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Royal Palace of Madrid, Spain
Royal Palace of Madrid

Community of Madrid

Royal Palace of Madrid

How to visit the Royal Palace of Madrid: which ticket to book, when the queue is shortest, why the free hour won't apply to you, and whether it's worth the €14.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 7 Jun 2026

Where

Madrid, Spain

Opening hours

Roughly 10:00–19:00 Monday–Saturday and 10:00–16:00 Sunday from April to September; daily 10:00–18:00 from October to March. Last entry is one hour before closing, and it can close at short notice for state ceremonies — confirm your date on patrimonionacional.es.

Tickets

€14 general admission; €8 reduced (5–16s, over-65s, students). Under-5s free. There's a free slot Monday–Thursday late afternoon (16:00–18:00 Oct–Mar, 17:00–19:00 Apr–Sep), but it's only for EU citizens, EU residents/work-permit holders and Latin American citizens — most UK tourists pay the €14.

Time needed

1.5–2 hours for the staterooms and Royal Armoury; add 20–30 minutes for security even with a timed or skip-the-line ticket.

In short

Visiting Royal Palace of Madrid

Buy a timed ticket online before you go (about €14, or €8 reduced) — the on-the-door queue can run 60–90 minutes late-morning, and skip-the-line entry only gets you past that, not the security screening. There's a free slot Monday–Thursday late afternoon (16:00–18:00 in winter, 17:00–19:00 in summer), but it's for EU citizens and EU residents only, so as a UK tourist you'll be paying the €14 unless you hold EU residency. The interior is the point: the Throne Room with Tiepolo's ceiling fresco, the gilded staterooms and the separate Royal Armoury. Allow 1.5–2 hours.

Which ticket, and the free slot worth knowing

General admission is about €14 (€8 reduced for 5–16s, over-65s and students; under-5s free), and you walk a fixed one-way route through roughly two dozen of the palace’s 3,418 rooms — the Throne Room under Giovanni Battista Tiepolo’s ceiling fresco, the Gasparini Room, the Royal Chapel and the separate Royal Armoury, which holds armour worn by Spanish kings since the 13th century and is the bit most people underrate.

There’s a free slot Monday to Thursday in the last two hours before closing — 16:00–18:00 from October to March, 17:00–19:00 from April to September — but read the small print before you bank on it: Patrimonio Nacional restricts it to EU citizens, EU residents and work-permit holders, and Latin American citizens. Post-Brexit a UK passport on its own no longer counts, so unless you hold EU residency you’ll be paying the €14 like everyone else. (It’s also self-guided, the busiest rooms of the day, and can’t be pre-booked, so it’s no great loss.) To skip the ticket-office queue — which runs 60–90 minutes from late morning in peak season — book a timed or skip-the-line ticket online instead. Either way you still pass airport-style security, so budget 20–30 minutes for that.

Is the interior worth the €14?

Aim for 10:00 sharp or after 16:00, ideally Tuesday to Thursday; between 11:00 and 14:00 is queue central, and weekends and the summer peak are worst. November to February has the thinnest crowds. The palace is a five-minute walk from Ópera metro (Lines 2 and 5), so it pairs naturally with Plaza Mayor and the Mercado de San Miguel a few streets east. Time it for a Wednesday or Saturday and you can watch the free Changing of the Guard in the Plaza de la Armería (11:00–14:00, or 10:00–12:00 in July and August).

Go inside if you like gilded staterooms and don’t mind a fixed route — the Throne Room and Armoury justify the €14 (don’t count on the free slot as a UK visitor — it’s an EU-residents perk). If palace interiors bore you, the courtyard, the cathedral opposite and the guard ceremony are all free and may be plenty. Allow an hour and a half to two hours, and don’t stack it against the Prado the same day — Madrid’s big sights reward spacing out.

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

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Royal Palace of Madrid FAQs

Do you need to book Royal Palace of Madrid tickets in advance?
It's strongly advised in peak season. The ticket office queue routinely runs 60–90 minutes from late morning, and a timed online or skip-the-line ticket lets you walk past it. You'll still pass through security, so allow 20–30 minutes for that whichever ticket you hold.
Can UK visitors get into the Royal Palace for free?
Usually no. The free Monday-to-Thursday afternoon slot — 16:00–18:00 from October to March, 17:00–19:00 from April to September — is for EU citizens, EU residents/work-permit holders and Latin American citizens only. Post-Brexit a UK passport doesn't qualify on its own, so unless you hold EU residency you'll pay the €14. The free slot is also self-guided, busiest of the day and can't be pre-booked.
Is the Royal Palace of Madrid worth visiting?
Yes, if you go inside. It's the largest royal palace in Western Europe with 3,418 rooms, though you only walk a fixed route through about two dozen. The Throne Room under Tiepolo's ceiling and the separate Royal Armoury are the standouts. If palace interiors leave you cold, the free exterior, the Plaza de la Armería courtyard and the Changing of the Guard may be enough.
When is the Changing of the Guard at the Royal Palace?
The regular ceremony runs every Wednesday and Saturday, 11:00–14:00 (10:00–12:00 in July and August because of the heat). The grander Solemn Changing of the Guard is on the first Wednesday of most months around 12:00. Both are free to watch from the Plaza de la Armería off Calle de Bailén, weather and state events permitting.

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