Shuvalov Palace tickets & tours | Price comparison

Shuvalov Palace

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Shuvalov Palace, also known as the Naryshkin-Shuvalov Palace, is one of the most atmospheric aristocratic mansions on the Fontanka and now houses the Fabergé Museum amid a grand staircase, ceremonial rooms, and the famous Imperial Easter Eggs in the Blue Room.

Start with a timed online museum ticket, then add the audio guide if you want the palace rooms and standout objects to make sense from the first staircase onward.
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6 tips for visiting the Shuvalov Palace

1
Book the time slot first
If you want the smoothest visit, reserve your timed entry online before you head to the Fontanka. Sessions last 60 minutes, numbers are capped, and same-day ticket-office sales can be limited. That way you are not improvising on the embankment.
2
Slow down in the Blue Room
If this is your first visit, do not rush from the Grand Staircase straight to the eggs. The payoff of Shuvalov Palace is how the restored rooms build up to the Blue Room, so give yourself a few calm minutes there. You will enjoy the palace, not just the checklist.
3
Use the audio guide
If you want context without committing to a full private tour, take the audio guide. It is available in English, German, and Italian, and it helps the names, dynasties, and room sequence click much faster once you reach the Gothic Hall and the Upper Dining Room.
4
Pack lighter than usual
At busy sessions, large bags slow everything down. Anything over 30 x 20 x 15 cm (11.8 x 7.9 x 5.9 in) needs to go to a locker, and you will pass a security check before the halls. This avoids a frustrating start.
5
Walk in from Nevsky
For most visitors, the easiest approach is from Gostiny Dvor via Nevsky Prospekt and Anichkov Bridge. It is roughly a 10-minute walk, easy to combine with a central-city stroll, and simpler than hunting for a curbside drop-off on the embankment. So you arrive oriented, not rushed.
6
Match the format to your interest
If you mainly want the palace and the key Fabergé pieces, standard entry plus the audio guide is usually enough. If you care more about aristocratic interiors, wartime damage, and restoration details, request the private guided tour by email in advance. That way you pay for depth only if you will use it.

How to plan a Shuvalov Palace visit

This is one of the easiest aristocratic interiors to fit into a central Saint Petersburg day, but timed sessions mean a little planning pays off.

Book online before you walk over

Choose this if your priority is a smooth arrival. Online tickets are the main access route, sessions last 60 minutes, and the on-site ticket office sells only tickets for the current day, so booking before you leave Nevsky Prospekt saves time and uncertainty. Book now.

Walking in from Nevsky Prospekt

From Gostiny Dvor, the approach along Nevsky Prospekt, over to Anichkov Bridge, and down the Fontanka is simple and helps the palace feel anchored in the city rather than isolated from it. If you are already near Mayakovskaya, the slightly longer walk still stays easy and central.

Choosing between audio guide and private tour

Best for first-timers: standard timed entry plus the audio guide, because it keeps the visit light and explains the palace rooms as you move. Great when you care more about family history, war damage, and restoration craft: request a private guided tour in advance by email so you can ask questions at your own pace. Book now.

What can slow down your entry

The Grand Staircase is part of the experience, and it is worth arriving in the right mood for it. Security screening, shoe covers, and locker use can compress a short session if you show up overloaded, so arrive a little early and keep your bag small. That way the palace still feels elegant instead of logistical.

Rooms that define Shuvalov Palace

The building works best when you treat it as more than a container for treasures. A few rooms do most of the storytelling, and slowing down in them changes the whole visit.

Start with the Grand Staircase

The restored Grand Staircase immediately explains why this address mattered on the Fontanka. The ascent, the dome above, and the ceremonial feel do more than move you upstairs: they reset your pace and make the collection feel housed rather than merely displayed.

Why the Blue Room matters

The Blue Room is the emotional center of the route because it holds the Imperial Easter Eggs that made Fabergé famous. Even if you know the objects from books or photos, seeing them inside a ceremonial palace room gives them more intimacy and weight than a neutral gallery ever could.

Do not stop at the eggs

Great for repeat visitors, or for anyone who loves interiors more than trophy objects: keep going into the Gothic Hall, the White and Blue Room, and the Upper Dining Room. Icons, enamel, porcelain, and painting widen the story from imperial spectacle to taste, collecting, and room atmosphere.

Why the second-floor layout helps

Because the main route sits on the second floor, the visit has a compact upstairs rhythm instead of feeling scattered. That is especially helpful if you are fitting Shuvalov Palace into a short central Saint Petersburg half day and still want the stop to feel complete.

History of Shuvalov Palace

The appeal here is not only aristocratic glamour. The building carries salon culture, imperial society, war damage, Soviet reuse, and a full 21st-century rescue in one address.

From city edge to society salon

The palace rose at the end of the 18th century, when the Fontanka still marked the edge of Saint Petersburg. After Maria Naryshkina acquired it in 1799, the house became a fashionable social address known for concerts, balls, and a guest list that reached from Alexander I to Pushkin.

The Shuvalov remake

A major redesign began in 1844 ahead of Sofya Naryshkina's marriage to Pyotr Shuvalov, and the palace entered its Shuvalov chapter in 1846. Later 19th-century work added the Neo-Renaissance mood, technical upgrades, and much of the ceremonial character visitors still notice today.

War damage and Soviet afterlife

The building was nationalized in 1918, reused by several institutions, and then badly damaged during the Siege of Leningrad. Bomb hits and fire destroyed part of the courtyard wing and ruined the painted ceiling above the Alexander Hall, which helps explain why later restoration had to be deep rather than cosmetic.

Restoration and museum life today

From 2006 to 2013, a full restoration returned the palace to working life after decades of deterioration, and the Fabergé Museum opened here on November 19, 2013. For visitors, that means you are not seeing a frozen shell: you are walking through a restored historic house that now operates as a serious collection space.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I plan for Shuvalov Palace?

Plan for about 60 minutes. That matches the timed session model and gives you enough time for the palace interiors plus the main Fabergé Museum pieces if you keep a steady pace.
Read more.

Do I need to book in advance?

It is the safer choice. Online tickets are the main access method, session sizes are capped at 15 people, and the on-site ticket office sells only tickets for the current day.
Read more.

Can I see the palace without a guide?

Yes. Standard timed admission is for self-guided visits, so most people experience the palace rooms and collection independently. Add the audio guide if you want more context without committing to a full guide.
Read more.

Which format is best for a first visit?

For most first-timers, the best balance is standard entry plus the audio guide. If you are more interested in restoration stories, aristocratic family history, or asking detailed questions, request the private guided tour before you go.
Read more.

Can I visit with a stroller or wheelchair?

Yes. Strollers are allowed, children 13 and under need an accompanying adult, and the route can handle wheelchairs or strollers up to 85 cm (33.5 in) wide. For more support, contact the museum in advance.
Read more.

What should I know about bags and security?

Expect a metal-detector or X-ray screening before entry. Outerwear goes to the cloakroom, and bags above 30 x 20 x 15 cm (11.8 x 7.9 x 5.9 in) need locker storage, so light packing saves time.
Read more.

Are photos allowed inside?

Usually yes for personal use. Skip the flash, tripods, monopods, selfie sticks, and other special equipment, and watch for room signs because some works or temporary shows may have tighter rules.
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Which metro stop is best?

For most visitors, Gostiny Dvor is the easiest because the final walk via Nevsky Prospekt and Anichkov Bridge is straightforward and scenic. If you are already on the eastern side of central Saint Petersburg, Mayakovskaya or Ploshchad Vosstaniya also work well.
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General information

opening hours

Open daily from 10 am to 8:45 pm; ticket office from 9:30 am to 8:15 pm.
Visits run in timed 60-minute sessions, and the admin line answers Monday to Friday from 10 am to 7 pm. The ticket office sells only same-day tickets.

tickets

As of March 9, 2026:
- Full entry: 700 RUB
- Discounted entry: 350 RUB
- Guided-tour ticket: 1,300 RUB
- Audio guide: 300 RUB
- Private guided tour: 6,500 RUB for 1-5 people, then 1,300 RUB per extra guest up to 18.
Timed online booking is the main access route, and discounted tickets require supporting documents.

address

Shuvalov Palace
21 Fontanka River Embankment
Saint Petersburg, Russia

security

Expect bag screening with metal detectors or X-ray control before you reach the halls. Wear clean shoes, plan for shoe covers, and allow a few extra minutes if you carry medical equipment that needs a manual check.

how to get there

The easiest walk is from Gostiny Dvor: about 10 minutes along Nevsky Prospekt to Anichkov Bridge, then about 100 m (328 ft) along the Fontanka.
Mayakovskaya and Ploshchad Vosstaniya also work on foot at roughly 15 minutes. If you prefer surface transport, check same-day transit updates before you ride.

accessibility

The museum can help organize visits for guests with mobility, hearing, vision, or autism-related access needs. Wheelchairs and strollers up to 85 cm (33.5 in) wide fit the route, larger equipment can be swapped for house equipment free of charge, and wheelchair users are accompanied in the elevator.
If you need support, contact the museum in advance on weekdays from 10 am to 7 pm by phone or email. The elevator limit is 200 kg (441 lb).

luggage

Outerwear goes to the cloakroom, and bags larger than 30 x 20 x 15 cm (11.8 x 7.9 x 5.9 in) must go into a locker. If an oversized item cannot be stored safely, you will not be able to take it into the exhibition halls.

photography and filming

Amateur photography is usually allowed, but flash, tripods, monopods, selfie sticks, extra lighting, and video cameras are not. Some objects or temporary shows may ban photos, so watch for room signs.
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