Which Prado Museum ticket is actually worth booking?
The Museo Nacional del Prado sits on the Paseo del Prado in central Madrid, a short walk from the Banco de España metro stop, inside Juan de Villanueva's neoclassical building from 1819. The collection runs to seven centuries of European painting, but the reason people queue is Velázquez, Goya and Bosch, all hung within a few rooms of each other. Four ticket options get you in front of them, priced from $21 to $159, and this guide compares what each one actually buys.
About This Experience
Calle de Ruiz de Alarcón 23, on the Paseo del Prado, 28014 Madrid
Metro Banco de España (line 2) or Atocha (line 1), both a short walk; buses 9, 10, 14, 19, 27, 34, 37 and 45 stop on the Paseo del Prado
Monday to Saturday, 10:00 to 20:00; Sunday and holidays, 10:00 to 19:00. Open every day except 1 January, 1 May and 25 December
15 euros at the door, free during the last two hours of the day; the $21 reserved entry ticket skips the window entirely
Juan de Villanueva's neoclassical building, opened in 1819 to house the Spanish royal collection, its galleries still hung on the deep oxblood-red walls the museum has kept since the 19th century
Velázquez's Las Meninas, Goya's Black Paintings, Bosch's Garden of Earthly Delights, and rooms of El Greco, Titian and Rubens from the royal collection
Check Live Availability & Prices
Entry slots and guided tours both move fast in high season, especially the free evening hour. See current pricing and open dates below.
Which Prado Museum Ticket to Pick
Four products, one gallery, and the price gap between them is enormous. The $21 reserved entry ticket is the reliable default and the one most people should book: it skips the ticket window on the Paseo del Prado and gets you straight to the paintings. The $49 skip-the-line guided tour is the most-booked guided option here, with 2,961 reviews, and adds an art historian walking you through the headline rooms in something close to the order they were meant to be seen.
The $72 masterpieces tour is the highest-rated Prado option on the list, a perfect 5 stars, though on a smaller base of 340 reviews, and it keeps to the twenty or so paintings people actually come for rather than trying to cover the whole museum. The $159 VIP pre-opening tour buys the galleries before the public arrives, standing in front of Las Meninas in a room that is briefly empty, which is a genuine luxury priced like one.
Honest take: the Prado's collection is hung and labelled well, so the entry ticket suits most visitors on its own. Pay for a guide only if you want the Habsburg politics behind the pictures or the Black Paintings explained properly, and skip the VIP option unless an empty room in front of Las Meninas is worth four times the door price to you. For how the Prado fits into a wider day among the city's galleries, this guide to the museums in Madrid is a reasonable place to start planning.
All Prado Tours and Tickets
Every reserved entry ticket, guided walk and VIP option for the Prado, side by side.
from $21 Prado Museum Entry Ticket
- Reserved timed entry
- Las Meninas & Goya
- Skips the ticket window
from $49 Prado Museum Skip-the-Line Guided Tour
- Skip-the-line entry
- Expert art historian
- Velázquez, Goya & Bosch
from $72 Prado Museum Masterpieces Tour with Entry Ticket
- The essential 20 paintings
- Highest-rated Prado tour
- Entry ticket included
from $159 Prado VIP Exclusive Pre-Opening Museum Tour
- Before public opening
- Empty galleries
- Small VIP group
Side by Side
| Tour | Duration | Price | Book | Rating | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reserved Entry Ticket | Self-paced, 2 to 3 hours | $21 | Check | 4.6★ | The cheapest reliable way in |
| Skip-the-Line Guided Tour | ~2 hours | $49 | Check | 4.5★ | A guided walk through the headline rooms |
| Masterpieces Tour | ~1.5 hours | $72 | Check | 5★ | Focused on the twenty key works |
| VIP Pre-Opening Tour | ~1 hour | $159 | Check | 4.8★ | Empty galleries before the doors open |
What You'll See
Room 012 holds Velázquez's Las Meninas, the most analysed painting in Spain, where the painter, the royal family and the viewer all seem to occupy the same impossible room. In the basement hang Goya's Black Paintings, fourteen murals he painted straight onto the walls of his own house in his deaf old age, Saturn Devouring His Son among them, moved here after his death and still unsettling to stand in front of. Nearby, his Clothed Maja and Nude Maja are displayed side by side, exactly as his patron kept them.
Room 056A holds Bosch's Garden of Earthly Delights, the three-panel vision of paradise, pleasure and hell that Philip II hung in the Escorial, and it rewards more time than most visitors give it. The rest of the collection is deep rather than wide.
- El Greco's The Nobleman with his Hand on his Chest, plus rooms of Zurbarán and Ribera that give the Prado no rival for Spanish painting
- Titian's equestrian Charles V, Rubens's Three Graces and Raphael's Cardinal, all bought into the royal collection from abroad
- The Jerónimos cloister and the 2007 Moneo extension, where the temporary exhibitions run, easy to skip if you are short on time
How a Visit Flows
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Before you go
Book a timed slot
Reserve online ahead of your date, especially if you want the free evening hour rather than a paid ticket.
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On arrival
Head straight to Room 012
The galleries around Las Meninas are the busiest few square metres in the city; go there first, not last.
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First stop
Las Meninas
Give it real time. It is a small canvas that rewards standing still in front of it longer than feels necessary.
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Deeper in
The Black Paintings basement
Goya's murals from his own house, hung together downstairs, are easy to rush past on the way to the exit. Do not.
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Before you leave
Bosch's triptych
The Garden of Earthly Delights in room 056A is worth circling twice, once for the whole and once for its small details.
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After the galleries
The cloister and Moneo extension
The Jerónimos cloister and the 2007 extension sit past the main collection and draw far fewer visitors.
Know Before You Go
Not suitable for
- Anyone hoping for a quick 45-minute pass; three hours is the honest minimum around the headline rooms
- Visitors expecting modern art; that collection lives at the Reina Sofía, not here
- The last-minute crowd hoping to walk into the free evening slot without a timed reservation
What to bring
- A confirmed ticket, on your phone or printed
- A photo ID matching the name on the booking
- Comfortable shoes; the galleries run longer than they look on the floor plan
- A light layer, the rooms stay cool even during a Madrid summer
Not allowed
- Large bags or suitcases, checked at the entrance
- Flash photography near the paintings
- Food and drink inside the galleries
Insider Tips
A few habits separate a calm visit from a rushed one.
- Arrive at the 10:00 opening for Las Meninas without the shoulder-to-shoulder crowd that builds by midday
- The free evening slot, 18:00 to 20:00 Monday to Saturday and 17:00 to 19:00 Sunday, fills fast; book the timed place in advance if the budget is the priority
- Unlike the Reina Sofía, the Prado stays open every day of the week, so it is the easier gallery to slot into a short schedule
- Give the Black Paintings basement its own ten minutes; most visitors rush straight past it toward the exit
- Three hours is the honest minimum for the headline rooms alone, longer if you want the Jerónimos cloister too
- Pair a Prado morning with the Moneo extension before you leave; almost everyone skips it
Where You're Headed
Prado Museum Tickets FAQ
How much does it cost to see the Prado Museum?
The door price is 15 euros. Online tickets start at $21 for reserved entry, rising to $49 for a skip-the-line guided tour, $72 for a masterpieces-focused tour and $159 for a VIP pre-opening visit.
What are the Prado Museum's opening hours?
Monday to Saturday, 10:00 to 20:00; Sunday and holidays, 10:00 to 19:00.
Is the Prado Museum closed any day of the week?
No. It opens every day of the year except 1 January, 1 May and 25 December, unlike the Reina Sofía, which closes on Tuesdays.
How do you get to the Prado Museum?
It sits on the Paseo del Prado, a short walk from the Banco de España (line 2) or Atocha (line 1) metro stops; several buses also stop directly outside.
What do you actually see inside the Prado?
Velázquez's Las Meninas, Goya's Black Paintings and his two Majas, Bosch's Garden of Earthly Delights, and rooms of El Greco, Titian, Rubens and Raphael from the Spanish royal collection.
How far ahead should you book Prado tickets?
The free evening slot fills fastest, so reserve it as soon as your dates are set; paid tickets and guided tours hold availability closer to your visit but still sell out in high season.
Is a guided tour worth it at the Prado?
The $49 skip-the-line guided tour and the $72 masterpieces tour both add context the wall labels do not, mainly around the Black Paintings and the royal collection's politics. The reserved entry ticket alone suits most visitors, since the museum is otherwise well labelled.
How long does a visit to the Prado take?
Three hours is the honest minimum for the galleries around Las Meninas, longer if you add the Jerónimos cloister and the Moneo extension.
What Visitors Say
The $21 reserved entry was all we needed. Walked past a long ticket line on the Paseo del Prado and went straight to Las Meninas.
Paid the extra for the $49 guided tour and it was worth it just for the Black Paintings basement. Our guide explained why Goya put Saturn on his own dining room wall and I still think about it.
The masterpieces tour at $72 kept moving and never lingered on rooms we did not care about. Small group, focused on the twenty paintings that matter, worth every euro.