Piedmont
Royal Palace of Turin
How to visit the Royal Palace of Turin (Musei Reali): the €15 ticket that also covers Guarini's Holy Shroud Chapel, the Royal Armoury and the gardens, plus an honest worth-it verdict.
Where
Turin, Italy
Opening hours
Thursday to Tuesday 09:00–19:00 (ticket office closes 18:00); closed all day Wednesday. The Royal Gardens are free and open the same days. Always confirm your date on museireali.beniculturali.it.
Tickets
€15 full (about £13); €2 reduced for ages 18–25 (about £1.70); free for under-18s. The single ticket covers the palace, Armoury, Sabauda Gallery, Museum of Antiquities and the Holy Shroud Chapel.
Time needed
2.5–3 hours if you take in the Armoury and Sabauda Gallery as well as the state rooms; 1.5 hours if you stick to the palace and chapel only.
In short
Visiting Royal Palace of Turin
Your €15 ticket isn't just the palace — it's the whole Musei Reali complex: the Savoy state rooms, the Royal Armoury, the Sabauda Gallery, the Museum of Antiquities and Guarini's restored Holy Shroud Chapel, all under one roof on Piazzetta Reale. The trap is the Wednesday closure, when the entire site shuts. Allow 2.5–3 hours to do it justice, and don't expect to see the Shroud itself — the relic lives sealed in the neighbouring Cathedral and is not on display.
How to visit without short-changing the ticket
The mistake here is thinking you’re buying entry to one palace. The €15 ticket is a Musei Reali ticket, and it lets you into the whole Savoy complex on Piazzetta Reale: the gilded first-floor state rooms, the Royal Armoury with its ranks of jousting armour and historic firearms, the first floor of the Sabauda Gallery, a sector of the Museum of Antiquities, and Guarino Guarini’s Holy Shroud Chapel — the soaring black-marble dome reopened in 2018 after the 1997 fire gutted it. The Royal Gardens behind the palace are free. People who rush through in forty minutes have genuinely wasted most of what they paid for.
The one thing that will sink your visit is timing. The entire site is closed all day Wednesday, and the ticket office shuts an hour before the museums at 18:00, so a late-afternoon Wednesday arrival is the classic Turin own-goal. Individual visitors don’t strictly need to pre-book — you can buy at the door — but a timed online ticket via the official site or a tour partner saves the queue on busy weekends. Note that you will not see the Turin Shroud itself: the relic is sealed in the neighbouring Cathedral and only shown during rare authorised exhibitions, so the chapel is the architecture, not the cloth.
Timing your visit, and what it’s worth
Getting there is easy on foot — it’s a flat 15-to-20-minute walk up Via Roma from Porta Nuova station to Piazza Castello, or buses 4 and 11 and trams 13 and 56 drop you a couple of minutes away. Go in the morning if you want a calmer run at the state rooms before the coach groups, and allow two and a half to three hours if you’re doing the Armoury and Sabauda Gallery as well as the palace and chapel.
It’s strong value and worth a half-morning, but only if you commit to the whole complex rather than treating it as a quick photo of the facade. The Holy Shroud Chapel and the Armoury are the highlights; the painting gallery is good without being essential. Pair it with the Egyptian Museum and the Mole Antonelliana over a single day in central Turin rather than stacking two big museums into one tired afternoon.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Turin city guide.
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