Tuesday 30 June 2026 10:06
Rome's Pantheon hikes entry fee from 1 July
Standard ticket rises from €5 to €7 under new accord between the culture ministry and the Diocese of Rome.The entry fee for Rome's Pantheon rises from Wednesday 1 July, with the standard ticket increasing from €5 to €7 for non-resident visitors.The change follows a new agreement signed in April between Italy's culture ministry and the Diocese of Rome, which sets out an updated framework for the joint management of the monument, balancing its roles as both a state-owned landmark and an active place of worship, since the building also serves as the basilica of Santa Maria ad Martyres.
Rome residents will continue to enter free of charge, and the reduced rate of €2 for visitors aged 18 to 25 remains unchanged.
Other existing exemptions are also unaffected, including for under-18s, visitors with disabilities, school groups from EU countries and teaching staff accompanying them, as well as clergy and those attending religious services.
The additional revenue from the €2 rise will go towards the government's Piano Olivetti per la Cultura, a scheme that funds local libraries in disadvantaged and inland areas. The culture ministry said the extra resources would help broaden access to culture, support cultural production and back social regeneration projects in marginalised areas, building on funding already channelled to the publishing sector under Italy's Decreto Cultura.
Paid entry to the Pantheon was first introduced in July 2023, ending centuries of free public access. Since then, ticket revenue has been split between the culture ministry, which takes 70 per cent, and the Diocese of Rome, which receives the remaining 30 per cent.
The monument, one of Rome's most visited sites with around 4.5 million visitors in 2025, is open daily from 09.00 to 19.00, with last admission at 18.30.
The increase comes after Rome introduced a separate €2 entry fee at the Trevi Fountain.
Photo credit: Pedro Senso / Shutterstock.com
#news #tourism
read the news on Wanted in Rome - News in Italy - Rome's local English news
The entry fee for Rome's Pantheon rises from Wednesday 1 July, with the standard ticket increasing from €5 to €7 for non-resident visitors.
The change follows a new agreement signed in April between Italy's culture ministry and the Diocese of Rome, which sets out an updated framework for the joint management of the monument, balancing its roles as both a state-owned landmark and an active place of worship, since the building also serves as the basilica of Santa Maria ad Martyres.
Rome residents will continue to enter free of charge, and the reduced rate of €2 for visitors aged 18 to 25 remains unchanged.
Other existing exemptions are also unaffected, including for under-18s, visitors with disabilities, school groups from EU countries and teaching staff accompanying them, as well as clergy and those attending religious services.
The additional revenue from the €2 rise will go towards the government's Piano Olivetti per la Cultura, a scheme that funds local libraries in disadvantaged and inland areas. The culture ministry said the extra resources would help broaden access to culture, support cultural production and back social regeneration projects in marginalised areas, building on funding already channelled to the publishing sector under Italy's Decreto Cultura.
Paid entry to the Pantheon was first introduced in July 2023, ending centuries of free public access. Since then, ticket revenue has been split between the culture ministry, which takes 70 per cent, and the Diocese of Rome, which receives the remaining 30 per cent.
The monument, one of Rome's most visited sites with around 4.5 million visitors in 2025, is open daily from 09.00 to 19.00, with last admission at 18.30.
The increase comes after Rome introduced a separate €2 entry fee at the Trevi Fountain.
Photo credit: Pedro Senso / Shutterstock.com
