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Castelo de Guimaraes, Portugal
Castelo de Guimaraes

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Castelo de Guimaraes

The 10th-century founding castle billed as the cradle of Portugal — genuinely small, so don't over-plan it; 30–40 minutes on the battlements is plenty, and the €2 ticket is bought at the Paco dos Duques office.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Guimaraes, Portugal

Opening hours

Generally open daily through the day with a possible midday or seasonal variation and occasional closures on public holidays. The castle keeps similar hours to the neighbouring Paco dos Duques. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

Entry is around €2 for the castle, or about €8 on a combined ticket with the Paco dos Duques (ducal palace). The castle ticket is sold only at the Paco dos Duques ticket office, not at the castle gate. Prices change, so confirm current hours and fares on the official site.

Time needed

Around 30–40 minutes for the castle itself — walk the battlements and the keep, take the views, and don't expect to fill an afternoon here.

In short

Visiting Castelo de Guimaraes

The 10th-century Castelo de Guimaraes is billed as the cradle of Portugal — this is where the first king was associated and the nation took shape. It's genuinely small, so don't over-plan it: 30–40 minutes on the battlements is enough. Entry is around €2, or about €8 combined with the ducal palace, and the castle ticket is sold only at the Paco dos Duques office, so do the palace first.

The cradle of Portugal

The Castelo de Guimaraes carries a heavy title: this 10th-century hilltop fortress is billed as the cradle of Portugal, the place tied to Afonso Henriques and the birth of the nation. As a piece of national symbolism it’s hard to beat, and the slogan “Aqui nasceu Portugal” — Portugal was born here — is taken seriously in this town.

So manage your expectations, because the castle itself is genuinely small. It’s a compact medieval shell of walls, towers and a central keep rather than a furnished, room-by-room attraction. The reward is climbing the battlements, walking the ramparts and looking out over Guimaraes and the green hills of the Minho — and 30 to 40 minutes comfortably covers the whole thing. Don’t block out an afternoon for it; it’s an atmospheric stop, not an all-day site.

Tickets and the order to do it in

Here’s the practical catch that trips people up: entry to the castle is only about €2, but you can’t buy the ticket at the castle gate. It’s sold solely at the Paco dos Duques (the ducal palace) ticket office a short walk away. The sensible move is to do the palace first, buy the combined ticket for around €8 covering both, and walk up to the castle afterwards — that way you don’t trek up the hill only to be sent back down for a ticket.

The Paco dos Duques is the larger, furnished attraction and earns the bulk of your time; the castle is the quick, evocative add-on next door, with the little Romanesque chapel of Sao Miguel between the two. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site before you go, then round off the visit by wandering down into Guimaraes’s beautifully preserved UNESCO old town, which is the real star of the day.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Guimaraes city guide.

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Castelo de Guimaraes FAQs

Where do I buy the castle ticket?
Only at the Paco dos Duques (ducal palace) ticket office nearby — there's no separate ticket desk at the castle gate. The practical tip is to visit the palace first, buy the combined ticket there for around €8, and walk up to the castle afterwards rather than doubling back.
Is the castle worth visiting?
For its history, yes — this is the symbolic birthplace of Portugal and the views from the walls are good. But be realistic: it's a compact medieval shell rather than a furnished castle, so 30–40 minutes covers it. The real pleasure is pairing it with the palace and Guimaraes's beautifully preserved old town.
Can I combine it with the Paco dos Duques?
Yes, and you should. The combined ticket of around €8 covers both the castle and the ducal palace, which sit a short walk apart on the same hill. The palace is the bigger, furnished attraction; the castle is the quick, atmospheric add-on next door.

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