
Leaning Tower of Pisa tickets and tours

The Leaning Tower, situated in Piazza dei Miracoli together with the Duomo, Baptistery and Camposanto is the symbol of Pisa. With its impres...
Flexible

Don't miss the chance to visit the most important monuments in Pisa with a single ticket!Climb the Leaning Tower with this skip-the-line tic...
1 day

Discover the Miracle Square with this amazing tour that will show you the best of Pisa. With your local guide you will learn about the Cathe...
1 hour, 30 minutes

Join a guided walking tour of Piazza dei Miracoli, where your expert guide will show you the square and its monuments, which are called “mir...
2 hours

Join a guided walking tour of Piazza dei Miracoli, where your expert guide will show you the square and its monuments, which are called “mir...
1 hour

Leave Florence for some hours and travel through the beautiful Tuscan countryside to reach Pisa.Discover the Square of Miracles, whose name ...
5 hours, 30 minutes

Pisa is one of the most visited cities in Tuscany. It is famous for its Leaning Tower and the beautiful Piazza dei Miracoli, which are among...
5 hours, 45 minutes

Discover the Miracle Square and taste the Tuscan flavours with this amazing tour that will show you the best of Pisa. With your local guide ...
2 hours, 30 minutes

This excursion to Pisa from Florence with skip-the-line access to the Leaning Tower will give you the amazing experience of climbing the wor...
6 hours

Leave Florence behind and head to Pisa, the beautiful city known worldwide for its Leaning Tower and for its architectonic masterpieces. You...
8 hours, 30 minutes

Would you like to see the best and most beautiful areas of Tuscany in one memorable day? Join this tour and spend a magical day, made even m...
12 hours, 45 minutes

Three hundred years ago, aristocratic and noble young men from Europe began taking a trek through Italy in search of art, culture and the ro...
12 hours
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The inside story
Why does the tower lean? The Romanesque 183ft (56m) campanile, was begun in 1170 but started leaning immediately due to the porous clay soil beneath it.
Building diagonal floors to offset the lean was attempted in 1272, but didn’t help. In 1372, the tower was leaning 4.5ft (1.4m). By 1993, it was 17ft (5.4m) and the tower was closed for ten years amid fears it might fall. But by 2013, it had started to lean slightly back in the opposite direction. What was happening?