Museo dell'Ara Pacis tickets & tours | Price comparison

Museo dell'Ara Pacis

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Museo dell'Ara Pacis lets you meet the ancient Ara Pacis Augustae in a bright pavilion by Richard Meier beside the Tiber and the Mausoleum of Augustus. Relief processions, curling acanthus leaves, and the calm white altar make imperial Rome feel unexpectedly close.

Start with a standard museum-entry ticket if this stop is your priority; it keeps your timing flexible and lets you add the current exhibition only if it genuinely suits your day.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Museum entry tickets

Choose these if you want a focused visit to the altar and museum spaces without turning the stop into a wider city walk.
Ara Pacis Museum: Impressionism & Beyond Exhibition
4.1(141)
 
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Guided Rome walks

These routes suit you better if you want the museum folded into a broader walk through central Rome landmarks with live context from a guide.
Guided Early Morning Rome Sightseeing Walk
 
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Current exhibitions

L'Ara si rivela

Immersive videomapping experience on the Ara Pacis

This multimedia event uses videomapping, narration, music, and sound to bring the altar's original polychromy and reliefs back into view. The experience follows the monument's ancient history and later rediscovery, with audio available in multiple languages.

Mar 27, 2026 – Dec 31, 2026

Robert Mapplethorpe. Le forme della bellezza

Around 200 photographs on beauty and formal rigor

This exhibition brings together around 200 photographs in which Robert Mapplethorpe treats bodies, faces, and still lifes with the same geometric precision. It focuses on his search for pure form and closes an exhibition project previously presented in Venice and Milan.

May 29, 2026 – Oct 4, 2026, Spazio espositivo (Via di Ripetta 180)

6 tips for visiting the Museo dell'Ara Pacis

1
Go museum-only when time is tight
If you only have a short slot in central Rome, choose the museum ticket and focus on the altar first. Trying to force the current exhibition into a rushed visit can flatten the experience. This keeps the stop elegant instead of breathless.
2
Reserve the current exhibition early
If you want Impressionism and Beyond, fixed-date booking is the safer move. Open-date exhibition tickets have been suspended since February 10, 2026, and weekend demand is high. That way you protect your slot before you even get to the riverfront.
3
Read the altar in two loops
On your first circuit, stay a little back and take in the whole enclosure. On the second, move closer for the processions and acanthus friezes. This simple two-pass rhythm helps the reliefs make sense instead of blending into one white wall.
4
Use the video guide for context
If Augustan symbolism is new to you, the video or audio guide is a better investment than guessing from labels alone. It clarifies who is in the procession and why the monument mattered politically. So you spend less time decoding and more time looking.
5
Travel light on the riverfront
Bring a compact bag, especially on wet or windy riverfront days. Bulky bags, backpacks, and umbrellas may need to go straight to the free cloakroom, and dealing with that late slows your entry. A lighter setup makes the visit smoother from the start.
6
Pair one nearby classic
After the museum, add just one follow-up such as the Spanish Steps, the Pantheon, or Castel Sant'Angelo. One clean pairing keeps your day in central Rome coherent and still leaves room for lunch or an aperitivo. That way you remember the altar, not the logistics.

How to plan a Museo dell'Ara Pacis stop in Rome

This is one of the easier high-value culture stops in central Rome, but the experience changes a lot depending on whether you treat it as a focused altar visit or as part of a wider museum-and-walk day. A little planning is enough to keep the stop calm, clear, and memorable.

Choose your visit format first

Best for first-time visitors: start with the museum-only route if the ancient altar is the real priority. The current temporary exhibition can be excellent, but it changes the pacing, the ticket logic, and sometimes the crowd level. Pick the format before you arrive, and the whole stop feels cleaner.

Use timing to protect the mood

The pavilion works best when you have enough quiet to step back from the marble and then move in again for detail. General museum hours run from 9:30 am to 7:30 pm, with last admission 1 hour before closing; for Impressionism and Beyond, weekend demand is strong, and from March 27, 2026, Friday to Sunday evening hours extend to 8:30 pm. Early arrival or a clearly booked slot usually saves stress.

Add one nearby classic

This stop sits neatly between the riverside and the dense historic core, so it pairs well with exactly one follow-up. Choose the Spanish Steps if you want a classic uphill city stroll, the Pantheon if you want another layer of ancient Rome, or Castel Sant'Angelo if your priority is a Tiber-side continuation. One add-on is enough.

Why the Ara Pacis still feels radical

The monument is small enough to circle in minutes, yet it carries an unusually large amount of Roman political, dynastic, and urban meaning. That contrast is exactly why the stop lands so strongly.

An altar for Augustan peace

The Senate voted for the altar after Augustus returned from campaigns in Gaul and Spain in 13 BC, and it was dedicated in 9 BC. The message was never just peace in the abstract: it linked military control, dynastic order, and sacred legitimacy in one carefully staged monument. When you stand in front of it today, you are looking at imperial storytelling in marble.

Buried, lost, and rebuilt

The monument gradually disappeared as the ground level of the northern Field of Mars rose and the Tiber kept reshaping the area. Fragments resurfaced from the 16th century onward, major excavation resumed in 1903, and the altar was recomposed in 1938. That long interruption explains why the site feels both ancient and strangely modern in its survival story.

Why the Meier building matters

The current museum, opened in 2006 after conservation concerns became acute in the 1990s, is not just a container. The glass-and-light approach by Richard Meier gives the altar space, silence, and controlled visibility beside the Mausoleum of Augustus and the river edge. Even if you normally distrust modern shells around ancient material, here the contrast is the point.

Ticket types at Museo dell'Ara Pacis

Bookable formats divide cleanly between direct ticketing and wider guided walks through central Rome. The best choice depends on whether this museum is the destination or one stop within a bigger city narrative.

Museum entry tickets

Best for visitors who want the monument itself, not a long city route. A standard museum ticket keeps pacing flexible, lets you add the video or audio guide, and works especially well when you want a focused one-stop culture break near Piazza Augusto Imperatore. Choose this if the altar is the priority. Book now.

Guided Rome walks

Best for first-time visitors who want live context across several central landmarks in one sweep. Bookable walks connect the museum with areas such as the Spanish Steps, Pantheon, and Trevi Fountain, so the payoff is broader orientation rather than deeper on-site reading of every relief. Choose this if city context matters more than museum depth. Book now.

When the exhibition is worth adding

If the temporary show genuinely interests you, the combined ticket makes more sense than improvising on site. Impressionism and Beyond runs until May 3, 2026, and demand is strong enough that Friday-to-Sunday evening hours extend to 8:30 pm from March 27, 2026. Add it when you want a fuller art stop, not when you are racing between landmarks. Book now.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to book Museo dell'Ara Pacis in advance?

For the museum alone, same-day purchase is possible, but advance purchase is available online, by phone, or at the ticket desk. For Impressionism and Beyond, booking ahead is the safer move, especially on weekends, because demand is already strong.
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How much time should I plan for Museo dell'Ara Pacis?

For most visitors, 45 to 75 minutes works well for the altar and museum spaces. Add more time if you also want the current exhibition or if you plan to use the video guide slowly.
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What is the difference between the museum ticket and the exhibition ticket?

The museum ticket covers the permanent Ara Pacis spaces. Exhibition tickets cover the current temporary show, while the combined ticket lets you do both in one visit. If the altar is your main reason for coming, start with the museum ticket; if the current exhibition is the draw, the combined option makes more sense.
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Is photography allowed inside?

Yes, for personal use inside the museum. The main exception is the temporary-exhibition area, where the works on display cannot be photographed or filmed. Tripods, selfie sticks, and extra lights are not allowed.
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Is the museum good for wheelchair users or visitors with reduced mobility?

Yes. There are ramps, elevators, staff assistance, and free admission for a visitor with disabilities plus 1 companion. If you want the smoothest arrival, come a little earlier so support does not feel rushed.
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Can I bring a stroller or buggy?

Yes. Baby buggies are allowed inside. That makes this stop more family-friendly than many tighter historic sites in central Rome.
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Are guided tours available in English?

Yes. Guided tours can be booked in several languages with advance reservation, and room staff also provide information in English. If you want deeper context without piecing it together yourself, that format works well.
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What should I pair with the museum nearby?

Choose one nearby classic rather than building a marathon. The cleanest add-ons are the Spanish Steps, the Pantheon, the Trevi Fountain, or Castel Sant'Angelo, depending on whether you want a short uphill walk, another ancient monument, or a riverside continuation.
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General information

opening hours

General museum hours run daily from 9:30 am to 7:30 pm, with last admission 1 hour before closing. The museum is closed on May 1 and December 25. From March 27, 2026, the Impressionism and Beyond exhibition stays open until 8:30 pm from Friday to Sunday, again with last admission 1 hour before closing.

tickets

Museum-only admission is EUR 14 full and EUR 8.50 reduced. Residents of Rome and the Metropolitan City enter the museum free with valid ID, except for the separate exhibition space. Impressionism and Beyond runs until May 3, 2026 and costs EUR 15 full / EUR 13 reduced, or EUR 23 / EUR 17 combined with the museum. The museum video guide costs EUR 6, and the audio guide costs EUR 4.

address

Museo dell'Ara Pacis
Lungotevere in Augusta
corner of Via Tomacelli
00186 Rome
Italy

how to get there

The museum sits at Piazza Augusto Imperatore, between Lungotevere in Augusta and Via di Ripetta. In practice, the easiest final approach is on foot from the Via del Corso / Spanish Steps area or along the river from Castel Sant'Angelo. Because the last stretch is fully central Rome, walking the final few minutes is usually simpler than trying to be dropped exactly at the door.

accessibility

The museum has access ramps and elevators, staff assistance, permanent tactile aids for blind and visually impaired visitors, and an Italian Sign Language video station near the entrance. Admission is free for visitors with disabilities and 1 companion. If you need step-free entry or extra support, arrive a little earlier so help stays calm and unhurried.

cloakroom

The self-service cloakroom is free and included with admission. Staff may ask you to leave bulky bags, backpacks, umbrellas, or other potentially harmful objects there, and everything must be collected before the museum closes.

photography and filming

Personal photos and videos are allowed in the museum, but not for works displayed in temporary exhibitions. Tripods, selfie sticks, and additional lights are not allowed. Professional shooting requires separate authorization.
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