San Domenico Maggiore tickets & tours | Price comparison

San Domenico Maggiore

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San Domenico Maggiore, also known as Basilica di San Domenico Maggiore, anchors Piazza San Domenico Maggiore on Spaccanapoli and layers Gothic-Angevin structure from 1283 to 1324 with later Baroque interventions. In one compact stop, you move from chapels linked to Saint Thomas Aquinas to the sacristy cycle by Francesco Solimena.

Start with the free basilica entry, then add a paid guided route through the monumental areas for deeper context, clearer pacing, and fewer last-minute decisions.
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Some experiences and attractions are seasonal and might close temporarily.

6 tips for visiting the San Domenico Maggiore

1
Start in the first half of the day
If you want calmer chapels and smoother access to paid sections, arrive earlier rather than late afternoon. Foot traffic on Spaccanapoli rises quickly later in the day. Starting earlier keeps your route focused and avoids unnecessary ticket-desk waiting.
2
Use liturgy times as your anchor
Sunday Mass at 11 am and the daily rosary at 6 pm shape how quiet or busy the interior feels. If your priority is uninterrupted photos and slower reading of details, plan outside those moments. This simple timing choice lowers stress and keeps your visit predictable.
3
Separate free and paid areas
General entry to the basilica is free, while guided routes in selected monumental areas are paid. If your priority is speed, do the free church pass first; if your priority is depth, schedule the guided part immediately after. That way you do not zigzag between two visit modes.
4
Set mobility needs before arrival
If reduced mobility is part of your plan, use the dedicated accessible entrance at Vicoletto San Pietro a Majella 3A and confirm route details in advance. Some sections can require prior arrangement. A quick pre-check prevents day-of friction and keeps the stop comfortable.
5
Pair one nearby stop smartly
After San Domenico Maggiore, pick one clear add-on: Naples Underground for underground history, San Severo al Pendino for nearby church heritage, or MADRE Contemporary Art Museum for a contemporary-art contrast. Choosing one keeps your old-center walk coherent. You get more quality and less schedule drag.
6
Plan a compact 45 to 75 minutes
Most first visits work best in a 45 to 75-minute window, depending on whether you add a guided segment. If you only do the basilica, many visitors finish faster. This buffer keeps your day flexible, and your espresso break safe from heroic overplanning.

How to plan a San Domenico Maggiore stop in Naples

A smooth stop here depends on one simple sequence: choose your visit format first, then set timing and one nearby continuation.

Choose your visit mode before arrival

Best for a quick old-center pause: free basilica entry only. Best for deeper context: add the paid guided route through selected monumental spaces. If you decide this before reaching Piazza San Domenico Maggiore, you avoid on-site indecision and protect your day plan. Book now.

Time your stop around service windows

Sunday Mass at 11 am and the daily rosary at 6 pm can reshape crowd density and interior rhythm. If your priority is contemplative atmosphere, those moments can be a strength; if your priority is uninterrupted viewing, choose a different slot. Matching timing to intent makes the same space feel dramatically different.

Use Dante and Cavour as transfer anchors

For most visitors, the easiest public-transport frame is Metro Lines 1 and 2, with Dante and Cavour as practical anchors. From there, the final walk through the historic center is short and predictable. This keeps transfers simple and saves mental energy for the visit itself.

Add one nearby continuation, not three

After San Domenico Maggiore, choose one clear continuation: Naples Underground, San Severo al Pendino, or MADRE Contemporary Art Museum. If you try to stack all three in one block, quality drops and the old-center walk turns into logistics. One add-on keeps your route human, and your attention where it belongs.

Why San Domenico Maggiore matters in Naples

This site is one of the most readable architectural timelines in Naples: Angevin foundations, Baroque layers, Dominican scholarship, and civic-memory monuments in one concentrated setting.

1283 to 1324: the Angevin rebuilding phase

The current monumental scale takes shape between 1283 and 1324, when the complex is rebuilt under Angevin patronage in the old city core. That chronology is still visible in the church's massing and spatial rhythm around Piazza San Domenico Maggiore. You are not just entering a church, but a key medieval urban statement.

From Dominican study center to civic landmark

The complex develops as one of Naples's major Dominican study hubs and keeps a strong identity link to Saint Thomas Aquinas. That scholarly layer explains why the visit feels intellectual as well as devotional. For history-focused travelers, this dual identity is the real value of the stop.

Baroque layers: Solimena and the sacristy experience

Inside the same route, you move from medieval fabric to Baroque intensity, especially in the sacristy cycle linked to Francesco Solimena. This contrast gives the visit emotional range without requiring a long transfer across the city. It is one reason the site works so well for both first-time and repeat visitors.

Best fit by travel style

First-time visitors usually benefit from a guided segment after the free basilica pass, while repeat visitors often enjoy a shorter detail-focused return. Families can keep the stop compact before moving to Naples Underground, and couples often pair it with a slower walk toward San Severo al Pendino. If your day extends toward the civic axis, Castel Nuovo is the natural longer continuation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is San Domenico Maggiore free to enter?

For the basilica itself, yes: general church entry is free. Paid access applies to selected monumental areas and guided routes.
Read more.

Which opening hours should I rely on?

Use the DOMA booking window for paid visits: slots run from 10 am to 6 pm. Weekday guided visits run from 10 am to 1:30 pm and 2:30 pm to 5:30 pm, with Saturday, Sunday, and holiday visits running continuously to 6 pm. The municipal section has been temporarily closed for works since October 2, 2025.
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Do I need to prebook online?

Not for free basilica-only access. Online booking is used for paid guided formats, while free church entry is handled on site.
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How long should I plan for one stop?

A practical first-stop range is 45 to 75 minutes, depending on whether you add a guided segment. For a quick basilica-only pass, many visitors need less time.
Read more.

Is the site accessible for limited mobility visitors?

Yes, accessibility support is available, including a dedicated entrance at Vicoletto San Pietro a Majella 3A. Some extended routes can require pre-arrangement, so a quick advance contact is worth it.
Read more.

Why is San Domenico Maggiore historically important?

The site connects a major Angevin rebuilding phase from 1283 to 1324 with later Baroque art layers and Dominican scholarly history in Naples. It is one of the clearest architectural timelines in the old center.
Read more.

Is there a Saint Thomas Aquinas connection?

Yes. The complex is strongly tied to the Dominican study tradition associated with Saint Thomas Aquinas, and this remains one of the defining identity anchors of the visit experience.
Read more.

Which nearby POIs pair best after this stop?

A practical pairing is one nearby add-on: Naples Underground, San Severo al Pendino, or MADRE Contemporary Art Museum. If you want a longer extension toward the civic axis, continue to Castel Nuovo.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

DOMA-managed visits and ticketed routes use a 10 am to 6 pm window in the booking flow. Weekday guided visits run from 10 am to 1:30 pm and 2:30 pm to 5:30 pm, with closing at 6 pm; Saturday, Sunday, and holiday visits run continuously from 10 am to 6 pm, with last entry at 5:30 pm.

The municipal section of the monumental complex has been temporarily closed for works since October 2, 2025. Sunday Mass is at 11 am, and the rosary is held daily at 6 pm.

address

San Domenico Maggiore
Vico San Domenico Maggiore, 18
80134 Naples
Italy

accessibility

Accessibility support is available, including a dedicated reduced-mobility entrance via Vicoletto San Pietro a Majella 3A. The basilica includes an accessible route on the right aisle, while some extended routes may require prior reservation. If mobility is central to your plan, pre-contact the venue so your route is set before arrival.

tickets

General basilica entry is free. Paid DOMA routes currently cost:
- Tour Completo: €11; reduced €8
- Tour Standard: €8; reduced €6
- Guided basilica tour: €11
- Sacristy and Treasury Room without guide: €7; reduced €6
- Carafa di Roccella Crypt: €6; reduced €5
- Groups and schools (minimum 20 visitors): €6

Prices include booking fees. Reduced rates are for groups of at least 20, school groups, visitors aged 12 to 25, ICOM/ICCROM members, and Campania Artecard holders; proof is required.

how to get there

The complex sits by Piazza San Domenico Maggiore between Spaccanapoli and Via Benedetto Croce. Official visitor guidance lists Metro Lines 1 and 2 with nearby stops at Dante and Cavour. From Naples Central Station, buses R2 and 151 toward Piazza G. Matteotti (Via Medina) are listed, then about a 10-minute walk.
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