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Castle of the Moors, Portugal
Castle of the Moors

Lisbon Region

Castle of the Moors

How to visit Sintra's Castle of the Moors: the climb, the combined ticket with Pena, how long the ramparts take, and whether it's worth it next to the palaces.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Where

Sintra, Portugal

Opening hours

Daily 09:30โ€“18:00, with last admission at 17:30 (hours often stretch later in high summer). Always confirm your date on parquesdesintra.pt.

Tickets

Adults โ‚ฌ12 (about ยฃ10); youths 6โ€“17 and over-65s โ‚ฌ10; a 2-adult, 2-youth family ticket โ‚ฌ33 (about ยฃ28); under-6s free. Buying it together with Pena Palace shaves a few euros off the total.

Time needed

About 1โ€“1.5 hours walking the full circuit of ramparts; add the 10โ€“15 minute uphill path from the ticket gate.

In short

Visiting Castle of the Moors

Walk this one rather than admire it from below: the whole point of the Castle of the Moors is pacing its zig-zag ramparts along the ridge for the wide view over Sintra, Pena Palace and the Atlantic. There are no rooms or treasures inside โ€” it's a restored 10th-century hilltop wall you climb. Buy a combined Pena + Castle ticket so you only pay for parking and the 434 bus once, and do the castle either side of your timed Pena slot. Allow about an hour and a half on the walls.

How to visit without doubling up on fares

The Castle of the Moors is not a building you go inside โ€” itโ€™s a 10th-century hilltop fortress wall, restored in the 19th century, that you climb and walk. The whole experience is the zig-zag rampart running along the ridge: you go up the towers, pace the parapet, and look down on Sintraโ€™s old town one way and Pena Palace the other. People who arrive expecting rooms, furniture or a treasury leave disappointed; people who arrive for a 90-minute walk with the best view in Sintra leave happy.

Buy a combined Pena Palace + Castle of the Moors ticket rather than two separate ones. Pena runs on a fixed timed-entry slot and the castle does not, so the sensible plan is to book your Pena time, then do the castle in the gap either side of it โ€” the two sights are only a 10โ€“15 minute walk apart along the same ridge, so you never need the bus between them. The combined buy also trims a few euros off the total and saves you queueing at the castleโ€™s small ticket kiosk, which closes for lunch from 12:00 to 13:00.

The climb, the timing, and is it worth it?

Getting up there is half the logistics. Cars canโ€™t drive the final stretch, so take the Scotturb 434 bus from outside Sintra station (โ‚ฌ13.50 day pass, โ‚ฌ4.10 single, roughly every 15 minutes); it stops at the castle just before Pena. From the ticket gate itโ€™s a further 10โ€“15 minute uphill path through the woods before you reach the walls, and the rampart steps themselves are uneven granite with steep drops โ€” sturdy shoes, not flip-flops, and not ideal if stairs or heights are a problem. Allow about an hour to an hour and a half once youโ€™re on the walls.

On its own the castle is a thin reason to ride all the way up the hill, but paired with Pena itโ€™s the better half of the day โ€” quieter, cheaper, and with a view that puts the gaudy palace in its proper setting. Go on a clear morning before the cloud rolls over the ridge, climb the highest tower, and youโ€™ll see why people walk it rather than photograph it from the road.

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

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Castle of the Moors FAQs

Do you need to book Castle of the Moors tickets in advance?
It's wise in peak season. Unlike Pena Palace there's no timed-entry slot, so the queue moves, but the small ticket office still backs up on summer weekends and the kiosk shuts 12:00โ€“13:00 for lunch. Book online โ€” and book it together with Pena โ€” to skip the window entirely.
Is the Castle of the Moors worth it?
Yes, if you like a view and a walk, and you treat it as the pair to Pena rather than a destination on its own. There are no interiors โ€” you're paying to climb a restored 10th-century rampart along the ridge. The panorama back over Pena and out to the coast is the best in Sintra, and it's far quieter than the palace.
How do you get from Sintra station to the castle?
Take the Scotturb 434 'Circuito da Pena' bus from outside the station; it stops at the Castle of the Moors just before its last stop at Pena. A day pass is โ‚ฌ13.50 (cheaper online), a single โ‚ฌ4.10, and it runs roughly every 15 minutes. Cars aren't allowed up the final stretch, so the bus, a tuk-tuk or the walking trail are your options.
Should you do the castle or Pena Palace first?
Pena has a fixed timed slot, so build your day around it: do whichever site fits the gap before your Pena time, and the castle the other side. The two are a 10โ€“15 minute walk apart along the ridge, so you don't need the bus between them.

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