Park Güell + Gaudí House Museum Ticket

The Park Güell + Gaudí House Museum combined ticket costs approximately €28 for adults in 2026 (€23 for children aged 7–12 and seniors 65+). It includes timed entry to both the Monumental Zone and the Gaudí House Museum — the pink house where Antoni Gaudí lived from 1906 to 1925. The museum is not included in the standard €18 admission and must be booked as this combined ticket. Most visitors spend 30–45 minutes in the museum and 1.5–2 hours in the Monumental Zone.

The Gaudí House Museum — Casa Museu Gaudí — recently reopened after a restoration programme and is once again fully accessible with a combined ticket. It sits inside Park Güell’s grounds, close to the Turó de les Tres Creus path, and offers an entirely different experience from the Monumental Zone: intimate, quiet, and domestic rather than architectural and panoramic. This article tells you exactly what the combined ticket includes, what is inside the museum, how entry works, whether it is worth adding, and where to buy.

What’s Included

Timed entry to the Monumental Zone (Dragon Staircase, Hypostyle Room, Main Terrace, Serpentine Bench, Porter’s Lodge) and timed entry to the Gaudí House Museum (former residence of Antoni Gaudí, 1906–1925, containing original furniture, personal artefacts, architectural models, and a mosaic garden).

Monumental Zone entry The full Monumental Zone — Dragon Staircase and El Drac, Hypostyle Room, Main Terrace and Serpentine Bench, Porter’s Lodge pavilions — all accessible at your own pace with no time limit once inside. This is identical to the standard admission ticket. For a full breakdown of every feature included, see our Park Güell Admission Ticket article.

Gaudí House Museum entry The pink house where Antoni Gaudí lived from 1906 to 1925. Gaudí moved in at the invitation of his patron Eusebi Güell, who wanted to promote the planned residential estate. The house was designed by his close collaborator Francesc Berenguer i Mestres in 1904 and became a museum in 1963. It was declared a national monument in 1969 and recently underwent a full restoration before reopening in 2025–2026.

Inside the museum you will find:

  • Original Gaudí-designed furniture — chairs, mirrors, and wrought-iron pieces originally made for Casa Batlló and Casa Milà, displayed at close range and human scale – Personal artefacts and religious objects — devotional items, prayer books, and relics that illuminate the spiritual dimension driving his architectural decisions – Architectural models and sketches — drawings and scale models documenting his design evolution across projects – Preserved personal rooms — Gaudí’s bedroom, study, and staircase, furnished with the simplicity and humility that contrasted sharply with the grandeur of his public works

Ticket Prices 2026

Note: this ticket is non-refundable once purchased. Advance booking is strongly recommended — museum time slots sell out earlier than standard Monumental Zone slots due to the house’s limited capacity.

How the Combined Entry Works

Both components are timed independently. Visit the Monumental Zone first, then walk 10–15 minutes to the museum for your assigned slot. Monumental Zone and museum slots operate on the same day but at different times — plan both when booking. Museum slots are more limited and sell out faster than Monumental Zone slots.

The two components of the ticket operate independently with their own entry logic.

A practical tip: visit the Monumental Zone first (Dragon Staircase, Hypostyle Room, Main Terrace), then walk through the park to the Gaudí House Museum for your timed slot. This way you see the architectural highlights while your energy is highest and finish with the quieter, more intimate museum.

Is the Museum Worth Adding?

For dedicated Gaudí fans and architecture enthusiasts, yes — the museum adds a genuinely different dimension that the Monumental Zone cannot provide. For casual visitors mainly interested in the famous mosaics and views, the standard €18 admission is sufficient.

The museum is not a conventional architectural museum. Its strength lies in intimacy and personal scale. If you want to understand the man behind the architecture — his daily life, his furnishings, his faith, his working methods — the Gaudí House Museum provides this context uniquely and quietly.

The price premium over the standard ticket is approximately €10. For 30–45 minutes of a genuinely different experience in a space with significantly fewer visitors than the Monumental Zone, this represents reasonable value for interested visitors.

Photography at the Museum

Photography without flash is permitted inside the museum. Tripods are not allowed. The house is a small, residential-scale space — be mindful of other visitors when taking photographs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Gaudí House Museum included in the standard Park Güell ticket?

No. The museum requires a separate combined ticket costing approximately €28. The standard admission (€18) covers only the Monumental Zone.

Do I need to visit the museum at a specific time?

Yes. The Gaudí House Museum operates on strict timed slots. You must arrive at the museum entrance at your assigned time — latecomers are not admitted.

Can I visit the museum before the Monumental Zone?

Yes. The combined ticket allows you to visit both on the same day in whichever order you prefer, as long as you arrive at the museum during your assigned time slot.

How long does the museum visit take?

Most visitors spend 30–45 minutes inside. Allow more time if you want to study the furniture and objects in detail.

Is the museum accessible for wheelchair users?

The house has multiple floors and a staircase. Wheelchair access is limited. Contact the park at parkguell@bsmsa.cat for the most current accessibility information before visiting.

Is the combined ticket refundable?

No. The combined ticket is non-refundable once purchased. Changes and cancellations are not permitted.

Is the museum visible from the free zone?

The exterior — a distinctive pink house with spires — is visible from the free zone paths. Interior access requires the combined ticket.

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Researched & Written by
Jamshed is a versatile traveler, equally drawn to the vibrant energy of city escapes and the peaceful solitude of remote getaways. On some trips, he indulges in resort hopping, while on others, he spends little time in his accommodation, fully immersing himself in the destination. A passionate foodie, Jamshed delights in exploring local cuisines, with a particular love for flavorful non-vegetarian dishes. Favourite Cities: Amsterdam, Las Vegas, Dublin, Prague, Vienna

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