Roma Pass + Omnia Card + Vatican Museums tour

There must be just a handful of cities that can replicate the aura one generally associates with Rome. In fact, thanks to its historical, cultural, and architectural significance, it remains one of the most visited cities in the world.

While this bodes well for the tourism industry, a visitor could have a harrowing experience if they haven’t planned their itinerary in advance. Most attractions in Rome have limited visiting hours, which means you need to hustle and bustle your way through the tourist crowd, which only keeps getting bigger as the hours drift by. 

This is why a Roma Pass + Omnia Card could be exactly what you are looking for if you want to create unforgettable memories and visit all of Rome’s most famous sites. 

Bestselling tickets
# Vatican Museums, St Peter’s, and Gardens Private Group Tour Ticket
# Vatican Museums Private Night Tour Ticket
# Vatican Museums, Sistine Chapel Guided Tour Ticket
# Private Papal Audience Ticket
# St. Peter’s Basilica Tour Ticket

Roma Pass + Omnia Card highlights

  • Enjoy hassle-free entry to Rome’s Vatican Museums, Colosseum, etc.
  • Guided tour available in English and Italian
  • 2-in-1 City Card is available for 72 hours
  • Omnia includes the Vatican City’s top sights and a 3-day, hop-on, hop-off bus tour
  • Roma offers free entry to 2 out of 5 top attractions plus discounts to 30 other sights
  • Combo grants you free unlimited public transport based on the validity of your pass

Ticket description

This Roma + Omnia combo pass offers you access to not just the Vatican Museums and Sistine Chapel but also to other attractions like the Colosseum, Palazzo Valentini, Capitoline Museums, Castel Sant’Angelo, St Peter’s Prison, and the Circo Maximo Experience.

To break this down further, the Omnia Card offers you free entry (based on the duration of your card) to either one or two of these attractions: Vatican Museums, Sistine Chapel, St. Peter’s Basilica, Basilica of St. John in the Lateran, and Mamertine Prison. Omnia also offers you a free hop-on and hop-off Rome bus tour.

The Roma Pass, on the other hand, offers free admission to any two of these sites: Colosseum, Roman Forum, and Palatine Hill; Capitoline Museums; Castel Sant’Angelo; Borghese Gallery; and Circo Maximo Experience.

The Roma Pass also includes discounted entry to the National Roman Museum, Baths of Diocletian, National Gallery in Palazzo Barberini, Etruscan Museum of Villa Giulia, Centrale Montemartini, National Museum of Oriental Art, MACRO and MAXXI, Planetarium and astronomical museum, Trajan’s Market, Palazzo Valentini, etc.

Note: The Roma Pass does not include the Vatican Museums or St. Peter’s Basilica. So it’s best to opt for the Roma Pass + Omnia Card combo.

Pass details

  • Adult (18+ years): €149
  • Youth (6 to 17 years): €69

Free entry

  • Children aged 5 years and younger

Cancellation policy

You are eligible for a full refund if you cancel your ticket up to 24 hours before your booked date.

Planning a visit to the Museums? Here’s all you need to know about the attraction’s dress code, its three entrance lines, opening and closing hours, the amenities within the Museums, how to reach the Vatican, and special tours like the Vatican Museums early morning and late evening tickets, Castle Gandolfo, and Vatican Grottoes & Necropolis tickets.

Attractions you shouldn’t miss with this combo card

  • Vatican Museums: Second only to the Louvre in terms of yearly footfalls, the Vatican Museums house 70,000 works of art, out of which 20,000 are displayed in 54 galleries, taking in a total of 42,000 square meters (450,000 square feet) of space
  • Sistine Chapel: Home to Michelangelo’s world-famous ceiling frescoes depicting the Last Judgement and the Creation of Adam, the Sistine was originally built to function as the Pope’s private chapel, something it does even to this day
  • St. Peter’s Basilica: One of the most recognized religious and architectural edifices in the world, St. Peter’s can hold up to 20,000 people sitting and 60,000 standing any day! Its Dome remains the tallest in the world to date. 
  • Colosseum: During the zenith of the ancient Roman empire, all eyes lay on the Colosseum, built by the Flavian Dynasty to host gladiatorial fights. Today, its amphitheater is one of the top-most visited attractions in the world
  • Castel Sant’Angelo: This towering rotunda once served as Emperor Hadrian’s mausoleum and has since been converted into a palace, residence, courtroom, prison, and fortress.
  • Trajan’s Market: Dating back to the Imperial Roman era, the ‘Mercati di Traiano’ was once a semicircular complex of five floors that housed 150 shops and offices selling horticultural products, spices, oil, and wine.
  • Planetarium: Often alluded to as the ‘great machine of space and time,’ the attraction’s 14-meter dome offers a perfect reproduction of the motions of the Sun, the Moon and the planets, the Zodiac, the Milky Way, and some 4,500 stars

Related tickets

Vatican Museums, St Peter’s, and Gardens private tour

From

€288

Rome tourist pass

From

€116

Recommended Reading

# What’s inside Vatican Museums
# Things to know before booking your Vatican Museums tickets
# Last-minute Vatican Museums ticket
# Sistine Chapel ticket
# Floor map of Vatican Museums

Photo of author
Researched & Written by
Mark Lancy Sebastian is a traveler at heart with a strong passion for history—mostly Classical Greek and Roman, culture, food, and art. He thrives on poetry, baking, climbing hills, and befriending local cats (the 'pspspspspspsp' actually works!) and dogs.