
The Last Supper + Duomo + Sforza Castle tour is a half-day walking tour covering Milan’s most important Renaissance and Gothic landmarks. Includes: Last Supper skip-the-line refectory entry with guide commentary, Duomo di Milano interior access, Sforza Castle exterior tour, and San Maurizio al Monastero Maggiore (‘Sistine Chapel of Milan’). Duration approximately 3.5–4 hours. This tour has a stronger art and architecture focus than the La Scala combination.
If your interest lies primarily in Renaissance art and Milanese architecture rather than opera history, this is the combination tour that delivers the most consistent art-focused content. The San Maurizio inclusion — largely absent from comparable tours — is a genuine differentiator.
Top Tickets
Table of Contents
What’s Included
- Duomo di Milano interior: Guided interior entry. Gothic nave, stained glass, relics, Italy’s largest organ.
- Sforza Castle (exterior): Courtyard tour. Guide covers the Sforza family dynasty, their patronage of Leonardo, and the castle’s transformation into a cultural complex.
- San Maurizio al Monastero Maggiore: Interior entry (free). Floor-to-ceiling frescoes by Bernardino Luini (pupil of Leonardo). One of Milan’s most extraordinary and undervisited spaces.
- Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II and Piazza della Scala: Walk-through with commentary.
- Last Supper, Santa Maria delle Grazie: Skip-the-line refectory entry. 15-minute viewing with guide commentary.
Not included: Duomo rooftop, Sforza Castle interior museums, meals, transport to meeting point.
Book This TourThe San Maurizio Advantage
San Maurizio al Monastero Maggiore is the single most underrated sight in Milan. A 16th-century church on Corso Magenta — between the Duomo area and Santa Maria delle Grazie — its interior is covered floor-to-ceiling with extraordinary frescoes by Bernardino Luini, one of Leonardo’s most talented pupils. It is free to enter independently but almost entirely unknown to international tourists. Having a guide contextualise the frescoes as part of the Leonardesque tradition leading into the Last Supper adds significant value.
The frescoes inside San Maurizio have the same visual impact as some of Italy’s most famous frescoed churches — but with almost no competition for space. Most independent visitors walk past it entirely. This tour stops here specifically.
Tour Route Stops
| Stop | What You Do |
| Piazzale Cadorna (meeting point) | Meet guide. ID check. Tour briefing begins. |
| Sforza Castle | Exterior courtyards. Sforza family history. Leonardo patron connection. |
| San Maurizio al Monastero Maggiore | Interior. Luini frescoes. Guide contextualises within Leonardesque tradition. |
| Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II | Walk-through. 19th-century architecture. |
| Duomo di Milano | Interior entry. Gothic nave, stained glass, 600-year construction. |
| Piazza della Scala & Brera | La Scala exterior. Walk through Brera neighbourhood. |
| Santa Maria delle Grazie | Pre-entry briefing. 15-minute Last Supper refectory slot. |
This Tour vs the La Scala Tour
| Sforza Castle Tour (this page) | La Scala Tour | |
| La Scala Theatre | Not included | Interior entry included |
| San Maurizio church | Included — major stop | Not always included |
| Coach transfers | Walking tour | Coach transfers between stops |
| Duration | ~3.5–4 hours (half-day) | ~6–7 hours (full day) |
| Focus | Renaissance art & architecture | Broader Milan cultural highlights |
| Best for | Art/architecture enthusiasts | First-time visitors wanting maximum coverage |
Frequently Asked Questions
Does this tour include Duomo rooftop access?
No. The tour covers the Duomo interior at ground level. Rooftop terraces can be purchased separately.
What if the Duomo is closed for a service?
On Sundays or during religious services, interior access may not be possible. In these cases, the guide provides a detailed exterior tour with architectural commentary.
Is San Maurizio worth visiting?
Consistently, yes. Past visitors describe it as one of the best surprises in Milan — extraordinary frescoes in a quiet space that most tourists never find.