What’s Included & How It Works
The Vatican City Pass bundles Vatican Museums, Sistine Chapel, St. Peter’s Basilica, and a third attraction from ~$82. Find out exactly what’s included, how it compares to individual tickets, and whether it’s worth it.
The Vatican Museums attract over 6 million visitors a year and booking individual tickets — Vatican Museums entry, Basilica skip-the-queue, and a third Rome attraction — involves managing three separate bookings, three confirmation emails, and three timed entry slots. The Vatican City Pass consolidates all three into one purchase and typically costs less than buying the same tickets separately.
This page explains exactly what the Vatican City Pass includes, how to customise it, what each component option offers, how it compares to individual tickets, and who it is and is not worth buying for.
Top Tickets
The Vatican City Pass includes three customisable components: (1) Vatican Museums & Sistine Chapel — choose between skip-the-line entry, hosted entry with a local representative, or a guided tour in English; (2) St. Peter’s Basilica — choose between reserved entry with audio guide, a 1-hour express guided tour, a guided tour including the Papal Grottoes, or dome access with audio guide; (3) a third attraction — choose between Castel Sant’Angelo, Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore, or the Rome City Audio Guide app. A 10% discount code on five future Rome bookings is automatically included.
The centrepiece of the pass. Choose the level of access and guidance that suits your visit:
For a full comparison of Vatican Museums entry options, see our Vatican Museums tickets complete guide.
Entry to St. Peter’s Basilica is technically free, but the external security queue takes 45–90 minutes during peak season. The pass gives you priority access:
Choose a second Roman landmark or a practical tool:
The Vatican City Pass starts from approximately $82 per person (equivalent to around €75–80 depending on exchange rates at the time of purchase). The final price varies based on your selected options, visit date, and live availability. Higher-demand choices — such as the English guided Vatican Museums tour or dome access at St. Peter’s — will push the total higher than the base rate. All tickets are non-refundable.
For context, buying comparable components individually typically costs:
| Component | Individual ticket cost |
|---|---|
| Vatican Museums skip-the-line entry | from €39 |
| St. Peter’s Basilica guided tour | from €35 |
| Castel Sant’Angelo entry | from €15–20 |
| Total (approx.) | from €89–94 |
The Vatican City Pass starts from approximately $82 (around €75–80) — a saving versus individual tickets, plus the 10% discount code for future bookings adds further value if you plan additional Rome attractions.
The Vatican City Pass is worth it for most first-time visitors to Rome visiting in peak season (April–October), when Vatican queues exceed 2 hours without advance tickets. It saves both money and planning time by bundling three separate bookings into one purchase, typically at a lower combined price. It is less worth it for off-peak visitors (November–March) when queues are shorter, or for visitors who only want Vatican Museums access and nothing else.
| Vatican City Pass | Roma Pass + Omnia Card | |
|---|---|---|
| Vatican Museums | ✓ Included | ✓ Included (Omnia Card) |
| St. Peter’s Basilica | ✓ Included (priority access) | ✓ Included (Omnia Card) |
| Colosseum | ✗ Not included | ✓ Free entry (of 2, Roma Pass) |
| Borghese Gallery | ✗ Not included | ✓ Free entry (of 2, Roma Pass) |
| Public transport | ✗ Not included | ✓ Unlimited metro/bus/tram |
| Hop-on hop-off bus | ✗ Not included | ✓ 72 hours (Omnia Card) |
| Third attraction | ✓ Castel Sant’Angelo / Santa Maria Maggiore / app | ✗ Not included separately |
| Price (adult) | from ~$82 (~€75–80) | from €149 |
| Best for | Vatican-focused 1–2 day visit | Rome + Vatican 3-day trip |
For a full breakdown of the Roma Pass + Omnia Card option, see our Roma Pass for Vatican Museums guide.
The Vatican City Pass includes: Vatican Museums & Sistine Chapel entry (skip-the-line, hosted, or guided tour), St. Peter’s Basilica access (reserved entry, guided tour, guided tour + grottoes, or dome climb), a third attraction (Castel Sant’Angelo, Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore, or Rome audio guide app), and a 10% discount code for 5 future Rome bookings.
No — all tickets within the Vatican City Pass are non-refundable once purchased. Rescheduling to a different date may be possible depending on availability. Check the terms at booking before purchasing if your plans might change.
The Vatican City Pass is available exclusively through Tiqets. Purchase online, customise your three components at checkout, and receive mobile tickets by email. Book as early as possible for peak season dates — popular time slots for the Vatican Museums fill weeks in advance. Book directly on the Vatican City Pass Tiqets page.
No — the Colosseum is not included in the Vatican City Pass. For a pass that covers both the Vatican and the Colosseum, see our Vatican + Colosseum combo tour page, or the Roma Pass + Omnia Card guide.
No — Vatican Gardens access is not included in the Vatican City Pass. The Gardens require a separate guided tour ticket. See our Vatican Gardens tour page for options.
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