Santa Maria sopra Minerva tickets & tours | Price comparison

Santa Maria sopra Minerva

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Iconic in a quiet Roman way, Santa Maria sopra Minerva, formally the Basilica di Santa Maria sopra Minerva, hides Rome's rare Gothic church interior behind a plain facade steps from the Pantheon. Look up for blue starry vaults, then find Michelangelo's Cristo della Minerva, Filippino Lippi's Carafa Chapel, and the tomb of St. Catherine of Siena.

Choose a guided historic-center walk if you want the basilica, the Pantheon, and nearby piazzas explained in one low-stress route.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Guided historic-center walks

Best if you want Santa Maria sopra Minerva folded into a walk through Rome's historic center, with context for the Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, and the hidden artworks inside the basilica.
Tour of Rome:Trevi Fountain, Spanish Steps,Pantheon with Italian Ice Cream
4.7(118)
 
viator.com
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Vittoriano Santa Maria in Aracoeli and Piazza Venezia Guided Tour
5.0(5)
 
viator.com
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6 tips for visiting the Santa Maria sopra Minerva

1
Use the split opening hours
If you are crossing over from the Pantheon, aim for the morning block or the late-afternoon reopening. The basilica closes over midday, so a lunch-hour detour can leave you staring at the plain facade instead of the starry nave. Build it before lunch or after the afternoon reopening, and your route stays calm.
2
Look up before you rush
After the brightness of Piazza della Minerva, the nave can feel dim for a moment. Pause just inside and let your eyes adjust; the blue vaults and red ribs appear slowly, and that first minute is better than another rushed photo. It makes the church feel less like a checklist stop.
3
Give Michelangelo space
Groups often gather near the presbytery when they reach Michelangelo's 205 cm (6 ft 9 in) Christ the Redeemer, also called Cristo della Minerva. If your priority is a quiet look, circle back after a tour moves on. That small pause turns a famous name into a real encounter.
4
Respect the Mass rhythm
If prayer is under way, shift from sightseeing to quiet looking or return after Mass. The 6 pm service is a common pinch point, especially if you arrive after a central Rome walk. Stepping aside protects the worship space and keeps your own visit from feeling awkward.
5
Pair it tightly nearby
If your day is already centered on Pantheon, add Santa Maria sopra Minerva and then drift toward Piazza Navona or Trevi Fountain. The basilica works best as a deep, art-rich pause in the Pigna and Pantheon area. That way you do not lose the best part of the day in transit.
6
Notice the elephant outside
Before leaving Piazza della Minerva, turn around for Bernini's elephant base below the 6th-century BC Egyptian obelisk. It is small enough to miss when the Pantheon crowds pull you onward, but it gives the square its best wink. Save it for the end, and you leave with a smile.

How to plan a Santa Maria sopra Minerva stop in central Rome

Santa Maria sopra Minerva works best when you treat it as a precise historic-center stop, not a random church detour. Its magic is the contrast: a modest facade near the Pantheon, then a sudden Gothic nave full of Renaissance and Dominican memory.

Use it as the Pantheon pause

Best for first-time visitors: walk from Pantheon into Piazza della Minerva before the crowds pull you toward the next headline sight. The basilica gives the Pigna area a quieter second layer, with art, tombs, and prayer space a few steps from the ancient dome. Keep the stop short but intentional, and it feels like discovery rather than filler.

Choose a guided walk when context matters

Choose this format if you want Santa Maria sopra Minerva explained as part of the wider historic center, not as an isolated church. The mapped tours connect it with routes around the Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, Spanish Steps, Piazza Venezia, or nearby churches, so the art makes sense in the street pattern around you. Book now.

Keep the midday closure in your route

The practical trap is simple: Santa Maria sopra Minerva is not open as one continuous all-day museum. If you are moving between Piazza Navona, Pantheon, and Trevi Fountain, place the basilica in the morning or after the afternoon reopening. That small timing choice prevents the most common frustration in Piazza della Minerva.

Fit the stop to your group

For families, keep the visit playful: elephant outside, starry ceiling inside, then one famous name near the altar. For repeat visitors, slow down in the Carafa Chapel and let the Dominican layers do the work. If mobility or fatigue is a concern, favor an independent visit over a fast central Rome walk, so you can set the pace.

Art and history inside Santa Maria sopra Minerva

Inside Santa Maria sopra Minerva, the story of Rome changes register. Ancient sanctuary ground, Dominican learning, Renaissance patronage, and Baroque wit all sit within one compact basilica behind Piazza della Minerva.

A Gothic nave in a Baroque city

Santa Maria sopra Minerva sits over a much older sacred zone, where an 8th-century AD church preceded the Dominican basilica. The present Gothic architecture is dated to 1280, while the building story stretches to 1725. That is why the nave feels so unexpected in Rome: pointed arches and starry blue vaults appear where many visitors expect another Baroque surprise.

Michelangelo's Christ near the high altar

Near the presbytery, Michelangelo's Christ the Redeemer gives the visit its famous art-history jolt. The 205 cm (6 ft 9 in) marble statue was commissioned in 1514 and the current version arrived in 1521, after a flaw in the first block forced a restart. Stand slightly to the side, and the cross reads less like a prop than the force holding the figure upright.

Carafa Chapel and Renaissance color

The Carafa Chapel is where the basilica stops whispering and starts glowing. Filippino Lippi's frescoes, painted between 1488 and 1493, turn St. Thomas Aquinas, the Virgin Mary, music-making angels, and learned allegory into a bright Dominican theater. If you only have time for one side chapel, make it this one.

Saint Catherine, Fra Angelico, and the Dominican thread

The Dominican identity becomes tangible at the high altar and along the nave. St. Catherine of Siena rests beneath the main altar in a 15th-century tomb, while Fra Angelico, the painter-friar who shaped early Renaissance devotion, is also commemorated here. These are not decorative footnotes; they explain why the basilica feels scholarly, devotional, and intimate at the same time.

The convent spaces are not a normal add-on

The attached Dominican convent gives Santa Maria sopra Minerva much of its depth, but it is not a standard visitor zone. The cloister is reserved for community life and opens only on certain occasions, so do not build your day around seeing it unless a special visit is confirmed. The safer reward is the basilica itself, plus the elephant obelisk outside in Piazza della Minerva.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Santa Maria sopra Minerva worth visiting after the Pantheon?

Yes. Pantheon gives you ancient scale and a famous dome; Santa Maria sopra Minerva gives you a quieter Gothic nave, Renaissance chapels, Michelangelo, and Dominican history in the next square.
Read more.

How long should I spend inside the basilica?

Plan about 30 to 45 minutes for a good independent visit. Add more time if you want a guided explanation, a quiet prayer stop, or a slower look at the Carafa Chapel and the tombs near the high altar.
Read more.

Do I need a ticket to enter Santa Maria sopra Minerva?

A normal church visit does not work like a timed museum admission. The paid options on this page are guided walks, which are worthwhile if you want the basilica explained alongside the Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, or Piazza Venezia.
Read more.

What should I see first inside Santa Maria sopra Minerva?

Start with the blue starry vaults, then move toward Michelangelo's Cristo della Minerva near the presbytery. After that, give the Carafa Chapel, the tomb of St. Catherine of Siena, and Fra Angelico's memorial the time they deserve.
Read more.

Can I sightsee during Mass?

Treat Mass as worship time, not a sightseeing window. If you arrive during a service, stay quiet near the back or return afterward; the 6 pm Mass is the one most likely to overlap with late-afternoon sightseeing.
Read more.

Is the cloister included in a normal visit?

Usually no. The cloister belongs to the Dominican convent and is normally reserved for the community, with visits only on certain occasions. Focus your standard visit on the basilica interior and Piazza della Minerva outside.
Read more.

Is Santa Maria sopra Minerva good with children?

Yes, if you keep it short. The elephant obelisk outside, the starry ceiling, and the small hunt for Michelangelo work well for school-age children; avoid service times if your group needs to move and talk freely.
Read more.

What should limited-mobility visitors know?

If step-free access is essential, contact the basilica before making it a fixed stop. The surrounding Piazza della Minerva is part of Rome's historic center, with cobbles and tight walking routes, and guided walks may move faster than you want.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Santa Maria sopra Minerva is generally open daily from 9:00 am to 12 noon and from 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm.
Mass is usually celebrated on weekdays at 7:15 am, except Saturday, and at 6:00 pm; on Sundays and public holidays, Mass is usually at 11:00 am and 6:00 pm.
Hours can change for services, so avoid arriving right at closing or during the midday break.

tickets

A standard church visit is not sold as a timed museum ticket. Paid products on this page are guided walking tours that add art-historical context and nearby stops such as the Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, or Piazza Venezia.
Candle offerings, Mass intentions, and optional donations are handled separately by the basilica.

website

address

Basilica di Santa Maria sopra Minerva
Piazza della Minerva 42
00186 Rome
Italy

how to get there

Santa Maria sopra Minerva sits in Rione Pigna, just behind Pantheon and within an easy walk of Piazza Navona, Trevi Fountain, and Via del Corso.
For public transport, use the historic-center stops around Largo di Torre Argentina, Corso Vittorio Emanuele II, or Via del Corso, then walk the final stretch through narrow streets.
Taxis may drop you nearby rather than at the door when traffic restrictions or crowds are heavy.
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