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The Last Supper (Santa Maria delle Grazie), Italy
The Last Supper (Santa Maria delle Grazie)

Lombardy

The Last Supper (Santa Maria delle Grazie)

How to actually get a slot to see Leonardo's Last Supper in Milan: when tickets release, the guided-tour route in when it's sold out, and what 15 minutes in the room is really like.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Where

Milan, Italy

Opening hours

Tuesdayโ€“Sunday, 08:15โ€“19:00, with last admission at 18:45. Closed Mondays, plus 1 January and 25 December. Always confirm your date on cenacolovinciano.org.

Tickets

โ‚ฌ15 (about ยฃ13) full price; โ‚ฌ2 (about ยฃ1.70) reduced for ages 18โ€“25; under-18s free but still need a booked slot. Guided tours cost more โ€” usually โ‚ฌ40โ€“55 (about ยฃ34โ€“47) โ€” because they bundle a guaranteed slot you often can't get otherwise.

Time needed

About 45 minutes on site: arrive 30 minutes before your slot (10 if you're on a guided tour), then 15 minutes in the room. The viewing itself is non-negotiably 15 minutes โ€” you're moved on.

In short

Visiting The Last Supper (Santa Maria delle Grazie)

Only 40 people see the mural at a time, for a strict 15 minutes, in a climate-controlled room โ€” so tickets are scarce and book out weeks ahead. Official slots are sold through cenacolovinciano.vivaticket.it (the museum's own cenacolovinciano.org site doesn't sell tickets, it just links there), released in quarterly batches with a small weekly drop every Wednesday at noon Italian time; the moment you've fixed your Milan dates, book. If the official platform shows nothing, a guided tour is the reliable way in โ€” it holds its own allocation of slots and gets you a few minutes of context before you go through the doors. Allow about 45 minutes on site for what is, genuinely, 15 minutes in front of the painting.

The scarcity is the whole problem

Leonardoโ€™s mural lives on the refectory wall of Santa Maria delle Grazie, in a sealed, climate-controlled room that admits exactly 40 people every 15 minutes. That tiny capacity, not the price, is why itโ€™s hard to see โ€” at โ‚ฌ15 a head itโ€™s one of the cheapest world-famous sights in Italy, but the slots run out weeks ahead. There are no walk-up tickets and no same-day sales; if you havenโ€™t booked, you donโ€™t get in.

Official tickets come out in quarterly batches about three months before the dates they cover, and the good slots can vanish within hours of release. One thing that trips people up: the museumโ€™s own cenacolovinciano.org doesnโ€™t sell tickets โ€” it links out to the booking platform at cenacolovinciano.vivaticket.it, which is where the actual slots are. The practical rule is simple: the moment your Milan dates are fixed, go there and book. If the batch covering your trip is already out and sold, thereโ€™s a small weekly top-up released every Wednesday at noon Italian time for the following week โ€” useful, but a scramble, and only for individual bookings.

When itโ€™s sold out โ€” and what 15 minutes is really like

If the official site shows nothing for your dates, book a guided tour. Operators hold their own ring-fenced allocation of slots, so a tour often has space when the museumโ€™s own site is empty. Youโ€™ll pay โ‚ฌ40โ€“55 instead of โ‚ฌ15, but you also get a few minutes of context outside the doors, and you only need to turn up 10 minutes before your slot rather than the 30 minutes the museum demands of independent visitors who miss it and forfeit the ticket.

Itโ€™s worth it, with expectations set. The painting is faded and heavily restored โ€” Leonardo worked on dry plaster, so it began flaking in his own lifetime โ€” and you wonโ€™t see vivid colour. What you get is the composition at full scale, that frozen second after Christ says someone at the table will betray him, and the odd hush of being one of 40 people in a quiet sealed room. Allow about 45 minutes on site for what is genuinely a 15-minute viewing. Donโ€™t build a whole day around it โ€” pair it with a stroll to the Duomo or the Castello Sforzesco, both an easy tram ride east. The nearest stops are Metro M1 (red) at Conciliazione, a five-minute walk, or tram 16, which stops directly opposite the church.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Milan city guide.

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The Last Supper (Santa Maria delle Grazie) FAQs

How far ahead do you need to book the Last Supper?
As far ahead as you can. The official platform (cenacolovinciano.vivaticket.it, linked from cenacolovinciano.org) releases tickets in quarterly batches roughly three months out โ€” December for Febโ€“Apr, March for Mayโ€“Jul, June for Augโ€“Oct, September for Novโ€“Jan โ€” and popular dates can go within hours. Book the moment your Milan dates are fixed. If the batch covering your trip is already out and sold, watch the small weekly drop that appears every Wednesday at noon Italian time for the following week.
What do you do if the Last Supper is sold out?
Book a guided tour. Tour operators hold their own ring-fenced allocation of slots, so a tour will often have availability when the official site shows nothing. You pay more โ€” โ‚ฌ40โ€“55 rather than โ‚ฌ15 โ€” but you also get a few minutes of context outside before your timed entry, and you only need to arrive 10 minutes ahead instead of 30. The other option is the Wednesday-noon weekly release, but that's a scramble.
Is the Last Supper worth seeing?
Yes, if you go in knowing it's 15 minutes, not an afternoon. The mural is faded and much-restored โ€” it was painted on a dry wall and started flaking within Leonardo's lifetime โ€” so don't expect vivid colour. What you get instead is the scale, the moment frozen the instant Christ says one of them will betray him, and the strange quiet of being one of 40 people in a sealed room. It's a remarkable thing to stand in front of; just don't build a whole day around 15 minutes.

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