and inspectors do random checks.
Perfect weekend getaway for shopping and aperitivo culture, 2 to 4 days is ideal and bring comfy shoes.
Found Milan a bit overhyped, crowds felt exhausting and several museums seemed overpriced. Not for a long stay for me.
Loved the fashion vibes and cafe culture, pricey but the food made it worth it. Three days gave a good taste.