How much does the Pantheon ticket cost?

The official full-price Pantheon ticket is €7. The reduced ticket is €2 for eligible EU citizens aged 18–25, and some visitors can enter free, including under-18s, residents of the Municipality of Rome, visitors using the first Sunday free-entry rule, tour guides with valid professional proof, and other official concession categories.

If you see older pages saying the Pantheon costs €5, treat that information carefully. The official Pantheon source says the entrance fee increased from €5 to €7 from July 1, 2026, while existing reductions and exemptions remained unchanged.

Use the official price as your baseline before comparing anything more expensive. A higher-priced ticket, audio guide, hosted-entry product, guided tour, or marketplace listing may be worth it, but only when it clearly gives you something extra, such as useful context, a live guide, language choice, hosted support, cancellation flexibility, or a time that fits your itinerary.

For the current official ticket rules, check the Pantheon / Direzione Musei page. For standard online ticket purchase, use Musei Italiani.

If you only need standard entry, start with the official ticket route. If you are comparing ticket types more broadly, use the main guide here:

Pantheon tickets

Official Pantheon ticket prices in 2026

The official Pantheon ticket price is the best baseline to use before comparing any audio guide, hosted-entry product, guided tour, or third-party listing. If you only need standard entry, start with the official price first.

Ticket type Current price Who it is for What to check
Full-price ticket €7 Most adult visitors who do not qualify for a reduction or free entry Date, time slot, visitor name, and official ticket route
Reduced ticket €2 Eligible EU citizens aged 18–25 ID, age, citizenship, and eligibility proof
Free entry €0 Eligible visitors, including under-18s, residents of the Municipality of Rome, tour guides with valid professional proof, and other official concession categories Proof, ID, and the current official rules
First Sunday / free-admission days €0 Visitors using official free-entry days No online reservation; queue required to collect a non-nominal free ticket

Pantheon tickets are nominal, so the visitor name should match the ID presented at the entrance.

Official access is through the Musei Italiani website, the Musei Italiani app, or on-site ticket offices and automatic vending machines. If your goal is the lowest-cost standard visit, this is the route to check before paying more elsewhere.

Be careful with pages that show a low headline price but do not clearly explain what is included. A third-party product may be an audio guide, hosted-entry service, guided tour, app-based product, or combined Rome experience rather than a simple official admission ticket.

For help checking the official route and booking channels, use these guides:

Why some pages still show the old €5 price

Some Pantheon ticket pages still show the old €5 price. That is usually a sign that the page has not been fully updated, or that it was written before the latest price change took effect.

The official Pantheon source says the entrance fee increased from €5 to €7 from July 1, 2026, while existing reductions and exemptions remained unchanged. That means €7 is now the official full-price baseline to use when comparing ticket options.

This matters because Pantheon prices can look confusing in search results. One page may show the old basic entry price, another may show an audio-guide product, and a marketplace listing may show a higher price for a hosted-entry service or guided tour.

The safest approach is to separate the official admission price from visitor-experience prices. If a ticket costs more than the official price, check what extra service is included before deciding whether it is worth paying for.

Pantheon reduced tickets: who qualifies for the €2 price?

The reduced Pantheon ticket is €2. The main reduced category listed by the official Pantheon source is for EU citizens aged 18–25, meaning from 18 years old up to and including the day of the 25th birthday.

Choose the reduced ticket only if you clearly qualify. You should be ready to show ID or eligibility proof at the entrance, because the ticket category needs to match the visitor using it.

This is especially important because Pantheon tickets are nominal. If the name on the ticket does not match the ID presented at the entrance, access can be denied.

If you are not sure whether the reduced category applies to you, check the official ticket route before booking. It is better to choose the correct ticket type than to risk problems at the entrance.

For help checking official booking channels, use:

Where to buy Pantheon tickets

Pantheon free entry: who can visit for free?

Some visitors can enter the Pantheon free, but free entry still needs to match the official rules. Do not assume you qualify without checking the current category and bringing any proof that may be required.

The main free-entry categories listed by the official Pantheon source include visitors under 18, residents of the Municipality of Rome, visitors entering on the first Sunday of each month, and tour guides with valid professional proof. The official source also points to the Ministry of Culture concessions page for the full list of eligible categories.

If you qualify for free entry because of age, residence, professional status, or another concession, be ready to show ID or proof at the entrance. The ticket or access route needs to match the person using it.

Free entry is helpful when you clearly qualify, but it is not the same as guaranteed smooth entry. On free Sundays and free-admission days, online reservations are not available, and visitors must queue to collect a non-nominal free ticket at the entrance.

If your Rome itinerary is fixed, free-entry planning needs extra care. Saving the ticket price may not be worth it if the queue or timing uncertainty makes the rest of your day harder.

Is the Pantheon free on the first Sunday of the month?

Yes. The Pantheon is free on the first Sunday of each month, but it is not the best choice for every visitor.

On free Sundays and other free-admission days, online reservations are not available. Visitors must queue at the entrance to collect a non-nominal free ticket, so you have less control over timing than you would with a paid reserved ticket.

This can be a good option if your Rome schedule is flexible and you do not mind waiting. It is weaker if the Pantheon needs to fit into a fixed day with timed museum visits, restaurant bookings, airport travel, or a guided tour elsewhere in the city.

The tradeoff is simple: free Sunday can save the ticket price, but it can cost you predictability. If saving €7 matters more than controlling your visit time, it may be worth considering. If your itinerary is tight, booking a paid ticket for a normal visit day is usually the safer choice.

Do not confuse free Sunday with skip-the-line access. Free entry does not mean no queue, no checks, no crowds, or guaranteed immediate entry.

Why some Pantheon tickets cost more than the official price

If a Pantheon ticket costs more than the official admission price, it may not be a simple entry ticket. Higher-priced options often include an added service, such as an audio guide, live guide, hosted-entry support, cancellation flexibility, language choice, or a combined Rome experience.

That can be useful, but only when the extra value is clear before you pay. A higher price is not automatically better, and it should not be treated as the official Pantheon ticket price.

Reason for higher price May be worth it when Weak when
Audio guide You want light context without joining a live tour Admission is unclear or the language does not work for you
Live guided tour You want someone to explain the dome, oculus, architecture, tombs, and basilica setting You only want a quick self-guided visit
Hosted-entry support You want help with ticket handling, meeting instructions, or logistics It is presented as special official access without explaining the benefit
Cancellation flexibility Your Rome plans may change and the terms are clearly better The refund or change rules are unclear
Language choice You need an audio guide or live guide in a specific language The language is not confirmed before booking
Combined Rome experience You want a wider walking tour or route that includes the Pantheon You only need Pantheon entry

Pantheon Roma can make sense when the higher price buys a Basilica-connected visitor experience, such as audio-guide or guided-tour context. Marketplaces such as GetYourGuide, Tiqets, or Headout can also be useful when they solve a real booking problem, but they should not be confused with the official ticket price.

The key is to check what the higher price includes. If the listing clearly explains admission, supplier, product type, language, meeting point, cancellation terms, and final price, it may be worth comparing. If those details are vague, treat the option carefully.

For more help deciding whether the extra cost is worth it, use these guides:

When paying more for a Pantheon ticket is worth it

It can be worth paying more than the official Pantheon ticket price when the extra cost gives you something useful and clearly explained before booking. The important question is not just “Is this more expensive?” but “What am I getting for the higher price?”

Paying more can make sense if the ticket or tour includes a live guide, a useful audio guide, hosted-entry support, flexible cancellation terms, a language you need, or a combined Rome experience that actually fits your plans.

A guided tour is the strongest reason to pay more if you want help understanding what you are seeing. The Pantheon is a short visit for many travelers, but the dome, oculus, ancient Roman engineering, Raphael’s tomb, Christian basilica history, and later changes all benefit from explanation.

An audio guide can also be a reasonable upgrade if you want light context without joining a group. Before booking one, check whether Pantheon admission is included, which language is offered, whether you need an app, and whether there are pickup or meeting instructions.

Hosted-entry support can be useful if the listing clearly explains what the host does, where you meet, and how the ticket handling works. It is weaker if the page makes it sound like special official access without explaining the practical benefit.

Paying more is usually weaker when standard official entry is available, you only want a quick self-guided visit, or the listing does not clearly explain admission, supplier, product type, meeting point, language, cancellation terms, and final price.

Use this rule: pay the official price for simple entry, and pay more only when the extra service solves a real problem or improves the visit in a way you actually care about.

Cheap, fast-track, and skip-the-line tickets: what to watch for

Be careful with Pantheon ticket pages that lead with a very low price, a vague “from” price, or phrases such as “fast-track,” “priority entry,” or “skip-the-line.” These words can make a ticket sound better than it really is.

The official Pantheon source says “skip-the-line” entry is not available. That does not mean every higher-priced ticket is useless, but it does mean you should not pay more just because a page suggests special fast access.

A higher-priced product may still be useful if it clearly includes something extra, such as an audio guide, live guide, hosted support, cancellation flexibility, or a combined Rome experience. The problem is when the page does not clearly explain what you are paying for.

Before booking, check whether Pantheon admission is included, who the supplier is, what type of product it is, where you need to meet, which language is offered, and what the cancellation terms are.

Hosted entry is not the same as a guided tour. An audio guide is not the same as a live guide. Pre-booking is not the same as no waiting, no checks, no crowds, or special official access.

If the practical benefit is unclear, treat the ticket as a weak choice. The official price is the baseline, and any higher price should be justified by a clear service you actually want.

For a deeper explanation, use the dedicated guide:

Pantheon skip-the-line tickets

Is the Pantheon included in Roma Pass or Omnia Card?

No. The official Pantheon source says the Pantheon is not included in the Roma Pass or Omnia Card circuit.

That means you should not buy Roma Pass or Omnia Card expecting it to cover standard Pantheon admission. If you already have one of these passes, check the pass provider’s current inclusions, but plan Pantheon entry separately unless the provider clearly states a current Pantheon inclusion.

This matters because a city pass can still be useful for other Rome attractions or transport, but it should not be treated as a way to avoid the Pantheon ticket price.

If your main goal is to visit the Pantheon, use the official ticket route for standard entry, or compare a clearly described audio-guide, guided-tour, or hosted-entry product if you want extra support or context.

For more detail, use the dedicated guide:

Is the Pantheon included in Roma Pass or Omnia Card?

What to check before paying for Pantheon tickets

Before paying for any Pantheon ticket, check the details carefully. This matters whether you are using the official route, a visitor-experience route, or a third-party marketplace.

What to check Why it matters
Current price The official full-price ticket is the baseline. Be careful with older pages that still show the previous €5 price.
Booking route Check whether you are using Musei Italiani, Pantheon Roma, an on-site channel, or a third-party marketplace.
Admission included The page should clearly say whether entry to the Pantheon is included.
Product type Entry-only, audio guide, hosted entry, and live guided tour are different products.
Date and time Check the visit date and time slot before payment, especially if your Rome itinerary is fixed.
Visitor name and ID rules Ticket details should match the visitor using the ticket. Bring ID if required.
Reduced or free-entry eligibility Do not choose a reduced or free ticket unless you clearly qualify and can show proof if asked.
Meeting point Hosted-entry, audio-guide, and guided-tour products may require meeting someone outside or near the Pantheon.
Language An audio guide or live guide is only useful if the language works for you.
Cancellation terms Marketplace listings and visitor-experience products may have different refund or change rules.
Final price Compare the final price with what extra service you are actually receiving.
Fast-track or priority wording The official Pantheon source says “skip-the-line” entry is not available, so check what any priority wording really means.

If any of these details are unclear, slow down before booking. A higher price can be reasonable when it buys useful context, support, flexibility, or a better fit for your schedule. It is a weaker choice when the page does not clearly explain what you are paying for.

The safest rule is simple: pay the official price for standard entry, use reduced or free entry only if you clearly qualify, and pay more only when the extra service is clear before you book.

Compare Pantheon ticket and tour prices carefully

After you understand the official Pantheon ticket price, you can compare higher-priced options more fairly. The important point is to compare like with like. A standard admission ticket, an audio-guide product, a hosted-entry service, and a live guided tour are not the same thing.

Marketplace options can be useful when they clearly add value. For example, a higher price may make sense if the product includes a good guide, a language you need, hosted support, flexible cancellation terms, or a time that fits your itinerary when the official route does not.

They are weaker choices when the official ticket is available and enough for your visit, or when the listing does not clearly explain admission, supplier, product type, meeting point, language, cancellation terms, and final price.

Do not treat marketplace prices as official Pantheon ticket prices. Treat them as prices for third-party ticket, tour, audio-guide, hosted-entry, or combined-experience products, and check exactly what is included before booking.

HowdyEurope may earn a commission when you book through selected links. That does not change our advice. If the official ticket is the better choice, we say so. If a guided tour is worth paying more for, we explain why.

If you want to compare Pantheon ticket products, audio-guide options, hosted-entry listings, and guided tours, check the details carefully before paying.

Compare Pantheon tickets and tours on GetYourGuide

FAQ about Pantheon ticket prices

How much are Pantheon tickets?

The official full-price Pantheon ticket is €7. Reduced tickets are €2 for eligible EU citizens aged 18–25, and some visitors can enter free if they qualify for an official concession.

What is the official Pantheon ticket price?

The official full-price Pantheon ticket is €7. Use this as the baseline before comparing audio guides, guided tours, hosted-entry products, or marketplace listings.

Did Pantheon tickets increase in price?

Yes. The official Pantheon source says the full entrance fee increased from €5 to €7 from July 1, 2026. Existing reductions and exemptions remained unchanged.

Who gets reduced Pantheon tickets?

The main reduced category is EU citizens aged 18–25. The reduced ticket is €2. Bring ID or eligibility proof, and choose the reduced ticket only if you clearly qualify.

Who gets free entry to the Pantheon?

Main free-entry categories include visitors under 18, residents of the Municipality of Rome, visitors entering on the first Sunday of each month, tour guides with valid professional proof, and other official concession categories.

Is the Pantheon free on the first Sunday?

Yes. The Pantheon is free on the first Sunday of each month, but online reservations are not available on free Sundays or free-admission days. Visitors must queue to collect a non-nominal free ticket at the entrance.

Can you reserve free Pantheon tickets online?

No. On free Sundays and free-admission days, online reservations are not available. You need to queue at the entrance to collect a non-nominal free ticket.

Why are some Pantheon tickets more expensive?

Some Pantheon ticket products cost more because they may include an audio guide, live guide, hosted-entry support, cancellation flexibility, language choice, service fees, or a combined Rome experience. Check what is included before paying more than the official price.

Is a Pantheon guided tour worth paying more for?

A guided tour can be worth paying more for if you want live explanation of the dome, oculus, Roman engineering, Raphael’s tomb, and the Pantheon’s basilica setting. If you only want a quick self-guided visit, the official ticket is usually enough.

Are Pantheon skip-the-line tickets worth the higher price?

Be careful. The official Pantheon source says “skip-the-line” entry is not available. Do not pay more just because a page uses fast-track, priority, or skip-the-line wording. Check what practical benefit is actually included.

Is the Pantheon included in Roma Pass or Omnia Card?

No. The official Pantheon source says the Pantheon is not included in the Roma Pass or Omnia Card circuit. Do not buy either pass expecting it to cover standard Pantheon entry.

What should you check before paying for Pantheon tickets?

Check the current price, booking route, admission inclusion, product type, date and time, visitor name and ID rules, reduced or free-entry eligibility, meeting point, language, cancellation terms, final price, and any fast-track or priority wording.

More Pantheon ticket guides

Use these related Pantheon guides if you need more help before choosing what to book. Start with the main ticket guide if you are still deciding between standard entry, audio guides, guided tours, and marketplace options.

Final recommendation: what should you pay?

For most visitors, the official Pantheon ticket price is the right baseline. Pay the official full price if you only need standard entry and do not qualify for a reduced or free ticket.

Use the reduced ticket only if you clearly qualify, and bring proof of eligibility. Use free entry only if you match an official free-entry category, and remember that free Sundays and free-admission days are queue-based because online reservations are not available.

Pay more than the official price only when the higher-priced option gives you clear extra value. That might mean a useful audio guide, a live guided tour, hosted-entry support, better cancellation terms, a language you need, or a combined Rome experience that fits your plans.

Do not pay more just because a ticket page uses words such as “cheap,” “fast-track,” “priority,” or “skip-the-line.” Check what is actually included before booking, especially admission, supplier, product type, meeting point, language, cancellation terms, and final price.

The safest rule is simple: official price for standard entry, reduced or free entry if you clearly qualify, and a higher-priced option only when the added value is clear before you pay.