Yes. Its position in eastern Tuscany near the Umbria and Marche borders makes it a natural stop alongside towns like Arezzo or Urbino. With a private transfer, you set the itinerary, adding a stop or adjusting timing on the fly instead of being locked into fixed connections.
A half day is enough to see the highlights at an easy pace: the Museo Civico, the Duomo, and a walk through the historic center's palaces and squares. Because the town is compact and walkable, you won't lose time navigating between sights, leaving room to linger over a coffee or duck into an artisan workshop before heading back.
Public transport to Sansepolcro is limited, since it sits off the main rail lines and typically requires combining trains with connecting buses on restricted schedules. A private transfer removes that guesswork entirely, dropping you in the historic center on a schedule built around your day rather than a timetable.
The Duomo houses further works tied to Piero della Francesca and the town's medieval origins. The Medici fortress still dominates the skyline, a reminder of Sansepolcro's history as a fought-over trading hub. Wander the streets lined with striking stone palaces, and look for small workshops keeping local artisan crafts alive.
The town is the historic home of Buitoni pasta and still carries a strong food and craft heritage worth exploring on foot. It's also famous for the Palio della Balestra, a centuries-old crossbow competition held between Sansepolcro and rival town Gubbio, reflecting a civic pride that runs deeper than its museums alone.
This walled Renaissance town is best known as the birthplace of Piero della Francesca, whose fresco the Resurrection hangs in the Museo Civico. Aldous Huxley called it the most beautiful painting in the world, and seeing it in the town where it was created adds a layer no museum abroad can match. Add a Medici fortress, a Romanesque cathedral, and quiet stone streets, and Sansepolcro delivers an authentic slice of Tuscany without the crowds of bigger art cities.