Temple of Olympian Zeus tickets & tours | Price comparison

Temple of Olympian Zeus

TicketLens lets you:
Search multiple websites at onceand find the best offers.
Find tickets, last minuteon many sites, with one search.
Book at the lowest price!Save time & money by comparing rates.
The Temple of Olympian Zeus, also known as the Olympieion and Naos tou Olympiou Dios (Ναός του Ολυμπίου Διός), stands by Hadrian's Arch at the edge of the Acropolis district. Begun around 515 BC and completed in AD 131/132, it once had 104 columns, and 15 still rise about 17 m (56 ft) above the site today.

For most first visits, start with a dated entry ticket that includes audio context, so you keep your route efficient and still understand what you are seeing in a high-demand zone. Book now.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Entry tickets

Choose this for direct access to Olympieion on your selected date with the simplest on-site flow.
Temple of Olympian Zeus: Entry Ticket + Digital Hellenic Heritage Guide
3.8(98)
 
tiqets.com
Go to offer
Athens: Temple of Olympian Zeus Ticket and Audio Tour
3.5(190)
 
Go to offer

Audio guide tours

Pick this when your priority is independent pacing with richer historical context while you walk.
Temple of Olympian Zeus: Self-Guided Audio Tour on your Phone (without ticket)
3.5(11)
 
viator.com
Go to offer

Guided tours

Use guided formats when you want mythology and chronology explained clearly across multiple nearby landmarks.
Private Mythology Tour of the Acropolis and Acropolis Museum
5.0(34)
 
viator.com
Go to offer

More tickets and tours

Find broader city formats here when Olympieion is one stop inside a larger Athens itinerary.
Athens Half Day Tour, Acropolis, Parthenon, Temple of Olympian Zeus & Hephaistus
4.8(605)
 
viator.com
Go to offer
Acropolis, Temple Of Zeus,Olympic Stadium,Parliament,Guards Athens private Tour
4.8(10)
 
viator.com
Go to offer

6 tips for visiting the Temple of Olympian Zeus

1
Book your slot early
If your priority is a smooth entry, lock your timed ticket before your travel day. In the central Acropolis corridor, late decisions can force you into weaker time windows. Early booking keeps your day stable, so you do not lose momentum.
2
Start with the west-side view
If you want your best photos first, begin from the west-side angle where the surviving columns line up with nearby skyline elements. In a short morning stop, this saves you from rushing back for missed shots. That way your visit feels relaxed from the start.
3
Pair one nearby site only
If you want depth instead of checklist stress, pair Olympieion with one anchor such as Acropolis or Acropolis Museum, not four sites at once. In warm midday hours, overstacking quickly drains energy. One focused add-on keeps your day enjoyable.
4
Use audio context on first visit
If this is your first stop at Temple of Olympian Zeus, choose an audio-supported format. The remains are visually powerful, but context explains why this project stretched from 515 BC to AD 131/132. You will understand more without needing a long guided block.
5
Carry water and shade gear
If you visit in warmer months, bring water, a hat, and light sun protection before you enter. The open layout has limited shade, especially around midday. This simple prep avoids fatigue, so you can focus on the site instead of heat stress.
6
Screenshot your ticket before entry
If your phone signal drops near busy gates, a pre-saved ticket screenshot can save the moment. This micro-hack matters most when several groups arrive in the same slot. You clear entry faster and avoid small last-minute stress.

How to choose your Olympieion ticket style

Ticket options around Olympieion split into clear use cases. Choose by your visit intent first, then lock the slot that fits your route.

Single-use entry tickets

Best for visitors who want the fastest direct access to Olympieion. You pick your date, enter once, and keep logistics simple in the dense Acropolis zone. Choose this if your priority is speed and a focused stop. Book now.

Audio guide formats

Best for travelers who want history depth without fixed group pace. Audio formats help decode the long timeline from 515 BC to AD 131/132 while you move at your own rhythm near Hadrian's Arch. Choose this if understanding context matters as much as entry itself. Book now.

Guided combinations across the district

Great when you want a connected story from Olympieion to Acropolis and Parthenon. Guided combinations usually reduce interpretation gaps and keep transfers coherent in a crowded heritage area. Choose this if you prefer expert narrative over independent browsing. Book now.

Multi-site combo validity planning

Best for archaeology-focused itineraries that continue after Olympieion. The combined format can cover sites like Ancient Agora of Athens and other major classics over a five-day validity window after first entry. Choose this when your goal is breadth with one ticket logic. Book now.

History and highlights of the Temple of Olympian Zeus

What you see at Olympieion is the result of centuries of ambition, pauses, and reuse. Knowing that timeline makes the short visit much more meaningful.

A project that began in 515 BC

The sanctuary project started around 515 BC in what is now central Athens, but completion took many generations. This long start-stop history explains why the place feels both monumental and fragmentary at the same time.

Hadrian's completion in AD 131/132

Under Hadrian, the temple reached its final imperial form in AD 131/132, with 104 columns in total. That scale made it one of the largest temple projects of its era in the Greek world.

Why only 15 columns stand now

By around the 5th century AD, decline and material reuse had already reduced the monument. A further dramatic moment came in 1852, when one column collapsed in a storm. What remains is still powerful, but it is the surviving frame of a much larger vision.

What to notice during your walk

As you move through Olympieion, notice how the standing columns interact with the nearby axis of Hadrian's Arch and the Acropolis skyline. For families and first-time visitors, this visual alignment is the easiest way to feel the historical scale quickly, without overloading the stop.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Olympieion in Athens?

Olympieion is the sanctuary area of the Temple of Olympian Zeus in central Athens. Construction began around 515 BC and the monument was completed in AD 131/132 under Hadrian.
Read more.

How long should I plan for the visit?

Most visitors use 30 to 60 minutes on site. If you add an audio format and photo stops, plan closer to 75 minutes.
Read more.

Do I need a timed-entry ticket?

Yes. Entry at Olympieion uses timed windows, so it is best to lock your slot before arrival and show up early at the gate.
Read more.

Is there a combined ticket for nearby archaeological sites?

Yes. A multi-site combined format in the same ticketing system includes Olympieion together with major sites such as Acropolis and Slopes, Ancient Agora, Roman Agora, and Hadrian's Library.
Read more.

Is the site accessible for wheelchair users?

Most of the archaeological area is wheelchair accessible through the main entrance on Vasilissis Olgas Avenue. A companion helps on uneven paths.
Read more.

Can I go inside the temple structure?

Not as an interior monument. You visit the open archaeological zone around the surviving columns, and climbing on the ruins is not allowed.
Read more.

What is the best time of day to visit?

Early morning usually gives calmer paths and softer light. In warmer periods, this also helps you avoid peak heat on the open site.
Read more.

Which nearby places pair best with Olympieion?

For most visitors, the strongest pairings are Acropolis, Parthenon, and Acropolis Museum. If you want a civic-history extension, add Ancient Agora of Athens.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Current published winter schedule is from November 1 to March 31, daily from 8 am to 3 pm, with last entrance at 2:40 pm.
Entry runs on timed slots, and arrival near closing can block admission.
Check the date-specific booking calendar before you go, because seasonal schedules shift.

tickets

Current checkout listing (checked 2026-03-01) shows single-use general admission from EUR 10 for Olympieion.
Single-use tickets are valid for one admission on the selected date.
The same listing currently includes free-admission categories such as up to 25 years for EU visitors and up to 5 years for non-EU visitors.
A multi-site combined format in the same system is valid across Acropolis and Slopes, Ancient Agora, Roman Agora, Hadrian's Library, Olympieion, Kerameikos, and Aristotle's School for five days after first entry.

address

Temple of Olympian Zeus
Olympieion Archaeological Site
Vasilissis Olgas Avenue
Athens
Greece

how to get there

The main entrance sits on Vasilissis Olgas Avenue, right by Hadrian's Arch and close to Acropolis and Acropolis Museum.
For most visitors, the easiest approach is walking from the Acropolis district or central Athens hotels.
Taxi drop-off is most practical on the avenue side near the main gate.

accessibility

Most of Olympieion is wheelchair accessible through the main entrance on Vasilissis Olgas Avenue.
A companion is recommended for support on uneven archaeological surfaces.

security

Timed-entry tickets are required for all visitors.
Practical slot rules on site allow entry in a controlled window around your selected time, and very late arrivals can miss entry.
Plan to reach the gate about 30 minutes early, keep your ticket ready on your phone, and avoid touching or climbing the ruins.
How useful was this page?
Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0.
Compare prices for more top sights in Athens:
Ancient Agora of Athens13 tickets & guided tours
National Archaeological Museum11 tickets & guided tours
Benaki Museum1 tickets & guided tours
Museum of Cycladic Art3 tickets & guided tours
Byzantine and Christian Museum0 tickets & guided tours
Attica Zoological Park0 tickets & guided tours
Language
English
Currency
© 2020-2026 TicketLens GmbH. All rights reserved. Made with love in Vienna.