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Colorful tiled mosaic foreground, people walking below, unique gingerbread-like buildings, and a cityscape under a partly cloudy sky.
4.4 (45,545 reviews)

Park Güell Tickets

Secure your Park Güell tickets and enter into Gaudí’s colorful world with timed entry that lets you see it all

Park Güell: Digital Tickets Required

Access to Park Güell is only available with an advance ticket purchase online. Book in advance to ensure entry.

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7 options • from $24.47

Guided Tour

Park Güell: Guided Tour

Available tomorrow
  • Duration: 1h 15mins
  • Live guide in English, German, French, Italian, Spanish
  • Group of max. 30 people
4.3 (3,203)
From
$24.47

Best of Barcelona Bundle

Available tomorrow
  • Park Güell
  • Sagrada Familia
  • Casa Batlló

+ 1 other top thing to do

4.5 (1,365)
From
$113.04

The Gaudi Bundle

Available today
  • Park Güell
  • Sagrada Familia
  • Barcelona City Audioguide
4.4 (1,341)
From
$76.33
Attraction Passes

The Barcelona Pass

Available tomorrow
  • Park Güell
  • Sagrada Familia
  • Hop-on Hop-off Bus Barcelona or Casa Batllò or La Pedrera

+ 1 other top thing to do

4.4 (3,791)
From
$111.87
Guided Tour

Sagrada Familia & Park Güell: Guided Tour

Available Monday, 08 Dec
  • Duration: 4h - 4h 30mins
  • Live guide in English, French, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, Chinese
  • Group of max. 25 - 30 people
4.2 (261)
From
$103.72

Hand-picked combinations

Combine Park Güell with other Barcelona favorites. Some things are better together.

Park Güell Tickets Overview

Park Güell has two parts. You can walk around the large outer park for free without a ticket. The famous Gaudí area is different. This is the paid Monumental Zone, where you find the mosaic lizard, serpentine bench, terrace, and main structures.

All Park Güell tickets you see online are only for the Monumental Zone, not for the free public park.

Ticket numbers for the Monumental Zone are limited by the hour. Once a slot is full, you cannot enter at that time. That is why you often see Park Güell tickets sold out, especially in high season. To avoid problems, you should book Park Güell tickets in advance rather than wait for last-minute Park Güell tickets.

You can choose from four main types of tickets for Park Güell, each with a different level of service and Park Güell ticket price.

What it is: This is the standard Park Güell entry ticket for the Monumental Zone. You choose a specific 30‑minute time slot. You enter during that window, then move around on your own. You can stay inside as long as you like after entering, until closing time. Numbers are capped per slot, so Park Güell reservations are very important.

Key Benefits:

  • Guaranteed, timed entry to the famous Monumental Zone
  • The most affordable way to see Gaudí’s well-known creations
  • Freedom to move around and take photos at your own pace

Best for: Independent travelers and budget‑minded visitors who plan ahead and feel comfortable finding the key sights without help.

What it is: This option includes a Park Güell ticket plus an expert local guide. The guide leads you through the Monumental Zone, explains the history, the symbols in the mosaics, and Gaudí’s building methods. Tour companies often hold reserved ticket blocks, so a guided tour can be the best solution when standard Park Güell tickets are gone for your dates.

Key Benefits:

  • Often the only way to get in when regular tickets are sold out
  • Clear explanations of the stories, symbols, and design details
  • A structured route that covers all the main highlights quickly
  • Includes a guaranteed Park Güell skip-the-line ticket entry, so you avoid the main ticket queue

Best for: First‑time visitors, architecture fans, and anyone who finds standard tickets sold out but still wants a confirmed visit.

What it is: These are simple packages that include a Park Güell ticket plus at least one more top sight. The most common combo is Park Güell plus Sagrada Família, giving you two of Gaudí’s key works in one booking.

Key Benefits:

  • One purchase covers multiple major sights, saving planning time
  • Often better value than buying each ticket separately
  • Helps you set up a clear “Gaudí day” in Barcelona with fixed times

Best for: Travelers on a tight schedule who want to lock in Park Güell and another landmark with a single, organized booking.

What it is: City cards (such as the “Barcelona Pass” or “Go City All‑Inclusive Pass”) are broader than a simple bundle. You pay one price for a set number of days and get entry to a wide list of attractions, often including Park Güell. For Park Güell, you still need to make a time reservation within the pass system, but the ticket cost is covered.

Key Benefits:

  • Strong value if you plan to visit many sights in a few days
  • Flexible: you can build your own schedule around the included entries
  • Another useful way to secure Monumental Zone access if standard tickets are gone

Best for: Visitors staying several days who want to see as much as possible at a fixed, predictable cost while keeping their daily plans flexible.

Discover Park Güell: Gaudí's Garden City

Park Güell began as a bold housing project. Gaudí and Eusebi Güell planned a garden city where wealthy families would live among trees, walkways, and shared public spaces. The homes never filled up, but the site turned into a unique public park instead.

With your ticket to the Monumental Zone, you enter into the core of this vision. Here you find the Dragon Stairway, the Hypostyle Room, the Greek Theatre/Nature Square, the Austria Gardens, and the famous stone viaducts. This compact area holds the mosaics, curves, and symbols that make Park Güell so well known worldwide.

You enter through iron gates and face a dramatic double staircase that climbs the hill in two sweeping flights. Curved balustrades frame the steps, lined with white tiles and bold color.

At the center, you meet “El Drac,” the mosaic salamander that has become a symbol of Barcelona. Its scales are made from broken ceramics, glass, and tiles, using Gaudí’s trencadís technique. You see rich blues, greens, oranges, and yellows under the sunlight. This is your first close look at the playful side of Gaudí’s design, right at the park’s front door.

Why It’s a Must-See: It gives you the classic Park Güell photo, introduces Gaudí’s mosaic style, and signals that you are stepping into a very unusual city park.

You move up from the Dragon Stairway into a huge covered hall, once planned as the neighborhood market. Eighty‑six thick, fluted columns surround you, like a stone forest holding up the terrace above.

The space feels cool and sheltered, with light filtering between the pillars. Look up, and you spot round mosaic medallions on the ceiling, set between plain tiles. Each piece of broken ceramic forms suns, waves, and abstract forms that break the rigid order of the columns.

Why It’s a Must-See: It shows how Gaudí mixed classical shapes with natural forms and bold decoration, all while solving tough structural problems in a very original way.

Above the Hypostyle Room, you reach the main terrace, known as the Greek Theatre or Nature Square. It is a broad, open platform designed for gatherings and events, with the city spread out in front of you and the sea beyond.

Around the edge runs a long, wavy bench that twists and bends like a living form. The back of the bench is covered in colorful trencadís, made from broken tiles, plates, and glass set into flowing patterns.

Why It’s a Must-See: This is the social hub of the park and the place for wide city views. The mosaic bench is a textbook example of Gaudí’s skill in turning public seating into art that feels good to sit on and look at.

Further inside the Monumental Zone, you find the Laundry Room Portico, a long stone gallery that seems to roll in waves along the slope. Tilted columns look like tree trunks or roots, leaning at sharp angles yet holding the path above. The curves and rough stone make you feel as if you are walking along a natural cliff.

Next to this, the Austria Gardens offer a more regular layout, with straight paths, planted beds, and trees donated by Austria. It is a calmer corner with pleasant views back toward the main Monumental Zone.

Why It’s a Must-See: The portico is one of Gaudí’s most photographed structures, a clear example of how he copied natural forms in stone. The gardens give you a quieter pause among greenery, still within reach of the main sights.

Outside the Monumental Zone, you can spend more time in the larger public park without a ticket. Here you can follow winding dirt paths through Mediterranean pine forest and low scrub. Gaudí’s stone viaducts carry walkways above you, with rough pillars and arches that blend into the hillside. You can walk under them or along the tops as raised paths.

If you continue upward, you reach Turó de les Tres Creus (Hill of the Three Crosses), the highest point in the park. From here, you get the widest views over Barcelona, from the hills to the sea.

Why It’s Important: Knowing the difference between the Monumental Zone and the free areas helps you plan your time. You use your ticket for the core Gaudí works, then extend your visit with forest paths, viewpoints, and viaducts at no extra cost.

Know Before You Go: Visiting Park Güell

Park Güell uses timed entry for the Monumental Zone. Your ticket is valid for a 30‑minute entry window (for example, 10:00-10:30). You must enter during that window.

Once you are inside the Monumental Zone, you can stay until closing time. You will not be rushed; only your entry time is fixed.

Opening hours change by season, and they sometimes change from year to year. Schedules are roughly as follows:

  • Late autumn–winter: 9:30 to 17:30
  • Spring–early summer, late summer–autumn: 9:30 to 19:30
  • Peak summer: 9:00 to 21:30

Before you buy Park Güell tickets, always check the latest hours on the official Park Güell website, as these times can shift.

Park Güell sits high above the city, in the Gràcia/Carmel area. No matter how you get there, expect some uphill walking.

By Metro (Line L3 – Green Line):

  • Take L3 to Lesseps or Vallcarca
  • From either station, you face about 15-20 minutes of steep uphill walking
  • From Vallcarca, you can use outdoor escalators on Baixada de la Glòria to cut some of the climb, but you still walk on sloping streets and paths
  • This route suits you only if you are comfortable with hills and longer walks

By Bus:

  • Bus line 24 is one of the easiest options
  • It runs from Plaça de Catalunya and Passeig de Gràcia up toward Park Güell
  • It drops you near the Carretera del Carmel entrance, which keeps the uphill section short
  • This is a good choice if you want to avoid the steeper streets near the metro

By Taxi or Ride-share:

  • This is the most convenient way to reach the park
  • You are dropped right by an entrance, usually Carretera del Carmel
  • It costs more than public transport but saves time and energy, especially in hot weather or if you have limited mobility
  • Timed entry: Arrive at your designated entrance gate within your 30‑minute time slot. If you are late, the staff may refuse entry even if you have tickets for Park Güell
  • Footwear: Wear comfortable walking shoes with a good grip. The park is large, with uneven paths, steps, and steep gradients
  • Ticket validation: Once you are inside the Monumental Zone, you cannot exit and re‑enter on the same ticket. Use the restrooms and organize your group before going in
  • Gaudí House Museum: The Gaudí House Museum is inside the Park Güell grounds but outside the Monumental Zone ticket. It needs a separate ticket and its own time slot, so plan your visit times carefully

Park Güell Frequently Asked Questions

You only need tickets for Park Güell to enter the Monumental Zone, where Gaudí’s main works are located.

The larger outer park is free and open to everyone, but it does not include the Dragon Stairway, Hypostyle Room, or main terrace.

The Park Güell ticket price varies by age and type (standard timed entry, guided tour, combo, or city pass). Standard timed tickets are the cheapest option, while guided tours and attraction bundles cost more but add services or extra sights.

Check the official site or a trusted ticket partner for current prices on your exact date.

You can book Park Güell tickets on the official Park Güell website or through authorized resellers and city card providers. Buying online lets you see live availability, compare ticket types, and secure a time slot before you arrive in Barcelona.

You may find Park Güell tickets in Barcelona at authorized tourist offices, hotel desks, or ticket machines, but same‑day availability is limited.

For busy dates and seasons, do not rely on last-minute Park Güell tickets at the gate; time slots often sell out hours or days in advance.

Timed Park Güell reservations are typically released several weeks to a few months ahead. If you already know your travel dates, check the calendar early and lock in a slot, especially for weekends, holidays, and peak summer.

If standard Park Güell tickets are gone, look for:

  • Guided tour tickets – these often have separate ticket allocations
  • Combined tickets (Park Güell + Sagrada Família)
  • City passes that include Park Güell with their own booking pool. These options can still give you access when direct timed entries are unavailable

Park Güell skip-the-line tickets are useful in busy months, as they include a reserved entry time and avoid the main ticket queue. They often come bundled with guided tours, which also help you move through the site more efficiently.

Plan 1.5 to 2 hours inside the Monumental Zone to see the key features without rushing. Add another 30-60 minutes if you want to walk in the free park area, explore the viaducts, or climb to Turó de les Tres Creus.

Morning visits usually bring cooler temperatures and softer light, helpful for photos and for walking uphill to the park. Late afternoon or early evening can feel calmer once large tour groups thin out, and city lights start to appear below. Avoid the midday summer heat if you can.

A guide is not required, but it can add strong value. With a guided tour, you hear the stories and learn about the symbolism and design ideas behind the mosaics and structures, which you might miss on your own.

If tickets are scarce or you want deeper context, a guided option is worth considering.

Park Güell reviews

4.4
45545 verified customer reviews
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Customer images

3 reviews
O
Oltiana,  Albania Albania
29 Nov 2025
Excellent
Very highly recomended. You find there a well combination of nature, art, history and religion. The guide, Najra made it even more interesting with all the info she shared and the way she brought...
Very highly recomended. You find there a well combination of nature, art, history and religion. The guide, Najra made it even more interesting with all the info she shared and the way she brought everything.
Park Güell: Guided Tour + Skip The Line Ticket
D
Dirk,  Germany Germany
21 Oct 2025
Good
The ticket booking was easy and was accepted from officials with no issues. The Audioguide was one of the most simple ones we ever experienced. Even the travel guide Barcelona was more detailed …
Park Güell: Entry Ticket + Audio Guide
N
Nicolas,  Ireland Ireland
15 Oct 2025
Excellent
Thanks to our guide, Albert we had an amazing experience. Local guides like him, are connected with the culture and thank to them you can enjoy the context around the heritage you're visiting. Gracias!
Thanks to our guide, Albert we had an amazing experience. Local guides like him, are connected with the culture and thank to them you can enjoy the context around the heritage you're visiting. Gracias!
Park Güell: Guided Tour + Skip The Line Ticket

About: Park Güell

Park Güell is Gaudí's fantasy-fuelled park in Carmel Hill, Barcelona. Walk amongst fantastic creations built in Gaudí's special brand of Catalan Modernism and enjoy panoramic views of Barcelona.

Park Güell

Friday
09:30:00 - 17:30:00
Saturday
09:30:00 - 17:30:00
Sunday
09:30:00 - 17:30:00
Monday
09:30:00 - 17:30:00
Tuesday
09:30:00 - 17:30:00
Wednesday
09:30:00 - 17:30:00
Thursday
09:30:00 - 17:30:00
Park Güell
Carrer d'Olot, 11, 08024, Barcelona
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