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Pena Palace, Portugal
Pena Palace

Lisbon Region

Pena Palace

How to visit Sintra's Pena Palace: the timed-entry ticket you must book, the 434 bus up from the train, whether the interior is worth it, and how to dodge the worst of the crowds.

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

Where

Sintra, Portugal

Opening hours

Park 09:00โ€“19:00 (last admission 18:00); the palace interior 09:30โ€“18:30 (last entry 17:30). Closed 25 December and 1 January. Confirm your date on parquesdesintra.pt.

Tickets

Park + Palace โ‚ฌ20 (about ยฃ17); reduced โ‚ฌ18 for ages 6โ€“17 and over-65s; family ticket (2 adults + 2 youths) โ‚ฌ65. Park-only โ‚ฌ10 (~ยฃ8.50), terraces but no state rooms. The optional park shuttle to the palace door is โ‚ฌ3.50 (~ยฃ3) on top.

Time needed

2.5โ€“3 hours for the park and palace combined; about an hour inside the state rooms. Add 30 minutes to get from the park gate up to the palace entrance on foot.

In short

Visiting Pena Palace

Book a timed Park-and-Palace ticket online before you go โ€” the slot on it is your entry time to the palace interior, not the gate, and turning up on spec can mean a queue of up to three hours. Take the train from Lisbon's Rossio to Sintra (about 40 minutes), then the 434 bus up the hill rather than walking. Aim for the first slot of the day and you'll have the candy-coloured terraces almost to yourself; arrive at midday and you'll shuffle through the state rooms shoulder-to-shoulder. Allow 2.5โ€“3 hours for the whole hilltop, the park included.

How to visit without losing half a day to queues

Pena Palace sits on a wooded peak above Sintra, and getting there is a two-stage trip from Lisbon: the suburban train from Rossio to Sintra (about 40 minutes), then the 434 bus that loops up the hill from the station to the palace gate in under 20 minutes. A return on the 434 is โ‚ฌ7.60. The bus is the sensible choice โ€” the road up is steep and thereโ€™s nowhere safe to walk it โ€” but itโ€™s a small bus and the queue for it is the first of the dayโ€™s bottlenecks, so donโ€™t dawdle off the train.

Book a timed Park-and-Palace ticket online before you go, and read the time on it carefully: that slot is your entry to the palace interior, not the moment you walk through the park gate. Youโ€™ll need about 30 minutes to get from the gate up to the palace door on foot, or โ‚ฌ3.50 for the little shuttle that saves the climb. Miss your slot and thereโ€™s no tolerance and no refund. Buy at the gate on a busy day instead and the next free interior slot can be three hours away โ€” or sold out.

The view earns it, but does the interior?

Take the first slot of the day and aim to be at the Sintra gate by around 09:00. By late morning Pena is one of the most crowded sights in the country, and its narrow painted terraces โ€” the bit everyone comes to photograph โ€” clog with people fast. Early, you get the red-and-yellow ramparts against the forest with room to breathe, and a better shot at a clear hilltop before sea mist or coach groups arrive. Allow two and a half to three hours for the whole site; the state rooms inside take about an hour.

The exterior earns its reputation as the most photographed building in Portugal โ€” it really is that vivid, and it isnโ€™t a let-down in the flesh. The interior is the weaker half: a brisk, busy one-way circuit through the royal rooms thatโ€™s worth doing once but wonโ€™t be the memory you keep. If money is tight, the โ‚ฌ10 park-only ticket still buys you the terraces and the famous views; pay the extra for the state rooms only if you want the full Romanticist story. Pair the day with the Moorish Castle next door, which the 434 also passes, rather than trying to cram in Sintraโ€™s other palaces the same afternoon.

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

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Pena Palace FAQs

Do you need to book Pena Palace tickets in advance?
Yes, if you want to go inside. The palace uses timed entry, and the time printed on your ticket is your slot for the interior circuit. Buying online at least a day ahead locks that in; buy at the gate on a busy day and you can face a wait of up to three hours for the next free slot, or miss out entirely.
How do you get to Pena Palace from Lisbon?
Take the suburban train from Rossio station to Sintra (around 40 minutes), then the 434 hop-on bus, which loops up the hill from the station past the Moorish Castle to the Pena gate in under 20 minutes. A return on the 434 is โ‚ฌ7.60; expect a queue for it, even off-season.
Is Pena Palace worth it?
Yes โ€” it's the most photographed building in Portugal for a reason, and the red-and-yellow terraces against the forested hilltop genuinely live up to the pictures. The state rooms inside are a quick, busy circuit and the weaker half of the visit; if budget is tight, the โ‚ฌ10 park-only ticket still gets you the famous exterior views.
What's the best time to visit to avoid the crowds?
Book the first slot of the day and be at the Sintra gate by around 09:00. The palace is one of the busiest sights in Portugal by late morning, and the narrow terraces clog quickly. Early also gives you a better chance of a clear hilltop before the sea mist or coach groups roll in.

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