Porto District
Porto Cathedral
How to visit Porto Cathedral (the Sé): the nave is free, the azulejo cloister is the bit you pay €3 for, and how to fit it in with the old-town walk down to the river.
Where
Porto, Portugal
Opening hours
Daily roughly 09:00–18:30 April–October, and 09:00–17:30 November–March; closed at Christmas and Easter. The cloister keeps slightly shorter hours than the nave and shuts over the midday lunch break on some days, so go in the morning to be safe.
Tickets
The cathedral nave is free. The cloister (with its azulejo galleries and Treasury) is €3 (about £2.60), or €5 (about £4.30) for a combined ticket with the neighbouring Bishop's Palace. Free for children under 10.
Time needed
45 minutes to an hour: 10 minutes in the free nave, the rest in the paid cloister and up on the terrace for the rooftop view over the old town.
In short
Visiting Porto Cathedral
The cathedral nave is free to walk into, so the only thing you actually decide is whether to pay €3 for the cloister — and it's the cloister, lined floor to ceiling with blue-and-white azulejo tiles, that's worth the money. No advance booking needed; you pay at a desk on the day. Allow 45 minutes to an hour, and treat the Sé as the top of your old-town walk down to the Ribeira rather than a destination in itself.
How to visit, and which bit you pay for
Porto Cathedral splits into two parts, and only one of them costs anything. Walking into the fortress-like nave is free — and if you only do that, you’ll be back out in five minutes, because the interior is dark, granite and fairly austere compared with the show-off churches elsewhere in the city. The part worth your money is the cloister, which costs €3 (about £2.60) at a desk inside, or €5 combined with the Bishop’s Palace next door. There’s no advance booking and no timed entry — you just turn up and pay on the day, which makes the Sé a rare Porto sight you don’t have to plan around.
The cloister is where the cathedral earns its keep: two storeys of 18th-century blue-and-white azulejo tiles lining the galleries, a small Treasury of church silver, and a terrace that frames the red rooftops sloping down to the Douro. Go in the morning — the cloister keeps shorter hours than the nave and can shut over a midday lunch break, and the light on the tiles is better before the afternoon coach groups arrive. Allow 45 minutes to an hour for the whole thing.
Getting there, and is it worth it?
The Sé sits on the hill above the old town, which matters for how you route your day. The path of least pain is to come down to it: get the metro or train to São Bento station, walk five to ten minutes uphill to the cathedral, then carry on downhill through the Sé district to the Ribeira riverfront. Doing it the other way means hauling yourself up a steep climb from the river — fine if your legs are willing, miserable in August heat.
Don’t make a special trip, but absolutely pay the €3 if you’re passing. The free nave alone isn’t a reason to come; the cloister and its terrace view are, and at that price it’s one of the best-value tickets in Porto. Treat it as the natural top of an old-town walk — São Bento’s tiled hall, the cathedral, then down to the river for a glass of port — rather than a headline sight in its own right.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Porto city guide.
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