- €20Adult park + palace (2026)
- 09:30–18:30Palace opening hours
- Timed30-min interior slots
- 1842–54Built by Ferdinand II
- 3–4 hrsTo visit at a relaxed pace
Why Pena Palace Is the One Sintra Sight Nobody Skips
Pena Palace (Palácio Nacional da Pena) is Sintra's crown jewel and Portugal's most-visited monument — a Romanticist fantasy castle built by King Ferdinand II between 1842 and 1854 on the ruins of a Hieronymite monastery. Painted in its iconic red (the old monastery) and yellow (the new palace) and ringed by a 200-hectare Romantic park, it drew 2.1 million visitors in 2024. It is the founding masterpiece of Portuguese Romantic-revival architecture, and it predates Bavaria's more famous Neuschwanstein by nearly three decades.
It is also Sintra's single busiest site, so when and how you visit matter as much as the ticket you buy. The palace interior needs a mandatory timed slot; the exterior terraces and park deliver most of the visual magic for less. This guide walks through the history, the architecture, the 2026 prices, the opening hours and the honest question of whether the interior is worth the queue — then how to reach it from Lisbon.
More Ways to See Pena Palace and Sintra
Pena Palace is the anchor of almost every Sintra itinerary, and there are many ways to reach it. Popular options include a full-day Sintra tour from Lisbon that also visits Quinta da Regaleira and the Moorish Castle, a small-group trip out to Cabo da Roca and Cascais on the Atlantic coast, and half-day tours focused purely on Pena Palace with skip-the-line tickets. Browse the live options for Sintra and Pena Palace below.
A Short History of Pena Palace
A medieval chapel, an earthquake, and a king-artist with a European imagination.
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A hilltop monastery
The site began as a medieval chapel to Our Lady of Pena. In the early 16th century King Manuel I built the Royal Monastery of Our Lady of Pena here, home for centuries to at most about eighteen Hieronymite monks.
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Ruin by earthquake
Damaged by lightning and then reduced to ruins by the Great Lisbon Earthquake of 1755, the monastery was abandoned after Portugal dissolved its religious orders in 1834 — though the chapel survived largely intact.
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Ferdinand II's vision
In 1838 King consort Ferdinand II — a cousin of both Queen Victoria and Prince Albert — bought the ruin with his own fortune. Meaning only to restore it, his enthusiasm grew into an entirely new palace, built 1842–1854 with engineer Baron von Eschwege.
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From royal home to museum
The State bought Pena in 1889; after the 1910 Republican Revolution it became a national monument and museum, preserved as the royal family left it. In 1995 it was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site as part of the Cultural Landscape of Sintra.
Architecture and the Highlights Inside
The red "Old Palace" wraps the surviving monastery; the yellow "New Palace" holds the royal rooms. Ferdinand deliberately fused Neo-Gothic, Neo-Manueline, Neo-Islamic and Neo-Renaissance into one statement of national identity.
Triton Gateway
A mythological half-man, half-fish Triton emerges from a clam shell above the entrance — an allegory of the creation of the world and a nod to the Age of Discovery.
Queen's Terrace
The best overall view of the palace and panoramas to the Atlantic and Lisbon, with a sundial cannon that once fired daily at noon.
Arab Room
Trompe-l'œil painted vaults imitate Moorish stucco, creating a striking illusion of carved depth overhead.
Great Hall
The palace's grandest room, used for banquets, with stucco, a golden-bronze chandelier and sculptures of "Turks" holding candelabra.
Stag Room
A round banquet hall built around a central palm-tree plaster column, ringed by plaster stag heads bearing real antlers.
Manueline Cloister
Surviving from the monastery, a two-level arcade clad in Hispano-Arab tiles — the quiet heart of the "Old Palace".
Over the 20th century the colours faded to grey; a major 1990s restoration repainted the palace in its original red and yellow. Beyond the palace, the Parque da Pena spreads over 200+ hectares and is considered Portugal's most important arboretum, with over 500 tree species — from North American sequoia to Australian tree ferns. Don't miss the High Cross (Cruz Alta), the highest point of the Serra at about 528 m, the Valley of the Lakes with its castle-shaped duck houses, and the cork-clad Chalet of the Countess of Edla, included on both tickets.
Pena Palace Tickets and Prices in 2026
Two tiers, both now including the exterior terraces. Booking online is 15% cheaper than the gate and secures your timed slot.
| Ticket | Adult (18–64) | Youth (6–17) & senior (65+) | Family (2 adults + 2 youths) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Park + Palace (interior) | €20 | €18 | €65 |
| Park only (terraces + gardens) | €12 | €10 | €40 |
Children under 6 are free but still need a (free) ticket selected during booking. A round-trip shuttle between the park entrance and the palace is €4.50 (ages 6+). The Lisboa Card gives only a 10% discount on Pena tickets — not free entry — though it does cover the free CP train from Lisbon. Many travel sites still quote older prices (e.g. €14 / €7.50); trust the official €20 / €12 for 2026. For the full buying playbook — discounts, real skip-the-line vs fast-track, where to buy safely and when to book — see our Pena Palace tickets & prices guide.
Opening Hours and How Timed Entry Works
The park you can enter any time; the palace interior runs on strict 30-minute slots.
Park
09:00–19:00 (last ticket and admission 18:00). The gardens, terraces and viewpoints don't need a timed slot.
Palace interior
09:30–18:30 (last ticket 17:30). Entry is by a mandatory, strictly enforced 30-minute window — miss it and the ticket is non-refundable.
Chalet of the Countess of Edla
09:00–17:30 (last admission 17:00), about a 25-minute walk west of the palace and included on both tickets.
Closed
Open daily except 25 December and 1 January (some dates such as 24 and 31 December have reduced hours). Always verify seasonally.
Arrive early for your slot
It takes about 30 minutes to walk from the park gate to the palace door, so reach the park well before your interior time.
Daily caps
Since 2024 Pena is capped at about 5,100 visitors a day across 17 slots — down from a peak of 12,000 — so popular times sell out ahead.
Is the Pena Palace Interior Worth It?
Reviews genuinely split. Here's the case each way so you can pick the right ticket.
The case for the interior
- Preserved almost exactly as the royal family left it in October 1910
- Original furniture, silk wallpapers and King Carlos's own paintings
- The highlight rooms: Arab Room, Great Hall, Stag Room, chapel and cloister
- Portugal's first hot-water shower and one of its earliest telephone lines
- A rare "paused" royal home for anyone who loves history
The case against
- The interior is relatively small and the route is strictly one-way
- In peak season it becomes a slow shuffle where you can't linger
- Most of the famous photographs are taken from the exterior terraces
- Those terraces are included in the cheaper €12 Park-only ticket
- Walk-up interior queues can reach 2–3 hours in high season
Verdict: if you love history and can enter at opening or late afternoon, take the full €20 ticket. If your priority is the fairy-tale exterior, the photos and the park — or it's high season with a long interior line — the €12 Park ticket delivers most of the visual magic for less.
How to Get to Pena Palace
Pena is about 30 km northwest of Lisbon. You can't drive up — here are the ways in.
Train + bus 434
CP train from Rossio to Sintra (~40 min), then the 434 "Pena Circuit" from the station to the park gate (~15–20 min, roughly every 15 min). The €13.50 day pass also covers the 435.
Tuk-tuk
Plentiful in the village centre — a convenient, pricier door-to-gate option that skips the bus queue.
Taxi / Uber / Bolt
Roughly an 8–12 minute ride from the station; often cheaper for groups and quicker than the bus.
Walking
A steep 40–60 minute uphill walk (~3.5 km) on scenic marked trails such as Santa Maria or Vila Sassetti — rewarding but demanding.
Inside the park
A paid shuttle runs every 15 minutes between the main gate and the palace forecourt (€4.50 round trip), removing most of the steep 20–30 minute climb.
Or let a tour handle it
A guided day tour from Lisbon covers the transport, the timed Pena ticket and the route — no bus queues, no car-ban worries.
What to Pair with Pena Palace
The strongest add-ons within Sintra, by how close they are and what they offer.
10–20 min walk
Moorish Castle
An 8th–9th-century hilltop fortress on the neighbouring ridge — all ramparts and views, no interior rooms. Adult €12, no timed entry; a combined ticket with Pena saves money.
In the town
Quinta da Regaleira
A romantic estate with the 27-metre Initiation Well, tunnels and grottoes — privately run, separate timed ticket, and many travellers' favourite Sintra sight.
Town centre
National Palace
The twin-chimneyed medieval royal palace with richly tiled interiors, easy to combine with lunch in town. Adult €13.
Quieter, further out
Monserrate Palace
An exquisite, far less crowded palace blending Moorish, Gothic and Indian influences, set in celebrated botanical gardens. Adult €12.
Planning the wider day around Pena? Our Sintra day trip guide compares the train, a guided tour and driving, and lays out how much you can realistically fit into one day.
Pena Palace: Frequently Asked Questions
How much are Pena Palace tickets in 2026?
The 2026 official Parques de Sintra prices are €20 adult for Park + Palace (interior) and €12 adult for Park-only, with reduced €18 / €10 rates for youths (6–17) and seniors (65+) and family tickets at €65 / €40. Children under 6 are free but still need a booked ticket. Buying online in advance is 15% cheaper than the gate and secures your timed slot.
Do you need to book Pena Palace tickets in advance?
Yes. The palace interior requires a mandatory timed-entry slot, and popular morning slots sell out days ahead in summer. To manage crowds Pena is now capped at about 5,100 visitors a day across 17 thirty-minute slots, so booking online in advance is strongly recommended — effectively essential from April to October.
Is the Pena Palace interior worth visiting?
It depends on your interests. The interior is preserved almost exactly as the royal family left it in 1910 — original furniture, the Arab Room, Great Hall, Stag Room and copper-clad kitchen — which history lovers value. But it's small, strictly one-way, and in peak season becomes a slow shuffle. Most of the famous photographs are taken from the exterior terraces, which are included in the cheaper Park-only ticket, so photographers and peak-season visitors often skip the interior.
How do you get to Pena Palace from Lisbon?
Take the CP train from Rossio to Sintra (about 40 minutes), then bus 434 (the "Pena Circuit"), a tuk-tuk, or an Uber/Bolt from the station up to the park gate — about 15–20 minutes. Private cars can't drive up. Inside the park a paid shuttle (€4.50 round trip) saves the steep 20–30 minute climb from the gate to the palace. A guided tour from Lisbon handles all of this for you.