Palácio Nacional de Queluz — the pink rococo summer palace of the Portuguese Bragança royal family, set in formal French-style gardens between Lisbon and Sintra.

Step inside the Portuguese Versailles

Queluz Palace skip-the-line — the rococo summer residence of the Bragança royal family, 15 km from Lisbon. We handle the booking; you walk straight to the throne room.

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  • 1747 Construction begun under Prince Pedro
  • Versailles Portugal's rococo answer to the French model
  • Bragança Royal summer residence until 1910
  • 15 km From central Lisbon

Choose your ticket

Adult — Palace + Gardens

Full visit · ages 18-64

€28

  • Palace interior — Throne Room, Hall of Ambassadors, Don Quixote Room
  • Formal French-style gardens laid out under Jean-Baptiste Robillion
  • Skip-the-line priority entry
  • Concierge booking + English-language support
Reserve adult ticket

Youth / Senior — Palace + Gardens

Ages 6–17 or 65+ · photo ID required at entry

€25

  • Same access as adult full visit
  • Photo ID required at entry (birth year / senior ID)
  • Children under 6: free at the gate
Reserve reduced ticket

Gardens Only — Adult

Gardens visit · no palace interior

€21

  • Robillion's formal French-style gardens
  • Malta Garden + Hanging Garden (Neptune)
  • Parterres, axial tiled canal, John Cheere lead statuary
  • Lighter visit (1 hour) · skip palace interior queue
Reserve gardens-only ticket
5.0 from 0 verified travellers
Hannah B.
Bristol, United Kingdom
“Did Queluz on the way back from Sintra to Lisbon. Half the crowds, twice the rococo. The Throne Room is something else — easily the prettiest interior of the trip.”
March 2026
Mateus R.
São Paulo, Brazil
“We almost skipped Queluz to do a third Sintra palace. So glad we didn't. Quiet, flat, gorgeous gardens, no climb. Stayed for the equestrian show — worth the extra hour.”
February 2026
Ingrid V.
Antwerp, Belgium
“Booked the family ticket for the four of us. Easy email confirmation, walked straight in past the ticket office. Kids loved running the parterres.”
January 2026
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About Palácio Nacional de Queluz

Palácio Nacional de Queluz is the 18th-century summer residence of the Portuguese Bragança royal family, set on flat, formal grounds in the town of Queluz between Lisbon and Sintra. Construction began in 1747 under the future King Pedro III on the site of an earlier hunting lodge, and the palace took shape across the second half of the 18th century — its pink-washed rococo façades, carved limestone trim, and French-style box-hedge parterres earning it the nickname 'the Portuguese Versailles'.

Inside, the Throne Room is the showpiece: a long rococo gallery in white and gold, with mirrored walls reflecting cut-glass chandeliers and a painted ceiling celebrating the Bragança dynasty. The Hall of Ambassadors and the smaller Don Quixote room — the bedchamber where King Pedro IV was born in 1798 and died in 1834, painted with scenes from Cervantes on the dome ceiling — sit alongside private apartments preserved much as the royal family left them.

The formal gardens were laid out in the French style under the direction of Jean-Baptiste Robillion, the French architect who also shaped the rococo interiors, with parterres, lead mythological statuary cast in the workshop of British sculptor John Cheere, a tiled canal, and box hedges trimmed into geometric patterns. The Portuguese School of Equestrian Art performs in the grounds, in the former royal exercise arena. With roughly 200,000–300,000 visitors a year, Queluz is a calmer, slower-paced alternative to the crowded Sintra hilltop palaces.

Practical information

Opening hours
Daily 09:00 – 18:00 (last admission 17:00). Closed 25 December and 1 January. Confirm seasonal hours on parquesdesintra.pt the morning of your visit, particularly around public holidays.
Address
Largo do Palácio, 2745-191 Queluz, Portugal
Getting there from Lisbon
Train from Lisbon Rossio or Oriente on the Sintra Line to Queluz-Belas station (~20 minutes), then a 10–15 minute walk to the palace. Or by car, 15 km from central Lisbon — limited free parking near the palace.
Where it is
In the town of Queluz, on the flat plain between Lisbon and Sintra. Not on the Sintra hilltop — easy to combine with Sintra in either direction.
Time needed
Allow 1.5–2 hours for the palace interior plus the formal gardens. Add 1 hour if you stay for an equestrian performance.
Equestrian shows
The Portuguese School of Equestrian Art performs in the former royal exercise arena on Wednesdays year-round, with additional Sundays during the summer season. Separate ticket from the palace entry — confirm the current schedule on parquesdesintra.pt before timing your visit.
Accessibility
The palace has multi-level interiors with several short flights of steps. Ground-floor rooms and the formal gardens are largely accessible. Contact us before booking if mobility is a concern.
Photography
Permitted without flash or tripod throughout the palace and gardens. Selfie sticks restricted in the rooms.

About our service

Queluz Palace Tickets acts as a facilitator to assist international visitors in purchasing skip-the-line tickets directly from Parques de Sintra – Monte da Lua, S.A., the official operator of Queluz, Pena Palace, Sintra National Palace, the Moorish Castle, and the wider Sintra cultural landscape. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service. Our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, the official ticket site is parquesdesintra.pt.

Frequently asked

Is this the same palace as Pena, or as Sintra National?

No — three completely separate palaces, all operated by Parques de Sintra. Queluz sits on flat ground in the town of Queluz between Lisbon and Sintra, 15 km from central Lisbon. Pena is the yellow-and-red Romantic palace on top of the Sintra mountain. Sintra National is the medieval royal palace with the twin conical chimneys in the centre of Sintra town. Each has its own ticket.

Why is Queluz called 'the Portuguese Versailles'?

Because of its formal French-style gardens, its rococo interiors, and its role as the 18th-century summer residence of the Portuguese royal family — a deliberate echo of Versailles' role in France. The pink-washed façades, parterre hedges, mythological lead statuary cast in the workshop of British sculptor John Cheere, and the long axial canal are all classic French rococo design imported into Portugal.

What's included in the skip-the-line ticket?

Priority entry to the palace bypassing the ticket-office queue, plus the full self-guided circuit through the state rooms — Throne Room, Hall of Ambassadors, Don Quixote room, royal apartments — and access to the formal gardens with their parterres, statuary, and tiled canal.

How long does a visit take?

Allow 1.5–2 hours for the palace interior plus the gardens at a steady pace. Add another hour if you time your visit for an equestrian performance by the Portuguese School of Equestrian Art.

When are the equestrian shows?

The Portuguese School of Equestrian Art performs in the former royal exercise grounds on Wednesdays year-round, with additional Sundays during the summer season. Tickets to the show are separate from palace entry — your concierge ticket covers the palace and gardens, not the equestrian performance. Confirm the current schedule on parquesdesintra.pt before timing your visit.

Can I combine Queluz with a day in Sintra?

Easily — the train from Lisbon to Sintra stops at Queluz-Belas. A common pattern is morning at Queluz, lunch in the town, train onward to Sintra for an afternoon at Pena or Sintra National. Alternatively, Queluz works as the last stop on the way back from Sintra to Lisbon.

Is Queluz busier than Pena Palace?

No — significantly quieter. Pena draws around 2 million paid visitors a year, Queluz roughly 200,000–300,000. Queluz is a slower, calmer experience and rarely sells out, but mid-morning weekends in peak season can still see ticket-office queues build when the Lisbon coaches arrive.

How do I get there from Lisbon?

Train from Rossio or Oriente on the Sintra Line to Queluz-Belas station (~20 minutes, runs every 20 minutes), then a 10–15 minute walk through the town to the palace. By car, 15 km from central Lisbon — limited parking near the palace, easier to take the train.

Is there parking?

Some free street parking is available near the palace but it fills up by mid-morning on weekends. The train is more reliable. If driving, arrive before 10:00 to be sure of a spot.

Is it suitable for children?

Yes — kids enjoy the painted ceilings, the gilded Throne Room, the formal-garden parterres (good for running), and the equestrian shows on performance days. Under-6s are free at the gate. Strollers manage the gardens easily; the palace has some short flights of steps between rooms.

Is the palace wheelchair accessible?

Partially. The formal gardens are largely accessible on level paths. Inside, ground-floor rooms are accessible but several upper sections of the circuit involve short flights of steps. Contact Parques de Sintra on +351 21 923 73 00 in advance to confirm the current accessible route under their 'Welcome Better' programme.

Can I take photos inside?

Personal, non-flash photography is permitted throughout the palace and gardens. Tripods, professional lighting, and selfie sticks are restricted in the rooms. The Throne Room and the long axial canal in the gardens are the most-photographed frames.

What if I need to change my date?

Contact us by replying to your booking confirmation as soon as your plans change. We will do our best to swap the date subject to availability, but once a slot is collected from the operator on your behalf the standard non-refundable policy applies. The two automatic refund triggers are: (a) we cannot secure your originally chosen date, or (b) the operator cancels entry on your booked day.

What's your refund policy?

All sales are final. We refund in full only in two situations: we cannot secure your chosen date, or the operator cancels entry on your booked day. Outside those two triggers, tickets are non-transferable and non-refundable once issued — this matches every other Parques de Sintra concierge in the Sintra cluster.

How early should I book?

For peak months (June–September) and weekends, book 2–7 days ahead. Shoulder season (April, May, October) usually allows same-week booking. Winter is generally fine same-day. Skip-the-line still pays off in shoulder and peak — the ticket-office queue is the main friction, not slot availability.

Are food and drinks available on site?

There is a café on the palace grounds serving drinks, pastries, and light meals. For a proper lunch, the town of Queluz has a handful of restaurants within a 5–10 minute walk of the palace gate.