Attica
Temple of Olympian Zeus
How to visit Athens' Temple of Olympian Zeus: the seasonal single ticket, the 15 surviving columns, and why most people see it from the railings instead of paying in.
Where
Athens, Greece
Opening hours
Roughly 08:00โ20:00 (last entry around 19:40) from 1 April to 31 October, and 08:00โ15:00 (last entry 14:40) from 1 November to 31 March. Closed 1 January, 25 March, 1 May, Orthodox Easter Sunday and 25โ26 December. Confirm your date on the Greek Ministry of Culture site (odysseus.culture.gr) before you go.
Tickets
Single entry only, no advance booking needed: roughly โฌ8 (about ยฃ6.90) in summer, dropping to about โฌ4 (about ยฃ3.45) in winter, with a reduced โฌ4 rate. Under-25s from the EU and under-18s go free. A few recent visitors report being charged more at the gate, so treat the fee as confirm-on-arrival. The old โฌ30 combined Athens pass that used to include the site was withdrawn in 2025, so there is no multi-site ticket to weigh up any more.
Time needed
30โ45 minutes inside, less if you only photograph the columns; under 5 minutes from the railings without paying.
In short
Visiting Temple of Olympian Zeus
This is the half-hour stop, not the half-day one. Fifteen colossal columns are all that survive of what was once the largest temple in Greece, and the whole site is a flat, open field you can take in from the perimeter railings on Vasilissis Olgas Avenue in a couple of minutes. Pay in to walk among the columns if you want the scale up close; otherwise see it on the walk between the Acropolis and the National Gardens and save your entry budget for somewhere with more to do.
How to visit without overpaying
The Temple of Olympian Zeus is a flat, open archaeological field with 15 surviving columns standing from an original 104 โ the rest toppled or were quarried for building stone centuries ago. There is no museum, no roof and no second act: you walk in, circle the columns, photograph them against the Acropolis on the hill behind, and leave. That makes it the rare Athens sight where the right move for many people is not to pay in at all. From the railings on Vasilissis Olgas Avenue you can see almost the whole colonnade for free, and Hadrianโs Arch sits just outside the fence on the same corner with nothing to pay.
If you do want the scale up close, itโs a single ticket only โ roughly โฌ8 in summer and โฌ4 in winter, bought at the gate on the day, with no advance booking and none of the queues that plague the Acropolis. Carry a little extra cash, as a handful of recent visitors report being charged more than the listed fee, so treat the price as confirm-on-arrival. The old โฌ30 combined Athens pass that once bundled this site with the Acropolis and the Agoras was withdrawn in 2025, so thereโs no multi-site ticket left to weigh up. Get there by metro to Akropoli on the Red Line, a five-minute walk from the entrance, or stroll ten minutes down from Syntagma.
Is it worth it, and what to skip
Pay the โฌ8 only if standing beneath the columns matters to you โ they are genuinely huge, and the in-person scale is the one thing the railings canโt deliver. Allow 30 to 45 minutes at most; thereโs no shade, so a summer midday visit is brutal, and early morning or the hour before closing is far kinder. What to skip is the temptation to treat this as a half-day stop. It works best as a five-minute pause on the walk between the Acropolis and the National Gardens, with the Arch of Hadrian thrown in for free, rather than as a paid destination in its own right.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Athens city guide.
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