Feira da Ladra tickets & tours | Price comparison

Feira da Ladra

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Feira da Ladra, Lisbon’s flea market in Campo de Santa Clara, mixes antiques, vinyl, bric-a-brac, and pure curiosity under the dome line of the Panteão Nacional. Its roots reach back to the late 13th century, and the market still feels gloriously local on the Santa Clara hill.

For a first visit, choose a guided tuk tuk tour that folds Feira da Ladra into a wider old-town route, so you get the market and nearby hills with less navigation friction. Book now.
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Guided tuk tuk tours with tastings

Choose this if you want the market folded into a wider Santa Clara and old-town route with tastings and much easier hill logistics.
Lisbon: Private Guided Electric Tuk Tuk Tour with Tastings
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6 tips for visiting the Feira da Ladra

1
Start early for calmer browsing
If you want room to scan tables properly, arrive soon after 9 am on Tuesday or Saturday. The aisles in Campo de Santa Clara feel much easier before the late-morning swell. That gives you better browsing time, so you can spot the good oddities without shoulder-to-shoulder pressure.
2
Run the hill in one direction
If you arrive from Santa Apolónia, browse the market first, then continue toward Miradouro de Santa Luzia or Lisbon Cathedral only if your energy is still good. If you bounce up and down the Santa Clara slope twice, Lisbon suddenly feels much steeper. One clear direction saves energy, so the stop stays enjoyable.
3
Use the guided format on first-time trips
If this is your first morning in Lisbon, the guided tuk tuk route makes more sense than piecing the Santa Clara hill together on the fly. You get browsing time, city context, and tastings in one compact format. That way the market feels like part of a real Lisbon story, not a random detour.
4
Carry a foldable bag
If you think you might buy records, prints, or small vintage finds, keep a foldable tote in your day bag before you arrive. Good market finds are rarely planned, and carrying them by hand over cobbles gets old fast. This tiny prep keeps you flexible, so you can keep browsing without annoyance.
5
Treat it as a culture stop too
If you are not a serious buyer, the market is still worth about 45 to 90 minutes for atmosphere alone. Wander once, watch the mix of antiques and second-hand goods, then move on to Miradouro de Santa Luzia or Castle of São Jorge for a classic hilltop follow-up. That way you get the mood without forcing a shopping marathon.
6
Watch holiday dates in winter
Feira da Ladra closes on December 25 and January 1. If your Lisbon trip falls over the year-end holiday stretch, make sure your Tuesday or Saturday plan still lands on an active market day. This avoids showing up to an empty square.

How to plan a Feira da Ladra stop in Lisbon

The market itself is simple. What changes the experience is your market-day timing, how you handle the Santa Clara hill, and whether you want pure browsing or wider city context.

Choose between browsing only and a guided hill route

Best for an independent stop: go on your own, spend about 45 to 90 minutes at the stalls, and keep the rest of the day flexible. Best for first-time orientation: choose the guided tuk tuk route with tastings, which turns Feira da Ladra into part of a wider old-town loop with less wayfinding stress. Decide this first, and the rest of your Santa Clara plan becomes much easier. Book now.

Use Tuesday and Saturday windows well

If your priority is relaxed browsing, aim for soon after 9 am, when the central lanes still feel readable. If your priority is atmosphere, late morning brings more noise and energy, but also tighter movement between tables. Choose the mood first, so you do not expect a calm antique hunt in the market’s busiest window.

Build one Santa Clara to Alfama sequence

The cleanest route is one clear slope decision: market first, then Miradouro de Santa Luzia or Lisbon Cathedral, and only add Castle of São Jorge if you deliberately want a bigger climb. This keeps your Lisbon day coherent and avoids wasting energy on repeated uphill resets. If your tour format already solves the hill for you, even better. Book now.

History and character of Feira da Ladra

This is not a staged souvenir row. Feira da Ladra matters because one of Lisbon’s oldest trading traditions still feels mixed, imperfect, and very much alive.

Late-13th-century roots still shape the mood

Official sources place the market’s beginnings in the late 13th century, during the reign of Afonso III. That long timeline is why Feira da Ladra feels less like an event and more like a city habit that never fully disappeared. Even when you buy nothing, you are walking through a very old Lisbon routine.

Campo de Santa Clara gave the market its lasting stage

Archive records tie the market to Campo de Santa Clara from 1882, with Saturday trading added in 1903. The setting matters: beside the Santa Clara ridge and under the monument line, the market feels woven into the neighborhood rather than dropped into it. That physical fit is a big part of its charm.

Expect a mixed market, not a polished antique fair

One table may offer postcards, tools, and ceramic odds; the next may flip to vinyl, books, family leftovers, or handmade pieces. That unevenness is the point. Feira da Ladra works best when you come ready for curiosity rather than a perfectly curated shopping mission.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a ticket for Feira da Ladra?

No. Entry to the market itself is free.
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When is Feira da Ladra open?

The market is open Tuesday and Saturday from 9 am to 6 pm. It is closed on December 25 and January 1.
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How long should I plan for the market?

For most visitors, 45 to 90 minutes works well. Plan longer if you actively shop or pair the stop with nearby hill sights.
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Is Feira da Ladra worth it if I do not plan to buy anything?

Yes. The mix of antiques, second-hand goods, and local atmosphere still makes it a strong short stop, especially if you want a less formal Lisbon experience between monuments.
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What is the easiest way to get there?

The easiest public-transport anchor is Santa Apolónia on the Blue Line, followed by a short uphill walk. If you prefer to avoid the climb, arrive by taxi, rideshare, or guided tuk tuk.
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Is the market suitable for wheelchairs or strollers?

Partly. Much of the market is on open public ground without stairs, but paving can be uneven and the surrounding approaches are hilly. A close drop-off near the upper edge usually helps.
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What should I pair with Feira da Ladra nearby?

A practical nearby sequence is Miradouro de Santa Luzia, Lisbon Cathedral, or, if you want a more demanding hill segment, Castle of São Jorge. Pick one or two, not all three, unless you enjoy a climb-heavy half day.
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Are guided tours worth it for Feira da Ladra?

Usually yes on a first trip. Guided tuk tuk formats remove hill-navigation friction and turn the market into a smoother old-town route with more context.
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General information

opening hours

The market is open Tuesday and Saturday from 9 am to 6 pm. It is closed Sunday, Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, as well as December 25 and January 1.

tickets

Entry is free. Paid products on this page are guided city tours, mainly private tuk tuk routes with tastings that include the Santa Clara hill as part of a wider Lisbon circuit. Compare formats first if you want the market without extra hill-planning friction.

address

Feira da Ladra
Campo de Santa Clara
Lisbon
Portugal

how to get there

The closest metro and rail hub is Santa Apolónia on Lisbon’s Blue Line. From there, expect a short uphill walk to Campo de Santa Clara. If you want an easier arrival, use a taxi or rideshare drop-off on the Santa Clara side, or choose a guided tuk tuk route.

accessibility

This is an outdoor public market rather than a controlled venue. You can browse large parts of it without stairs, but paving is uneven in places and the surrounding hill streets add slope. If mobility is limited, arriving close to the upper edge of the market is usually the easier approach.
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