The combined Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine Hill ticket is the standard entry product for the Colosseum Archaeological Park - nearly every Colosseum ticket includes Roman Forum and Palatine Hill access by default. The decision most visitors face is not whether to add these two sites but whether to stay with standard combined access or upgrade to the Arena Floor, the Underground, or a guided tour that includes restricted areas. Prices listed here are approximate and subject to change; verify current rates at the official booking site before purchasing (as of 2025-2026).
Colosseum ticket guides
What the Combined Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine Hill Ticket Includes
Standard combined entry covers six distinct attractions under one ticket. Inside the Colosseum, access runs across tiers one and two - the lower seating levels and the internal corridor system from which the full scale of the amphitheater is visible. The Colosseum Museum is also included; it occupies a dedicated gallery inside the structure and displays original artifacts tied to the building's construction, renovation history, and use during gladiatorial events.
The Roman Forum entry covers the full open-air archaeological park. Key structures within the park include the Temple of Saturn, the Curia Julia (the senate building), the Arch of Septimius Severus, and the Via Sacra, the processional road that ran through the Forum's center. The Basilica of Maxentius and the Temple of Vesta are also within the walking area covered by standard access.
Palatine Hill access is shared with the Roman Forum under one combined entrance. The hill contains the Domus Tiberiana, a Julio-Claudian palace complex that has undergone significant restoration and reopened to visitors as a dedicated site. The new Roman Forum Museum, located within the Palatine zone, is also covered - it houses archaeological finds from the Forum excavations, including inscriptions, ceramic fragments, and building materials recovered during ongoing digs. Palatine Hill also offers elevated views over the Roman Forum below and the Circus Maximus to the south.
| Site or Feature | Included | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Colosseum - tiers 1 and 2 | Yes | Timed entry required |
| Colosseum Museum | Yes | Inside the Colosseum |
| Roman Forum | Yes | Separate entrance; 24-hr window |
| Palatine Hill | Yes | Shared entrance with Forum |
| Domus Tiberiana | Yes | On Palatine Hill |
| New Roman Forum Museum | Yes | Within Palatine zone |
| Super Sites | No | ~€4 upgrade; see below |
| Arena Floor | No | Separate ticket required |
| Underground | No | Guided ticket required |
| Colosseum tiers 3, 4 and 5 | No | Guided tours only |
| Audio guide | No | Add-on; varies by vendor |
Super Sites: What They Are and Whether to Upgrade
Super Sites are a defined set of restricted archaeological zones within the Roman Forum and Palatine Hill complex that require an upgrade beyond standard admission. The upgrade costs approximately €4 on top of the standard ticket price (as of 2025-2026) and can be added at the time of booking or purchased on site at the Forum entrance. Visitors who book Arena Floor tickets, Underground tours, or most full guided tour products receive Super Sites access automatically - the upgrade is bundled into those higher-tier products and does not need to be purchased separately.
Standard combined ticket holders who want to maximise coverage of the Forum and Palatine zone should add the Super Sites upgrade at the point of purchase rather than on the day, as on-site availability during peak periods is not guaranteed.
What the Combined Ticket Does Not Include
The Arena Floor - the wooden reconstruction at the center of the amphitheater where gladiators competed - is not part of standard combined access. It requires a dedicated Arena Floor ticket, which is a separate product with its own pricing and availability. The Colosseum Underground, which covers the two-level hypogeum beneath the arena where fighters and animals were held before events, is restricted to guided tours only and is not accessible with a standard combined ticket. Upper tiers of the Colosseum - levels three, four, and five - are only accessible through specific guided tour products. The Mamertine Prison (Carcer Tullianum), located near the Forum entrance, is a separate paid attraction not covered by the combined ticket.
See All Colosseum Ticket Options
Combined Ticket Price: Adult, Reduced and Free Entry in 2025-2026
The standard combined ticket is priced at approximately €18 for adult visitors as of 2025-2026. A mandatory booking fee of €2 applies to all online reservations through the official site and most third-party platforms. Prices are subject to change; confirm current rates at the official booking site before purchasing. Full pricing across all ticket types - including Arena Floor, Underground, and guided tour products - is covered in the Colosseum ticket prices guide.
| Visitor Category | Ticket Price | Eligibility Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Adult (full price) | ~€18 | All visitors 18 and over |
| Reduced - EU citizens 18-25 | ~€2 | Valid EU ID required at entry |
| Children 0-17 | Free | No charge; booking still required |
| Super Sites upgrade | ~€4 extra | Added to any standard ticket |
| Booking fee (online) | ~€2 | Applied per transaction online |
Reduced Ticket: EU Citizen Age 18-25 Eligibility
The reduced rate of approximately €2 applies to citizens of European Union member states aged 18 up to but not including 25. The reduction ends the day after the visitor turns 25. EU citizenship must be demonstrated with a valid identity document at the entrance - a passport or national ID card is acceptable. Citizens of non-EU states are not eligible for this reduction at the standard rate, with one exception: non-EU nationals holding a valid Italian residence permit issued for work, family, humanitarian, or study reasons by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs qualify for the same reduced rate. Full eligibility rules for discounts and concessions are at tickets for EU citizens, seniors and students.
Free Entry: First Sunday of the Month
The Colosseum Archaeological Park participates in the Italian Ministry of Culture's first Sunday free admission initiative. On the first Sunday of each month, the combined Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine Hill ticket is available at no charge. Free tickets are distributed in person at the ticket office in Piazza del Colosseo (near the Temple of Venus and Rome) and at Largo della Salara Vecchia, in order of arrival. No advance online booking is available for free Sunday entry. Queues on free Sundays begin well before opening and available slots are exhausted quickly during peak months. Roma Pass and Membership Card holders also collect their free Sunday tickets at the ticket office in person rather than using their pass for timed entry. Full details on eligibility and what to expect on free Sundays are at free entry: first Sunday and who qualifies.
Booking Fee and Third-Party Pricing
The official site applies a ~€2 booking fee per online transaction regardless of the number of tickets in the order. Third-party platforms - GetYourGuide, Tiqets, Viator, Headout, and Klook - set their own service fees on top of the base ticket price. The total cost through a third party will typically run €3-€6 higher than the official site for a standard adult ticket. That premium reflects the booking fee, platform service charge, and in some cases the inclusion of an audio guide or flexible cancellation terms not available through the official site.
How the 24-Hour Validity Window Works: Two Entrances, One Entry Each
The combined ticket operates on a split validity system. The Colosseum requires a timed entry slot booked in advance - the entry time selected at checkout is the only window during which the Colosseum entrance is valid. The Roman Forum and Palatine Hill do not require a timed slot; they are valid for 24 hours from the moment of first entry anywhere within the archaeological park. First entry can be at the Colosseum or at the Forum/Palatine entrance - whichever is visited first starts the 24-hour clock.
The Two Separate Entrances
The Colosseum and the Roman Forum/Palatine Hill complex have two physically separate entrances. They are not interchangeable and each entrance admits visitors once only - re-entry is not permitted at either site after exit.
| Site | Entrance Location | Entry Type | Re-entry |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colosseum | Piazza del Colosseo | Timed slot - booked in advance | Not permitted |
| Roman Forum and Palatine Hill | Largo della Salara Vecchia | Open within 24-hour window | Not permitted |
A second entrance to the Roman Forum and Palatine Hill zone exists at Via Sacra. Both the Largo della Salara Vecchia and Via Sacra entrances access the same combined Forum/Palatine area and are covered by the same ticket. Visitors arriving late to their Colosseum time slot will not be admitted and are not entitled to a refund or rebooking - the official site states this explicitly in its visitor regulations.
The 75-Minute Maximum Stay Inside the Colosseum
The Colosseum Archaeological Park visitor regulations (Article 1, Paragraph 4) set a maximum permitted stay of 75 minutes inside the Colosseum for standard combined ticket holders. This limit applies from the moment of entry through the Colosseum turnstile. Visitors who wish to spend longer inside the amphitheater - for example, to cover the upper tiers or access the Underground - must book a guided tour product, which operates under different time conditions. The 75-minute rule applies specifically to the Colosseum interior; time spent at the Roman Forum and Palatine Hill is not subject to a stated maximum under the standard ticket.
Splitting the Visit Across Two Days
The 24-hour window makes a two-day itinerary practical and, during peak season, often preferable. A visitor who enters the Colosseum at 10:00 AM on Tuesday has valid access to the Roman Forum and Palatine Hill until 10:00 AM on Wednesday. This allows the Colosseum to be covered on day one and the Forum/Palatine complex - which typically requires 1.5 to 2 hours to cover thoroughly, more with the Domus Tiberiana and new Roman Forum Museum - to be covered the following morning when crowds are lighter.
Visitors who plan to cover all three sites in a single day should allocate a minimum of 2.5 to 3 hours total: approximately 75 minutes inside the Colosseum, 45-60 minutes across the Roman Forum, and 45-60 minutes on Palatine Hill including the Domus Tiberiana. Morning entry slots for the Colosseum followed by an afternoon Forum/Palatine visit is the most common single-day itinerary. Time estimates for each site are covered in more detail at how long to spend at the Colosseum.
Booking the Colosseum Entry Time: What Happens at Checkout
At the point of purchase - on the official site or any third-party platform - visitors select a specific date and entry time for the Colosseum. That time slot is fixed at checkout and governs when the Colosseum entrance is valid. The Roman Forum and Palatine Hill entry time does not need to be selected at checkout; it is open within the 24-hour window and requires no separate reservation. On the official site, the booking process requires the full name of every ticket holder. Names on the booking must match the photo ID presented at the Colosseum entrance - mismatches will result in denied entry without refund.
Group bookings are not available as a single transaction on the official site. Groups must purchase individual tickets, ideally within the same booking session to secure the same time slot across all members. The official site does not permit cumulative purchases of more than a certain number of tickets per transaction - groups of eight or more should use the dedicated group booking channel.
Where to Buy the Combined Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine Hill Ticket
The combined ticket is available through the official Colosseum booking site and a set of authorised third-party platforms. The official site offers the lowest base price. Third-party platforms charge a service fee on top but frequently carry inventory when the official site shows a time slot as sold out, and several offer flexible cancellation terms not available through the official channel. A full vendor comparison with current availability is at where to buy Colosseum tickets.
| Vendor | Base Price | Booking Fee | Cancellation | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Official site (ticketing.colosseo.it) | ~€18 | ~€2 per order | Non-refundable | Lowest price; direct booking |
| GetYourGuide | ~€21-€24 | Included in price | Varies by product | Flexible options; availability |
| Tiqets | ~€21-€24 | Included in price | Varies by product | Availability; mobile tickets |
| Viator | ~€22-€26 | Included in price | Varies by product | Bundled audio guide options |
| Headout | ~€21-€25 | Included in price | Varies by product | Flexible and fixed options |
| Klook | ~€22-€26 | Included in price | Varies by product | Multilingual guided options |
All prices above are approximate as of 2025-2026 and subject to change. Third-party prices fluctuate based on season, availability, and whether add-ons such as audio guides or flexible cancellation are bundled into the product. Check each platform directly for current pricing before booking.
Official Site: ticketing.colosseo.it
The official Colosseum booking site is operated by the Colosseum Archaeological Park (Parco Archeologico del Colosseo). It carries the lowest base price for the standard combined ticket at approximately €18 adult plus the ~€2 booking fee per order. The booking window opens 30 days in advance of the visit date. Slots for peak dates - particularly morning entries in June, July, and August - can sell out within hours of the 30-day window opening. The official site does not offer refunds on standard combined tickets once purchased. Ticket names are mandatory at checkout and must match the photo ID presented at the Colosseum entrance.
The official site is the only channel through which the reduced EU citizen 18-25 rate (~€2) and the free children's ticket can be booked online at face value without a third-party markup. Visitors eligible for the reduced rate should bring the qualifying EU identity document to the entrance, as eligibility is verified on arrival.
GetYourGuide
GetYourGuide lists multiple combined ticket products for the Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine Hill, ranging from standard timed entry to options that bundle an audio guide, hosted entry with a staff member present at the entrance, or upgrade to Arena Floor access. Cancellation terms vary by specific product - some GetYourGuide listings offer free cancellation up to 24 hours before the visit; others are non-refundable. Verify the cancellation policy on the specific product page before completing the purchase, as the terms are not uniform across the platform's Colosseum inventory. GetYourGuide inventory is often available for dates showing as sold out on the official site, particularly for shoulder and low season visits.
Tiqets
Tiqets operates as an authorised reseller for the Colosseum and typically carries real-time availability for the standard combined ticket. Mobile ticket delivery is standard on Tiqets - tickets are stored in the app and scanned directly at the entrance without printing. Tiqets listings include options with and without audio guides. Cancellation terms differ by product; the platform distinguishes clearly between non-cancellable and flexible products at the point of purchase. Tiqets is one of the more reliable third-party options for last-minute availability checks when the official site is sold out.
Viator
Viator's Colosseum listings skew toward bundled products - standard combined tickets are often packaged with an audio guide, a guided tour component, or both. Pure entry-only products without a guide or audio component are available but less prominent in Viator's inventory. Prices on Viator tend to run slightly higher than GetYourGuide or Tiqets for equivalent access levels, reflecting bundled inclusions. Cancellation policies vary by operator; Viator displays the specific policy for each listing before checkout. Viator is particularly useful for visitors who want a guided experience and prefer to compare multiple operators in one place rather than booking directly with individual tour companies.
Headout
Headout lists both fixed non-cancellable and flexible cancellable combined ticket options for the Colosseum. The platform makes the distinction between these two product types clear at the listing level - fixed tickets are priced lower; flexible tickets carry a premium that reflects the refund option. Headout also lists upgrade products that add Arena Floor access or a hosted entry service to the standard combined ticket. Arrival instructions on Headout specify presenting the voucher at the Colosseum entrance at least 15 minutes before the booked time slot.
Buying at the Ticket Office on the Day
Physical ticket offices are located at Piazza del Colosseo (near the Temple of Venus and Rome) and at Largo della Salara Vecchia. On-site purchase is possible but carries significant risk during peak season. Queue times at the ticket office can reach 45 to 90 minutes during high season months, and available Colosseum time slots for the same day or following days can sell out entirely before the queue clears. On-site purchase is a viable option during low season (January and February) when demand is lower and same-day slots are more likely to be available, but it is never guaranteed. Detailed guidance on on-site purchasing conditions is at last-minute Colosseum tickets.
How Far Ahead to Book the Combined Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine Hill Ticket: A Timeline by Season
Booking lead time for the combined ticket is determined by two factors: the season of the visit and the specific time slot wanted. Morning entries on peak summer dates are the scarcest inventory in the entire Colosseum ticketing system. The 30-day booking window on the official site is the hard ceiling for advance planning through the official channel - slots cannot be reserved earlier than 30 days out regardless of how far ahead the trip is planned. Third-party platforms operate their own inventory systems and may carry availability beyond what the official site shows at any given moment. Full lead time guidance across all ticket types is at how far in advance to book Colosseum tickets.
| Season | Months | Recommended Lead Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peak | June, July, August | 4-5 weeks ahead | Morning slots sell out within hours of release |
| Shoulder | April, May, September, October | 2-3 weeks ahead | Easter week and Italian public holidays book faster |
| Low | November, December, January, February | 3-7 days ahead | Same-day possible but not guaranteed |
| March | March | 1-2 weeks ahead | Demand rises sharply mid-month toward Easter |
How the 30-Day Booking Window Works on the Official Site
The official Colosseum booking site releases inventory on a rolling 30-day basis. On any given day, the furthest available date for booking is exactly 30 days out. Slots for a Saturday in July, for example, become bookable on the Saturday exactly 30 days prior. Visitors targeting a specific peak-season date should be ready to book the moment that date enters the 30-day window. Waiting even 24 to 48 hours after a peak date becomes bookable can result in the preferred time slot - particularly early morning entries between 9:00 AM and 11:00 AM - being fully taken.
Third-party platforms do not share the same 30-day ceiling in all cases. Some operators purchase allocations in advance and hold inventory independently of the official site's real-time availability display. A date that shows as sold out on the official site may still have tickets available through GetYourGuide or Tiqets. Checking both channels simultaneously is the most reliable approach when booking for peak dates.
Peak Season: June, July and August
June through August is the highest-demand period for Colosseum tickets. The Colosseum receives over 12 million visitors annually, and a disproportionate share of those visits are concentrated in these three months. Morning time slots - particularly 9:00 AM, 9:30 AM, and 10:00 AM entries - are the first to disappear when a new date opens in the booking window. Afternoon slots from 2:00 PM onward generally remain available longer but are subject to higher heat exposure on Palatine Hill, which has limited shade coverage across its archaeological zones. Visitors booking for peak season should treat the 4-5 week lead time as a minimum rather than a target, and should check third-party platforms as a fallback if the official site shows no availability for the preferred date.
Shoulder Season: April, May, September and October
Shoulder season represents the best balance of availability and visiting conditions for most travelers. Demand is meaningfully lower than peak months and a 2-3 week lead time is generally sufficient to secure a preferred time slot. Two exceptions apply within the shoulder window. Easter week - which falls in March or April depending on the year - generates demand comparable to peak summer, and tickets for that week should be booked as soon as the 30-day window opens. Italian national public holidays, including April 25 (Liberation Day) and May 1 (Labour Day), also see a spike in domestic visitor demand that can exhaust availability faster than the surrounding dates in those months.
Low Season: November Through February
November through February is the lowest-demand period. A booking lead time of 3 to 7 days is typically sufficient for most dates during these months, and same-day tickets through the official site or third-party platforms are more likely to be available than at any other time of year. Same-day availability is never guaranteed - the Colosseum's capacity limit of 3,000 simultaneous visitors means that even in low season a busy Saturday or a free-entry Sunday can exhaust available slots. The first Sunday of each month, when entry is free, draws high volumes regardless of season and same-day tickets at the ticket office are distributed on a first-come basis with no online option. Visitors who want certainty even in low season should book at least 3 days out.
Upgrade Products Sell Out Faster Than Standard Combined Tickets
The booking lead times above apply specifically to the standard combined ticket. Upgrade products - Arena Floor access, Underground guided tours, and small-group guided tours covering restricted areas - carry significantly tighter availability and sell out ahead of standard tickets in every season. Underground tour slots in particular are limited by the physical capacity of the hypogeum and by the number of licensed guides available for each session. Visitors whose primary interest is the Underground or Arena Floor should treat those products as the binding constraint on their visit date and book those first, then plan the rest of the itinerary around the secured slot. Guidance on those products is at Underground tickets and Arena Floor tickets.
Before You Visit: ID Requirements, Security, Bag Rules and Getting There
The Colosseum has a set of entry requirements and restrictions that apply to all visitors regardless of ticket type or vendor. Several of these - particularly the ID requirement and the bag restrictions - result in denied entry or significant delays if not anticipated before arrival. The Roman Forum and Palatine Hill have lighter restrictions but share the no re-entry rule that applies across the entire archaeological park.
Photo ID: Mandatory at the Colosseum Entrance
The Colosseum ticket is nominative - the name of every ticket holder must be entered at the time of booking and must match the photo ID presented at the entrance on the day of the visit. A passport or national identity card satisfies the ID requirement. The ticket office staff verify the correspondence between the name on the ticket and the document presented before admitting the visitor. A mismatch between the booked name and the ID shown is grounds for denied entry. Visitors who made a name error at checkout should contact the vendor through which they booked before their visit date - corrections may be possible in advance but are not guaranteed, and the official site does not offer name changes on confirmed bookings.
Children aged 0-17 receive free entry but still require a booking confirmation. A child's booking does not require a separate ID check at the standard entrance, but the accompanying adult's ID must correspond to the adult ticket name. For the reduced EU citizen rate (ages 18-25), the EU identity document establishing both citizenship and age must be presented at entry - without it, full adult admission will be charged or entry refused.
Security Check: What to Expect and How Long It Takes
All visitors pass through a security screening before entering the Colosseum. The check involves X-ray scanning of bags and personal items and is mandatory regardless of ticket type, booking platform, or priority entry status. Under normal conditions the security check adds 10 to 30 minutes to the entry process. During peak hours in summer - typically 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM - the security queue can extend beyond 30 minutes. Visitors with timed entry slots are expected to arrive at the Colosseum entrance at least 15 minutes before their booked time to clear security within the slot window.
The archaeological park requests that all items including mobile phones be placed in a bag or the provided tray for X-ray rather than carried through the scanner separately. This is stated in the visitor regulations as a measure to maintain the speed of the security flow during high-volume periods.
Bag and Item Restrictions at the Colosseum
A specific set of items is prohibited inside the Colosseum. Restrictions apply at the point of the security check - prohibited items cannot be stored on site and must be left elsewhere before the visit.
| Item | Permitted Inside Colosseum | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Large backpacks | No | No on-site storage available |
| Luggage and trolleys | No | No on-site storage available |
| Camping or frame backpacks | No | Bulky bags specifically prohibited |
| Glass containers | No | Applies to bottles and jars |
| Plastic water bottles | No | Bottles explicitly prohibited |
| Alcoholic beverages | No | All alcoholic drinks prohibited |
| Aerosol cans | No | Includes sunscreen sprays |
| Small day bags | Yes | Subject to X-ray at security |
| Strollers and pushchairs | Yes | Permitted for families with infants |
| Mobility aids | Yes | Accessibility provisions apply |
No luggage storage facility is available at the Colosseum or within the immediate archaeological park. Visitors arriving with luggage from an early check-out or late check-in should use one of the private left-luggage services near Termini Station or in the surrounding neighborhood before travelling to the site. The bag restriction applies specifically to the Colosseum interior - the Roman Forum and Palatine Hill do not publish the same explicit prohibition on bags, though bulky luggage remains impractical given the uneven terrain across both sites.
What to Wear and Bring
Comfortable, flat-soled footwear is necessary across all three sites. The Colosseum interior involves uneven stone flooring across multiple levels. The Roman Forum is an open archaeological site with cobbled and unpaved surfaces throughout. Palatine Hill requires a sustained uphill walk from the Forum level - the ascent involves approximately 30 to 40 metres of elevation gain across a mix of stone paths and gravel. Sun protection - a hat and sunscreen applied before arrival - is particularly important for Palatine Hill visits during spring and summer, as shade coverage across the hill is limited and the exposed plateau receives direct sun for most of the day.
Water is not available for purchase inside the Colosseum given the bottle prohibition. Drinking fountains (nasoni) are located throughout the Forum and Palatine area and provide free potable water - bringing a refillable container for use after the Colosseum section of the visit is practical. Audio guide downloads for some vendors require a smartphone app and active data connection; downloading the app and guide before arriving at the site avoids connectivity issues inside the Colosseum, where mobile signal can be intermittent on the lower tiers.
Getting to the Colosseum and Roman Forum
The Colosseum is served directly by Colosseo metro station on Line B. Journey time from Termini Station is approximately 5 minutes by metro. Bus lines 40, 64, and 170 connect Termini Station and the Vatican area to Piazza Venezia, from which the Colosseum entrance is a 5-minute walk via Via Clivo Argentario. Tram line 8 runs from Trastevere to Piazza Venezia and serves the same walking approach. No dedicated car parking exists at the site; driving to the Colosseum is not recommended given the traffic restriction zones (ZTL) that cover much of central Rome. Full transport options and walking routes are at how to get to the Colosseum.
The Roman Forum entrance at Largo della Salara Vecchia is a 5-minute walk from the Colosseum along Via Sacra. Visitors covering all three sites in sequence typically enter the Colosseum first, exit through the Colosseum's lower level, and walk directly to the Forum entrance. The Palatine Hill summit is accessible from within the Forum park via marked paths - no separate journey between sites is required when visiting the Forum and Palatine on the same entry.
Accessibility at the Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine Hill
The Colosseum provides lift access to tiers one and two for visitors with mobility needs. The accessible entrance is located at the ground level of the structure and staff are present to direct visitors requiring assistance. The Roman Forum is largely accessible at ground level, though the uneven terrain across the archaeological site presents practical difficulties for wheelchair users in some zones. Palatine Hill is the most challenging of the three sites for visitors with limited mobility - the ascent paths are steep and partially unpaved. Visitors with disabilities holding documentation from their country of residence may be eligible for reduced or free admission; full eligibility conditions are at tickets for people with disabilities.
The combined ticket covers the three core sites of the ancient Roman city in one purchase and represents the starting point for any Colosseum visit. Visitors who want access beyond tiers one and two - the Arena Floor, the Underground hypogeum, or the upper levels - need a separate product; those options are compared in full at best Colosseum ticket options.