Vatican Museums Entrances
Which Line to Join & How Entry Works

Since January 2024, the Vatican Museums operate a fully online-only ticketing system — there is no walk-up ticket counter. There are two main entry lanes at the Viale Vaticano entrance: the Online Tickets lane (look for a yellow signboard) for visitors with any pre-booked online ticket, and the Group/Guided Tour lane (orange-yellow signboard reading ‘Group entrance with online reservation’) for visitors on a guided tour. A separate accessible entrance exists opposite the Pinecone Courtyard for visitors with mobility needs.
The Vatican Museums entrance on Viale Vaticano can look chaotic from the outside — a long queue, multiple gates, and signage in several languages. Knowing which lane to join before you arrive saves time and confusion. The single most important thing to know since 2024: there is no longer any queue for buying tickets at the door. If you arrive without a ticket, you cannot enter.
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The Two Main Entry Lanes — Online Tickets vs Guided Tours
There are two entry lanes at the Vatican Museums Viale Vaticano entrance: the Online Tickets lane (yellow signboard), for all visitors with a pre-booked ticket — skip-the-line entry, last-minute tickets booked online, or any ticket from a third-party platform; and the Group/Guided Tour lane (orange-yellow signboard), exclusively for visitors on a pre-booked guided or group tour, following their guide. Both lanes bypass the former walk-up ticket queue. Security screening applies at both.
Lane 1 — Online Tickets (Yellow Signboard)
- Who joins this lane: Any visitor with a pre-booked online ticket — skip-the-line entry from the official site, Tiqets, GetYourGuide, Viator, or any other authorised platform
- What to have ready: Your QR code on your smartphone (screenshot it before arriving — mobile signal near the entrance is unreliable)
- What happens: Staff scan your QR code at the validation counter inside the entrance — this validation step is mandatory before the turnstiles; do not proceed directly to the turnstiles
- Ticket validation: All online tickets must be validated at a counter inside the entrance before passing through the turnstiles — a step that catches many visitors off-guard
- Typical wait: 5–15 minutes depending on time of day; busiest around 9am–10am and 12pm–1pm
Lane 2 — Group / Guided Tour (Orange-Yellow Signboard)
- Who joins this lane: Visitors on a pre-booked guided tour — whether a small-group tour, private tour, or large group booking
- What to do: Follow your guide’s instructions before joining the lane — you will be given a coloured marker (pin or tag) for identification; keep this throughout the tour
- What happens: Your guide leads the group through this dedicated entrance, which typically moves faster than the Online Tickets lane
- Signboard text: ‘Group entrance with online reservation’
- Note: Do not join this lane if you are on a self-guided ticket, even if it appears shorter — staff will redirect you to the Online Tickets lane
Accessible Entrance — Visitors with Disabilities
A separate accessible entrance is located opposite the Pinecone Courtyard (Cortile della Pigna) on the west side of the Vatican Museums. This entrance allows visitors with disabilities and their companions to avoid the main entrance queues. Wheelchair ramps, elevators, and accessible toilet facilities are available throughout the Museums. Free wheelchairs can be borrowed from the cloakroom near the main entrance. Visitors with a disability certificate of 67%+ and one companion enter free — this cannot be booked online; present your certificate at the Special Permits desk inside the main entrance.
- Accessible entrance location: Opposite the Pinecone Courtyard (Cortile della Pigna), Viale Vaticano
- Free wheelchairs: Available from the cloakroom near the main entrance; present a valid ID and deposit
- Elevators: Available throughout the main gallery circuit on both floors
- Free entry: Visitors with a disability certificate of 67%+ enter free with one companion — present certificate at the Special Permits desk inside the entrance, not bookable online
What Happened to Walk-Up Ticket Sales?
Walk-up ticket sales at the Vatican Museums were permanently discontinued on 1 January 2024. Prior to this date, visitors could queue at an on-site ticket counter — this queue often stretched 500 metres or more. Since January 2024, all entry requires an online ticket booked in advance. If you arrive without a ticket, there is no counter to buy one at the door. The only option is to find availability on your phone via Tiqets, GetYourGuide, or the official Vatican site — which during peak season is rarely possible on the same day.
For strategies on finding last-minute tickets if you’re already in Rome without a booking, see our last-minute Vatican Museums tickets guide.
The Mandatory Ticket Validation Step
This is the most commonly missed step at the Vatican Museums entrance. All online tickets — whether from the official site, Tiqets, GetYourGuide, or any other platform — must be validated at counters inside the access corridor before the turnstiles. The turnstiles will not scan an unvalidated QR code. Visitors who go directly to the turnstiles find their ticket does not work and must rejoin the validation queue. Validation takes 1–2 minutes per person; the queue builds by 9:30am on busy days.
- Step 1: Enter through the main gate on Viale Vaticano
- Step 2: Join the validation queue in the access corridor inside the entrance (signposted)
- Step 3: Have your QR code ready — staff scan it and validate your ticket
- Step 4: Proceed through the turnstiles with your validated ticket
- Step 5: Pass through security screening (bags X-rayed, metal detector)
- Step 6: Collect any pre-booked audio guide from the desk just inside, near the Gregorian Egyptian Museum
Security at the Vatican Museums
Airport-style security screening applies to all visitors at the Vatican Museums — bags are X-rayed and visitors pass through a metal detector. On busy days (particularly Saturdays and Mondays), the security queue can take 15–30 minutes. Large bags (over 40×35×15cm) are not permitted inside the galleries and must be left at the free cloakroom near the entrance. See our things to know before visiting guide for a full pre-visit checklist.
Free Entry on the Last Sunday of the Month
On the last Sunday of each month, the Vatican Museums offer free entry from 9:00am to 2:00pm (last entry 12:30pm). On free Sundays, all visitors join a single queue at the main Viale Vaticano entrance — there are no separate lanes. Queues begin forming before 8:00am and can reach 2–3 hours by mid-morning. See our Vatican Museums opening hours guide for the complete list of free Sundays and holiday closures.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which entrance do I use for the Vatican Museums?
The main entrance is on Viale Vaticano on the north side of Vatican City. If you have a pre-booked online ticket, join the lane marked with a yellow signboard. If you are on a guided tour, follow your guide to the orange-yellow ‘Group entrance’ signboard. There is a separate accessible entrance opposite the Pinecone Courtyard for visitors with mobility needs.
Can I buy tickets at the Vatican Museums entrance?
No. Since January 2024, all Vatican Museums entry is online-only — there is no walk-up ticket counter at the entrance. You must book your ticket in advance online before arriving.
Do I need to print my Vatican Museums ticket?
No — a digital e-ticket on your smartphone is accepted. Screenshot the QR code before arriving as mobile signal near the entrance can be unreliable. Remember: all tickets must be validated at the corridor counters inside the entrance before the turnstiles.
Why won’t my ticket scan at the Vatican Museums turnstiles?
All online tickets must be validated at counters in the access corridor inside the entrance before the turnstiles. If your ticket does not scan at a turnstile, you have missed the validation step — rejoin the validation queue to have your ticket processed.
Is there a separate entrance for skip-the-line tickets?
No — skip-the-line tickets use the same Online Tickets lane (yellow signboard) as all other pre-booked online tickets. The ‘skip-the-line’ benefit means you bypass the former walk-up ticket queue (now abolished), not that you use a different physical entrance.
Where is the Vatican Museums accessible entrance?
The accessible entrance is opposite the Pinecone Courtyard (Cortile della Pigna) on Viale Vaticano. Free wheelchairs are available from the cloakroom. Visitors with a disability certificate of 67%+ and one companion enter free — present the certificate at the Special Permits desk inside the main entrance on arrival.
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