Siena Accessibility: Mobility Issues and Travel

Siena Accessibility: Mobility Issues and Travel

Visit Siena Guide editorial··6 min di lettura

Siena was built in the Middle Ages on a hill and the streets show it. Visitors with mobility issues should plan carefully.


# Siena Accessibility: Mobility Issues and Travel

Siena was built in the Middle Ages on a hill and the streets show it. Visitors with mobility issues should plan carefully.

Key facts

  • Hills and steps: unavoidable. Even the 'flat' streets have a slope.
  • Wheelchair access: limited in many older buildings. The Duomo and Palazzo Pubblico have ramps; smaller churches often do not.
  • Cobblestones: hard on wheels and on canes.
  • Hotels with elevators: book carefully, especially in restored medieval buildings.
  • Best accessible base: hotels just inside Porta Camollia (flatter approach).

What I tell visitors

If mobility is a concern, consider basing in San Gimignano (also a hill town, similar issues), Pienza (smaller, manageable) or Florence (flatter, more elevators) and visit Siena as a day trip.

Related guides

Final word

Whatever brings you to Siena — food, the Palio, the Tuscan countryside — slow down. The city repays attention. If you have a tip to add or a correction, write us at redazione@visitsienaguide.it.