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Guimarães Castle
How to visit Guimarães Castle: the combined castle-and-palace ticket, the 'birthplace of Portugal' story, the train from Porto, and whether the hilltop fortress is worth the climb.
Where
Guimaraes, Portugal
Opening hours
Daily 10:00–18:00, last admission 17:30. Closed 1 January, Easter Sunday, 1 May, 24 June (Guimarães city holiday) and 25 December. Always confirm your date on pacodosduques.gov.pt.
Tickets
Castle alone €5 (~£4.30). The combined castle + Palace of the Dukes ticket is just €8 (~£7) — the better buy; add the Alberto Sampaio Museum for the €13 (~£11) three-monument ticket. Under-12s free with an adult; over-65s and ages 13–24 pay half.
Time needed
30–45 minutes for the castle itself; 2.5–3 hours if you do the combined ticket with the palace and the chapel, plus the walk up from the centre.
In short
Visiting Guimarães Castle
Don't buy the castle on its own — at €5 it's only €3 less than the €8 combined ticket, which adds the far richer Palace of the Dukes 200 metres downhill, and the castle alone is a 30-minute walk-round. Come for the story rather than the rooms: this squat granite fortress is where Afonso Henriques, the first King of Portugal, was born around 1109, and the little Church of São Miguel beside it (free) is where he is said to have been baptised. Note the keep (Torre de Menagem) and wall walk have been closed for safety works with no firm reopening date, so the rampart views are off the table for now.
How to visit without overpaying
Guimarães Castle is the granite fortress on the hill above the old town where Afonso Henriques, the first King of Portugal, was born around 1109 — the country quite literally traces its founding to this spot, and the slogan painted on a nearby wall, Aqui nasceu Portugal (“Portugal was born here”), is not marketing hyperbole. The catch is that the castle itself is a hollow shell: thick walls, a central keep and a grassy courtyard, with no furnished rooms and, right now, the keep and wall walk fenced off for safety works with no confirmed reopening date.
So don’t pay €5 for the castle alone — for €3 more the €8 combined ticket, bought at the Palace of the Dukes ticket office, covers both the castle and the Palace of the Dukes of Bragança 200 metres downhill, a reconstructed 15th-century ducal residence with tapestries, painted ceilings and far more to actually look at. While you’re on the hill, step into the tiny Romanesque Church of São Miguel between the two (free), said to be where the infant Afonso Henriques was baptised.
Getting there, and is it worth it?
From Porto, take the urban train from São Bento station to Guimarães — about 1 hour 10 to 20 minutes for roughly €3.60 each way, no booking needed (there are no return tickets, so a round trip is just two singles). From Guimarães station it’s a pretty 20-minute walk up through the UNESCO-listed old town to the castle. Allow half an hour for the castle, or two and a half to three hours for the castle, palace and chapel together.
Come for the story and the day trip, not for the castle as a standalone sight. With the keep closed you lose the rampart views, and on its own the fortress is a quick walk-round. But bundled with the palace on the combined ticket, set against one of northern Portugal’s loveliest medieval centres, it’s an easy and rewarding day out of Porto — just calibrate your expectations to “founding myth in stone”, not a grand interior.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Guimaraes city guide.
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