





Built nearly 2,000 years ago, the Pantheon blends technical genius with spiritual grandeur.
With advance tickets and a little planning you can avoid the queues and enjoy the atmosphere without the crowds..
The Pantheon is open daily with extended hours; times may vary for religious services or holidays.
Occasionally closed for special liturgies, restoration works or public ceremonies
Piazza della Rotonda, 00186 Rome, Italy
The Pantheon sits in the heart of Rome’s historic center, easy to reach on foot, by bus or by metro. The main entrance faces Piazza della Rotonda.
Metro A to Barberini or Spagna, then a 10–15 minute walk via Via del Corso or nearby streets. Buses 40, 64, 87 and others stop nearby at Largo Argentina or Corso Vittorio.
The center is a limited traffic zone; public parking is scarce and pricey. It's best to park outside the ZTL and walk or take transit.
Many routes serve the area; check ATAC for live schedules and stops near Largo di Torre Argentina or Piazza Venezia.
From Piazza Navona, it's a 5‑minute stroll; from the Trevi Fountain, about 10 minutes through charming alleys.
Ancient Roman engineering at its finest, a soaring oculus open to the sky, and the tombs of Raphael and Italy's kings.

Understand the 2025 access rules: free vs paid days, reservation portals, audio guides, queue strategy, respectful condu...
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A clear chronological narrative: Republican context, Hadrian’s rebuild, medieval survival, Renaissance admiration, natio...
Learn More →Look up through the 9‑meter opening in the dome — sunlight and weather sweep through, connecting earth and sky.
Walk beneath the largest unreinforced concrete dome ever built, a masterpiece of Roman engineering and perfect geometry.
Pay your respects to the Renaissance genius, buried here alongside Italian kings and celebrated artists.

Skip‑the‑line tickets mean less waiting and more time inside.
Guided tours bring the ancient stories and engineering secrets to life.