
Self-guided audio tours written by people who actually live there.

Parma breathes through stone and silk, hiding centuries of blood and betrayal behind its golden facades. Beneath the quiet elegance of the Royal Theatre and the sprawling corridors of the Pilotta Palace, a darker pulse remains. This self-guided audio tour uncovers the scandals and secret rebellions most travelers walk past without a second glance. Experience the city not as a postcard, but as a stage for forgotten conspiracies. What pushed a desperate queen to abandon her crown in the dead of night? Who left the poisoned letter tucked inside the Glauco Lombardi Museum? Why does the local bell chime three times for a ghost that never existed? Navigate these winding streets to rewrite your understanding of history. Feel the tension of past political upheavals as you walk the very paths where empires once collided. Start your journey now and pull back the veil on Parma.

A celestial dome painted by Correggio watches over ancient streets where whispers of rebellion still linger in the stone. Parma hides its most powerful secrets just out of sight for those who rush past. Unlock the city’s soul with this self-guided audio tour, slipping behind grand facades to discover the stories and silent dramas missed by most visitors. Why did a brushstroke in the Abbey of St. John spark outrage among nobles? What hidden symbol lies carved in the Baptistery’s ancient pink marble? Which scandal haunted the artists behind the Assumption of the Virgin and shaped Parma’s destiny? Move through shadowed cloisters and sun-drenched piazzas, letting each step reveal forgotten battles, breathtaking masterpieces, and mysteries etched into every wall. Each landmark draws you deeper, seeing Parma anew with every turn. Begin your journey where art, faith, and rebellion have left their mark. The city’s secrets are waiting.

A grand avenue once echoed with secret whispers as dukes, poets, and revolutionaries plotted both art and upheaval beneath the trees of Parco Ducale. Unlock Parma’s quieter heart with this self-guided audio tour. Move beyond the obvious and unearth the buried drama and forgotten stories that cling to every turn—stories overlooked by even the most attentive eyes. What hidden act of rebellion once unfolded under the marble gaze of the Gian Domenico Romagnosi School? Which strange disappearance at the Eucherio Sanvitale Palace set tongues wagging for centuries? Why does a single statue hold a code known only to a select few Parmigiani? Wander through shaded boulevards and ornate courtyards as intrigue and revelation pull you through Parma’s untold histories. Every step becomes a leap between shadows and sun where nothing is quite as it first appears. Begin when ready and let Parma’s secrets draw you deeper into its living past.
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
Parma is the kind of Italian city that makes the rest of Italian food feel apologetic. Prosciutto di Parma has been cured in the hills south of the city since at least the 13th century, and the specific microclimate of the Langhirano valley, with its dry mountain air from the Apennines, is the reason the same pig, the same salt, and the same eighteen months produce a ham that cannot be exactly replicated anywhere else. Parmigiano-Reggiano, made in the plains around the city, is aged in wheels of 40 kilograms and has been produced under regulations that define minimum aging, milk source, and production area since at least 1612. Local food is not a selling point in Parma; it is the baseline.
The city's cultural confidence comes partly from the Farnese dynasty, who ruled Parma from 1545 and turned it into one of the more cultured capitals of the Italian patchwork.
The Farnese Theatre in the Palazzo della Pilotta, built in 1618 almost entirely in wood, was one of the first theatres to use a permanent proscenium arch and still strikes you as astonishingly ambitious when you stand in it. Antonio da Correggio, who worked in Parma in the 1520s and 1530s, painted the dome of the cathedral and the Camera di San Paolo's ceiling with illusionistic foreshortening that influenced Baroque painters across Europe for a century.

Before you walk.
Many organized food experiences run from Parma into the surrounding countryside: visits to prosciutto curing facilities in Langhirano, Parmigiano-Reggiano dairies where you can watch the morning cheese production, and acetaia visits to see traditional balsamic vinegar production further south in Modena. Book in advance as capacity is limited.
Parma is on the main Milan-Bologna rail line, with journey times of about 50 minutes from Milan and 35 minutes from Bologna. From Florence, change at Bologna (total about 1 hour 20 minutes). The station is about 10 minutes' walk from the cathedral and Piazza Garibaldi. A car is useful for the food production sites in the surrounding countryside.
Very much so. The cathedral, baptistery, Palazzo della Pilotta, and the main piazzas are all within about 15 minutes' walk of each other. Parma is an unusually flat city for northern Italy, making it easy to walk without the stair-climbing that characterizes many historic Italian centers.
You should. The Mercato Centrale has stalls selling prosciutto, Parmigiano, and torta fritta (fried dough to eat with cured meats) at any time of day. The osterie around Piazza Garibaldi serve traditional dishes at lunch and dinner. Avoid the tourist traps around the cathedral and walk one street further for genuinely local restaurants.
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4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.
This tour was such a great way to see the city. The stories were interesting without feeling too scripted, and I loved being able to explore at my own pace.
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.