Lazio
Roman Forum & Palatine Hill
How to visit Rome's Roman Forum and Palatine Hill: which combined ticket to book, the route that keeps you in the shade, and an honest take on whether you need a guide.
Where
Rome, Italy
Opening hours
Open daily from 09:00. Closes seasonally: 19:15 from late March to end September, 18:30 from 1–24 October, and 16:30 in winter. Last admission is one hour before closing. Closed 25 December and 1 January.
Tickets
€18 (about £15) for the 24-hour ticket covering the Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine Hill. The Forum-and-Palatine-only Forum Pass SUPER also costs €18, so there's no saving in skipping the Colosseum — take the combined ticket. Free for under-18s; €2 for EU 18–25s.
Time needed
2–2.5 hours to do the Palatine and the Forum properly; 1.5 hours if you're moving briskly. Add the Colosseum the same day on the combined ticket.
In short
Visiting Roman Forum & Palatine Hill
The Forum and Palatine come on one €18 ticket (about £15) with the Colosseum, valid 24 hours, so book the combined entry and do all three on the same day. The catch most people miss: the Forum-and-Palatine-only Forum Pass also costs €18, so the combined ticket adds the Colosseum for nothing — always take it. Walk it the right way round: start up the Palatine for shade and the Farnese Gardens view over the whole Forum, then drop down into the ruins. Allow 2–2.5 hours for both.
The ticket, and the route most people get wrong
The Forum and the Palatine aren’t a separate sight — they share the same €18 ticket as the Colosseum (about £15), valid for 24 hours. The Colosseum slot is timed and books out, but the Forum and Palatine you can wander into whenever suits within that window, so the smart play is to book the combined ticket, take the Colosseum at your slot, then cross the road for the ruins. There is a Forum-and-Palatine-only pass (the Forum Pass SUPER), but it now costs the same €18, so the combined ticket throws in the Colosseum for free — there’s no reason to buy the Forum-only version.
Walk it the right way round. Most people pile straight into the open Forum floor and wilt. Instead, enter on the Palatine side from Via di San Gregorio and climb first: the hill is shaded by umbrella pines, and the Farnese Gardens terrace at the top hands you the single best view of the whole Forum laid out below, plus the long sweep of the Circus Maximus on the other side. Then drop down into the Forum itself — the Arch of Titus, the Temple of Saturn, the Via Sacra — when you’ve already had the overview that makes the rubble make sense.
Heat, time, and is it worth a guide?
The Forum floor is the hottest patch of sightseeing in Rome: next to no shade, and the old stone holds the day’s heat so it feels worse than the forecast. In July and August go at 09:00 or after 16:00, fill up at the free drinking fountains inside, and don’t attempt it across the middle of the day. Allow two to two and a half hours for both the Palatine and the Forum if you want to read the place rather than march through it.
The site is extraordinary, but it’s almost entirely unlabelled, so what you get out of it depends entirely on preparation. With a good audio app or some reading beforehand, self-guided is perfectly good and far cheaper. If you’d rather turn up cold and have two thousand years explained as you walk, a small-group guide is the one upgrade that genuinely earns its fee here — more so than at the Colosseum, where the building speaks for itself. Either way, do it on the same day as the Colosseum to get the full value from the one ticket.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Rome city guide.
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