Reviewed by Fredrik Filipsson · Visited Q1 2026
Lead Curator, Restaurants for Kings
The Cafe
The terrace premium at Caffe Rivoire is the most justified surcharge in European cafe culture. You pay more than you would at an interior seat or at the bar — and you receive, in return, a direct and unobstructed view across Piazza della Signoria to the Palazzo Vecchio, the medieval tower that has defined Florence's civic identity since 1314. To the right, the Loggia dei Lanzi shelters Perseus by Cellini and the Rape of the Sabine Women by Giambologna. Behind the square, the long arcade of the Uffizi leads toward the Arno. The terrace at Caffe Rivoire surveys all of it from the corner it has occupied since 1872.
Enrico Rivoire founded the establishment as a chocolatier of the House of Savoy — a royal appointment that gave him access to the finest raw materials and a clientele with exacting standards. The chocolate production has continued without interruption, and the hot chocolate for which Rivoire is celebrated in every guide to Florence is genuinely remarkable: thick in the way that hot chocolate has no business being in most establishments, dark with the bitterness of properly sourced cacao, and served with the kind of unselfconscious seriousness that suggests the kitchen believes this is the correct temperature, texture, and flavour and is not interested in discussing alternatives.
The patisserie selection changes seasonally but maintains the standard of a kitchen that has been producing pastry longer than most of its competitors have existed. The coffee is excellent — a bar where espresso is an institution rather than a convenience. At lunch, the menu extends to light plates: crostini, salads, club sandwiches prepared with the ingredients of a kitchen that does not cut corners even on a tourist-facing summer menu.
The interior is art nouveau in its bones — the original fittings, the wood panelling, the glass cases displaying the chocolate collection — and feels like a room that has arrived at its current state through continuous use rather than period restoration. In winter, when the square empties and the light drops early, the interior is the correct choice: warm, unhurried, and carrying the specific atmosphere of a room that has been the same room for a very long time.
Why Caffe Rivoire Is Florence's Best Solo Pause
The solo traveller in Florence navigates a city designed for pairs and groups — museums queued with tour parties, restaurants optimised for reservations of two or four, the social logic of the piazza oriented around companionship. Caffe Rivoire provides the counterpoint: a solo seat on the terrace with the greatest view in the city, a hot chocolate that requires no company to appreciate, and a room whose history is sufficient conversation in itself. For the solo diner who has spent the morning in the Uffizi or the Bargello, the Rivoire terrace in the early afternoon — when the lunch crowd has cleared and the tour groups have moved on — is among the most civilised hours available in Florence.
What to Order
The hot chocolate is compulsory on any visit between October and April. In summer, the granita di caffe with cream is the correct alternative. The espresso at the bar is cheaper and, if you are passing rather than staying, worth taking standing in the Florentine manner. If seated on the terrace, the house aperitivo in the late afternoon — Negroni or Aperol Spritz, with the square as the backdrop — represents the most pleasant ninety minutes available in the city. The patisserie beside the coffee is not optional.