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Inquisitor's Palace (Birgu), Malta
Inquisitor's Palace (Birgu)

Southern Harbour

Inquisitor's Palace (Birgu)

A 1530s courthouse turned seat of the Inquisition for over 200 years, with original cells, prisoner carvings and a Maltese ethnography museum. The most human of Birgu's three sites โ€” prioritise it if you do just one.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

The Three Cities, Malta

Opening hours

Generally open daily through the day, with shorter winter hours and a final entry before closing. Hours shift seasonally, so confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

Adult entry is about โ‚ฌ10, or it's included in the โ‚ฌ13 Heritage Malta Birgu combined ticket that also covers Fort St Angelo and the Maritime Museum. Prices change, so confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Time needed

Around an hour to ninety minutes to work through the cells, tribunal rooms and the ethnography displays upstairs.

In short

Visiting Inquisitor's Palace (Birgu)

Built in the 1530s as a courthouse and the seat of the Maltese Inquisition for over 200 years, the Inquisitor's Palace keeps its original cells, prisoner carvings and tribunal rooms alongside a national ethnography museum. Adult entry is about โ‚ฌ10, or it's included in the โ‚ฌ13 Birgu combined ticket. The most human of Birgu's three sites and the one to choose if you only do one.

The human side of Birgu

Of the three Heritage Malta sites clustered in Birgu, this is the one that gets under your skin. Built in the 1530s as a courthouse and then the seat of the Maltese Inquisition for over two centuries, the palace still holds its original prison cells, complete with carvings and graffiti scratched by prisoners, the tribunal rooms where judgments were handed down, and the waiting halls in between. It is one of the very few inquisitorial palaces anywhere in Europe you can actually walk through, and that rarity, plus the quiet, slightly heavy atmosphere of the cells, is what makes it land.

Upstairs the mood lifts into a national museum of ethnography, covering Maltese daily life, faith and folk belief โ€” a useful counterweight to the darkness below. Adult entry is about โ‚ฌ10, or itโ€™s bundled into the โ‚ฌ13 Birgu combined ticket with Fort St Angelo and the Maritime Museum.

If you only do one

Where Fort St Angelo is all bastions and views, the Inquisitorโ€™s Palace is rooms, objects and stories โ€” so if your time in the Three Cities is short, make this your single stop. It rewards reading the panels and slowing down rather than rushing the loop.

Allow an hour to ninety minutes for the cells, tribunal rooms and the ethnography displays. It sits a few minutesโ€™ walk inland from the waterfront, so itโ€™s easy to fold into a Birgu morning, ideally before or after the fort. Go earlier in the day when the rooms are quieter and the cells feel their most atmospheric, confirm the current hours on the official site first, and consider the combined ticket if youโ€™ve any appetite for the other two sites nearby.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the The Three Cities city guide.

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Inquisitor's Palace (Birgu) FAQs

Is the Inquisitor's Palace worth it?
It's the pick of Birgu's three Heritage Malta sites for most visitors. It's the most human and atmospheric โ€” actual cells, prisoner graffiti scratched into the walls, the tribunal hall โ€” and it tells a darker, lesser-known chapter of Maltese history. If you only have time for one site in Birgu, make it this one.
What can you actually see inside?
The surviving prison cells with prisoner carvings, the tribunal and waiting rooms where the Inquisition sat, and a national museum of ethnography upstairs covering Maltese daily life and beliefs. It's one of very few inquisitorial palaces in Europe open to the public, which is part of what makes it stand out.
Should I get the combined Birgu ticket?
If you're visiting Fort St Angelo or the Maritime Museum as well, yes โ€” the โ‚ฌ13 combined ticket covers all three and beats paying separately. If the palace is your only stop, the single entry of about โ‚ฌ10 is fine. Check current pricing on the official Heritage Malta site.

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