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Capitoline Museums
How to visit Rome's Capitoline Museums: the standard vs exhibition price, why the Tabularium balcony is the reason to go, and whether it earns a slot on a short Rome trip.
Where
Rome, Italy
Opening hours
Daily 09:30–19:30, last admission one hour before closing. Closed 1 May and 25 December; shorter hours on 24 and 31 December (09:30–14:00). Always confirm your date on museicapitolini.org.
Tickets
Standard non-resident entry €15 (about £13), concession €9.50 (~£8). When a temporary exhibition is on, full price rises to €20.50 (~£17.50). The 7-day Capitolini Card (adds Centrale Montemartini) is €15.50. Online booking adds a €1 presale fee.
Time needed
1.5–2 hours for the main collections and the Tabularium view; closer to 3 hours if you read every label or there's an exhibition.
In short
Visiting Capitoline Museums
The Capitoline Museums sit on Michelangelo's Piazza del Campidoglio and hold the originals most people only know as copies — the bronze she-wolf, the Dying Gaul, the colossal head and hand of Constantine. Check whether a temporary exhibition is running before you go: it pushes the non-resident ticket from €15 to €20.50. Crowds are far lighter than the Vatican or Colosseum, so advance booking is optional, and the Tabularium gallery's window onto the Roman Forum is the single best free-with-entry view in the city.
How to visit without overpaying
The Capitoline Museums spread across two palaces on Piazza del Campidoglio, the square Michelangelo designed at the top of the Capitoline Hill — a short, steep walk up the Cordonata ramp from Piazza Venezia, five minutes from the Colosseum end of the Forum. There’s no metro right outside; the easiest approach is on foot from the ancient core, and most people pair it with a Forum or Vittoriano visit the same morning.
Tickets are bought at the office on arrival, and unlike the Vatican or Colosseum you rarely need to book ahead — the queue is short and the rooms never feel crammed. The one thing to check first is the price. Standard non-resident entry is €15, but when a temporary exhibition is running (it usually is) the full ticket jumps to €20.50 and there’s no way to decline the exhibition. Look at museicapitolini.org before you go so the desk price isn’t a shock. If you’ll also visit Centrale Montemartini across town, the €15.50 Capitolini Card covers both over seven days and is the obvious buy.
What to see, and is it worth it?
Head for the originals you’ve seen everywhere as copies: the bronze she-wolf, the Dying Gaul, the colossal marble head, hand and foot of Constantine in the courtyard, and the original gilded Marcus Aurelius equestrian statue indoors (a replica stands out in the square). Don’t leave without walking the Tabularium gallery in the basement level — its arched windows look straight down the Roman Forum, and it’s the best view in Rome that comes free with a museum ticket rather than a separate fee.
This is a yes for anyone who cares about ancient Rome, and a sensible swap if the Vatican’s crowds put you off. Allow an hour and a half to two hours. On a tight two-day Rome trip we’d still prioritise the Vatican and Colosseum first — but if you’ve a third day, or you want world-class Roman sculpture without the scrum, the Campidoglio is where to spend it.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Rome city guide.
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