Cappella Sansevero tickets & tours | Price comparison

Cappella Sansevero

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Cappella Sansevero, also known as the Museo Cappella Sansevero, hides just behind Piazza San Domenico Maggiore and turns one compact Baroque chapel into one of Naples' most unforgettable art stops. Inside, Giuseppe Sanmartino's Veiled Christ, locally the Cristo velato, Francesco Queirolo's Disillusion, and the unsettling Anatomical Machines make the visit feel part masterpiece, part experiment, and part noble myth.

For most first visits, choose a guided old-center tour that includes the chapel, because the strongest current bookable formats combine timed access with neighborhood context and less route-planning friction.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Guided tours and private culture routes

Best if you want Cappella Sansevero inside a narrated Naples route, with old-center context and less navigation friction around Spaccanapoli.
Naples: Downtown Tour with Veiled Christ & St Clare Tickets
4.9(6784)
 
getyourguide.com
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Naples: Old Town Tour with Veiled Christ and Cathedral
4.8(335)
 
getyourguide.com
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Seven Wonders of Naples - private tour and transport included
 
viator.com
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Short walks and entry combos

Useful if your schedule is tighter and you still want Cappella Sansevero inside a compact central-Naples walk.
Naples: Sansevero Chapel Ticket and Guided Tour
4.8(2825)
 
getyourguide.com
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Naples: Historic Center Tour & Veiled Christ Entry Tickets
5.0(104)
 
getyourguide.com
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2-Hour Small Group Walking Tour in the Heart of Naples
 
viator.com
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6 tips for visiting the Cappella Sansevero

1
Reserve before you get there
If your day in Naples is fixed, book before you reach Piazza San Domenico Maggiore. Timed entry is easier to manage when you choose it early, especially on weekends and holiday periods in the old center. That way you spend your energy on the chapel, not on reshuffling the day.
2
Use the audio guide for context
The museum's own audio guide runs about 25 minutes and comes in adult and children's versions. If you want more than the immediate shock of the Veiled Christ, it is the simplest way to understand how Raimondo di Sangro structured the chapel. So the visit feels deliberate, not just rushed wonder.
3
Plan for a no-photo visit
Inside the chapel, photos, video, and phone use are not allowed. If the Veiled Christ is your headline moment, give yourself a few slow seconds in front of it instead of reaching for the screen. That way you leave with a stronger memory than any blurry forbidden shot.
4
Check mobility limits in advance
If limited mobility is part of your plan, the nave and sacristy work, but the Underground Chamber with the Anatomical Machines does not. The narrow historic spiral staircase is the issue, not the art itself. A quick pre-check keeps the visit calm and realistic.
5
Use the children's route if needed
Traveling with kids? Choose the children's audio route and treat the stop as a concentrated art pause, not a marathon. Children under 10 enter free, and this format keeps the chapel intriguing without turning the day into whispered chaos.
6
Pair one nearby stop smartly
After Cappella Sansevero, add just one clear continuation: San Domenico Maggiore for more sacred history, Naples Underground for underground Naples, or MADRE Contemporary Art Museum for a contemporary-art reset. One focused add-on fits the old-center streets better than attraction hoarding. So your route stays human, and your espresso break survives.

How to plan a Cappella Sansevero stop in Naples

A smooth visit here is mostly about sequence: reserve first, use the right interpretation tool, and decide whether the chapel is your main event or one jewel inside a longer old-center walk.

Reserve before you reach Piazza San Domenico Maggiore

If your day in Naples is tightly structured, lock the slot before you step into the lanes around Piazza San Domenico Maggiore. Timed entry protects this stop from the classic old-center problem of drifting, detouring, and arriving later than planned. It is the fastest way to keep art, lunch, and the rest of your route in the right order. Book now.

Use the audio guide if you want more than the wow moment

The 25-minute audio guide is the cleanest way to move from pure amazement to understanding. It explains why Raimondo di Sangro turned the chapel into a coded family project, and why the route from nave to underground chamber feels so deliberate. Families can use the children's version, while solo travelers often enjoy the adult route at a slower pace.

Treat it as a compact indoor stop

Officially, the visit can last from a few minutes to over an hour, which is true but not especially helpful. In practice, most first-time visitors do well with about 45 to 75 minutes: enough for the Veiled Christ, the major statues, and a calm pass through the sacristy and Underground Chamber. If you rush faster than that, the chapel becomes a checklist instead of an experience.

Add one nearby continuation in the historic center

After the chapel, choose one clear direction. Go to San Domenico Maggiore if you want another sacred-historical layer near Spaccanapoli, to Naples Underground if you want subterranean Naples, or to MADRE Contemporary Art Museum if you need a contemporary-art contrast. One add-on is enough here. That way the old center still feels like a place, not a scoreboard.

Why Cappella Sansevero feels unlike any other Naples chapel

What makes this place unforgettable is not only one sculpture. It is the way miracle legend, aristocratic memory, and 18th-century invention collapse into one concentrated room.

From miracle story to family mausoleum

The chapel begins with a local miracle legend. Around 1590, a man in chains is said to have seen a Marian image appear by the wall of the di Sangro palace near Piazza San Domenico Maggiore; the devotion that followed led first to a small votive chapel. In 1613, Alessandro di Sangro enlarged it into a family mausoleum, which gave the site the durable shape visitors still read today.

Raimondo di Sangro rebuilt the chapel as a symbol machine

The current emotional and visual force of Cappella Sansevero mostly belongs to Raimondo di Sangro in the 1740s. He reorganized the chapel almost entirely, commissioning sculpture, painting, and floor design so that dynastic pride, spiritual allegory, and controlled theatricality would work together. That is why the room feels so dense: nearly everything points back to one mind's obsessive program.

The Veiled Christ is the emotional center

At the middle of that program stands Giuseppe Sanmartino's Veiled Christ, locally the Cristo velato, from 1753, one of the most admired sculptures in Naples. The extraordinary marble veil stops people first, but the real effect is quieter: grief, tenderness, and impossible technical control all arrive at once. This is the moment that makes the chapel more than a curiosity.

Disillusion and the Anatomical Machines change the ending

Francesco Queirolo's Disillusion, completed in 1753-54 AD, adds moral drama and family biography to the visit, while the Anatomical Machines in the Underground Chamber pull the mood toward experiment and unease. One shows virtuoso liberation from nets and error; the other shows the prince's world brushing against science, display, and myth. Ending with both is why the visit stays in your head longer than its size suggests.

Visit formats at Cappella Sansevero

Inside the chapel, the normal rhythm is self-guided or audio-guided. Bookable guided products mostly widen the frame to the historic center, so the right choice depends on whether you want the art alone or the neighborhood story around it.

Guided old-center tours

Best for first-time visitors who want the chapel inside a readable neighborhood story. These products usually wrap Cappella Sansevero into Spaccanapoli, nearby churches, or a wider historic-center walk, so you spend less time orienting yourself and more time understanding why the site matters in Naples. Choose this if context is your priority. Book now.

Short small-group walks

Some current bookable formats keep the route tighter and lighter, which works well if the chapel is one of several stops you want to fit into a compact day. They trade deep explanation for pace and flexibility. If your priority is flow rather than a full art-history frame, this can be the right compromise. Book now.

Broader private art routes

The widest private formats turn the chapel into one major note inside a larger Naples art-and-history composition. Pick these if you already know the old center, or if you want archaeology, multiple museums, and private transport in one long curated day. They cost more time and money, but they also remove nearly all logistics. Book now.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the current opening hours?

The base schedule is 9 am to 7 pm daily except Tuesday, with last entry at 6:30 pm. The 2026 calendar can override this on selected dates, including some Tuesday openings, extended 8:30 pm closes, reduced holiday hours, and occasional closures.
Read more.

How long should I plan for the visit?

Officially there is no fixed visit length, and the stay can range from a few minutes to over an hour. For most first visits, a comfortable window is 45 to 75 minutes, especially if you add the audio guide.
Read more.

Does Cappella Sansevero offer guided tours?

Yes, but only on selected dates. The museum-run guided visits are in Italian, last about 30 minutes, and use a separate €22 ticket for visitors aged 10 and up. Otherwise, the normal museum visit is self-guided or audio-guided, and many bookable guided options place the chapel inside a wider historic-center walk through Naples.
Read more.

How long does the audio guide take?

The audio guide lasts about 25 minutes. It is not compulsory, and you can choose either the adult route or the children's route.
Read more.

Can I take photos inside?

No. Photography, video recording, and mobile-phone use are not allowed during the visit, so expect a quiet, screen-free experience inside Cappella Sansevero.
Read more.

Is the museum accessible with limited mobility?

Partly. The nave and sacristy are accessible, but the Underground Chamber with the Anatomical Machines is not, because a narrow historic spiral staircase leads down to it.
Read more.

Is Cappella Sansevero suitable with children?

Yes, if you keep it focused. Children under 10 enter free, and the museum offers a children's audio route, which works better than trying to stretch the stop into a long lecture-heavy visit.
Read more.

Which nearby POIs pair best after the chapel?

Choose one clear continuation rather than several. San Domenico Maggiore works for more sacred-history depth, Naples Underground for subterranean Naples, and MADRE Contemporary Art Museum for a contemporary-art contrast.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

The base schedule is daily except Tuesday from 9 am to 7 pm; last entry is 6:30 pm.

The 2026 calendar lists special openings and changed hours on selected dates, including some Tuesday openings, extended 8:30 pm closes, reduced 2 pm closes on December 24 and 31, and occasional closure dates. Recheck the live calendar if your visit falls on a holiday period or another special-opening date.

tickets

Standard admission costs €12. Reduced tickets cost €8 for ages 18-26 and for FAI/FON members or law-enforcement/armed-forces cardholders, €6 for ages 10-17, and €7 total for a disabled visitor with companion. Children up to age 9 enter free; in online booking, free child tickets for ages 4-9 must be booked with at least one paid ticket in the cart. School pupils pay €4 on weekdays.

Online booking is mandatory, with tickets released 60 days ahead; small groups of up to 9 can also buy at the ticket office for the same day or following 7 days if places remain. Audio guides cost €3.50, or €6 for two devices, and the museum-run guided visit is a separate €22 ticket.

address

Museo Cappella Sansevero
Via Francesco De Sanctis, 19/21
80134 Naples
Italy

how to get there

The chapel sits behind Piazza San Domenico Maggiore in Naples' historic center, at Via Francesco De Sanctis. Metro Line 1 to Università or Dante, Metro Line 2 to Cavour, or buses and tram lines toward Via Nuova Marina all leave a final walk of about 5 to 10 minutes.

The surrounding old town is easier on foot than by car.

accessibility

Wheelchair users and visitors with reduced mobility can access the nave and the sacristy. The Underground Chamber, where the Anatomical Machines stand, is not accessible because of a narrow 19th-century spiral staircase.

A special 25-minute audio-guide route is also available free of charge for visitors with visual impairment.

photography and filming

Inside the museum, visitors are not allowed to take photographs or make video recordings. Mobile phones, food, drink, and animals are also not allowed, so plan for a quiet, screen-free stop.

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