Andalusia
Granada Cathedral
How to visit Granada Cathedral and the adjoining Royal Chapel: the two separate tickets you need, when to go, and whether it earns a slot alongside the Alhambra.
Where
Granada, Spain
Opening hours
Cathedral: Mon–Sat 10:00–18:15, Sun 15:00–18:15. Royal Chapel: Mon–Sat 10:15–18:30, Sun and religious holidays 11:00–18:00 (closed Good Friday, 25 Dec and 1 Jan). Confirm your date on the official sites before you go.
Tickets
Cathedral: €10 / about £8.50 adult during the KERYGMA exhibition (8 May–28 Nov 2026), otherwise €7 / about £6; under-12s free; app audio guide included. Royal Chapel: €5 / about £4.30 adult (audio guide included), €3.50 reduced, under-12s free; free Wednesday 14:30–18:30 with advance booking.
Time needed
About 45 minutes to an hour in the Cathedral and 30–40 minutes in the Royal Chapel — roughly 90 minutes for both, which sit a two-minute walk apart.
In short
Visiting Granada Cathedral
Granada Cathedral and the Royal Chapel next door are sold as two separate tickets, and the Royal Chapel — burial place of Isabella and Ferdinand — is the one most people actually come for. Neither sells out the way the Alhambra does, so you can buy on the day, but the Cathedral only opens Sunday afternoons and the Royal Chapel keeps short Sunday hours, so check the day before. Allow about 90 minutes for the pair, and note the Royal Chapel bans photography inside.
How to visit without missing the better half
The trap with Granada Cathedral is assuming one ticket covers everything. It doesn’t. The Royal Chapel (Capilla Real) shares a wall with the Cathedral but is a separate building with its own entrance and its own ticket — and it’s the one most people actually come for, because it holds the marble tombs of Isabella and Ferdinand, the Catholic Monarchs, with their plain lead coffins in the crypt directly beneath. Buy both: the Cathedral runs €10 (about £8.50) during the KERYGMA exhibition (8 May to 28 November 2026, otherwise around €7), and the Royal Chapel is €5 (about £4.30), audio guide included.
Neither sells out the way the Alhambra does, so you can turn up and buy on the day — the queues are minutes, not hours. The real planning catch is the hours: the Cathedral only opens Sunday afternoons from 15:00, and the Royal Chapel keeps shorter Sunday hours too and closes entirely on Good Friday, Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. If your only window is a Sunday morning, both will be shut. One quirk worth knowing: the Royal Chapel is free on Wednesdays from 14:30 to 18:30, but that slot needs booking in advance through the Archdiocese site, and photography is banned inside the Chapel — phone away once you cross the threshold.
Cathedral or Royal Chapel — which is worth it?
Allow roughly 90 minutes for the pair — about 45 minutes to an hour in the bright, white Renaissance nave of the Cathedral, and half an hour in the smaller, denser Royal Chapel taking in the tombs, the ironwork screen and Isabella’s collection of Flemish paintings. They sit a two-minute walk apart in the tangle of streets below the Alhambra hill, near the Alcaicería market, so they slot naturally into a morning before or after a timed Alhambra visit rather than competing with it.
This is a strong second-tier stop, not a headline. If your Granada trip is short and built around the Alhambra, the Royal Chapel alone is the one to keep — it’s compact, deeply historical and cheap. The Cathedral is worth adding if you’ve an hour spare and like big Renaissance interiors, but skip it without guilt if you’re tight on time. Pair the two with a wander through the Albaicín for the classic Alhambra view rather than trying to stack a third paid sight the same morning.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Granada city guide.
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Granada Cathedral FAQs
Is the Granada Cathedral ticket the same as the Royal Chapel ticket?
Do you need to book Granada Cathedral tickets in advance?
Which is more worth seeing, the Cathedral or the Royal Chapel?
Can you take photos inside?
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