Community of Madrid
Retiro Park
How to visit Madrid's Retiro Park: when the gates open, the rowing-boat lake, the free Crystal Palace, and whether it's worth your time.
Where
Madrid, Spain
Opening hours
Park gates open daily 06:00–midnight from April to September, and 06:00–22:00 from October to March. The Crystal Palace opens around 10:00 and closes 22:00 in summer / at sunset (about 18:00) in winter; confirm before a special trip, as it shuts between exhibition installs and has had longer renovation closures — check the Reina Sofía site for the current week.
Tickets
Park entry is free. Rowing boats on the Estanque Grande are about €6 on weekdays and €8 at weekends/holidays (£5–£7) for 45 minutes, up to four people. The Crystal Palace is also free.
Time needed
1.5–2 hours for a relaxed loop of the lake, Crystal Palace and rose garden. Add 45 minutes if you hire a boat.
In short
Visiting Retiro Park
Retiro is free to walk into and there is no ticket — the only things you pay for are the rowing boats on the Estanque Grande and the odd coffee. Come for the lake, the colonnaded Alfonso XII monument behind it, and the free Crystal Palace (Palacio de Cristal), which holds rotating Reina Sofía art installations. Enter from the Puerta de Alcalá / Plaza de la Independencia side via Retiro metro (Line 2), and allow an hour and a half to two for a proper loop.
How to visit without overthinking it
There is no ticket and no entrance queue — Retiro is a public park, open daily from 06:00 to midnight in summer and to 22:00 in the colder months. The simplest way in is the Puerta de Alcalá corner at Plaza de la Independencia, a two-minute walk from Retiro metro (Line 2); from there the main avenue runs straight down to the Estanque Grande, the rectangular boating lake backed by the colonnaded Alfonso XII monument. That stretch is the postcard, and it’s free.
The one thing worth paying for is a rowing boat. Hire is roughly €6 on weekdays and €8 at weekends for 45 minutes, up to four people, paid at the lakeside kiosk or through the Madrid Móvil app — go mid-morning, because the embarcadero backs up by early afternoon at weekends. A short walk behind the lake is the Palacio de Cristal (Crystal Palace): an 1887 glass-and-iron glasshouse that now hosts free, rotating Reina Sofía art installations. It closes between shows and has had longer renovation spells, so if it’s a fixed reason for your visit, check the Reina Sofía site for that week rather than assuming it’s open.
When to go, and how long to give it
Mornings are the pick — cooler, quieter, and the light is kinder on the lake. Skip the middle of a July afternoon, when there’s little shade on the open avenues and the boat queue is at its worst. Beyond the lake and Crystal Palace, the Rosaleda rose garden is worth ten minutes when it’s in bloom (late spring), and the Fallen Angel statue is a short detour, but you don’t need to tick off every monument.
Treat Retiro as a relaxed hour and a half rather than a destination in itself. It earns its place because of where it sits — the Prado and the Puerta de Alcalá are on its doorstep — so the natural move is a morning of art followed by a boat and a coffee here, not a special trip across the city. As a free breather in the middle of a Madrid museum day, it’s hard to beat.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Madrid city guide.
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