Climb the misty Serra de Sintra to King Ferdinand II's Romanticist fairytale palace — completed in 1854 in vivid yellow ochre and deep red, mixing Moorish horseshoe arches, Manueline tracery, Gothic battlements and a sea-monster Triton straight from a 16th-century cosmology. Walk through the State Rooms, stand on the Queen's Terrace with the Atlantic on the horizon, then lose yourself in the 200-hectare park of exotic trees, hidden grottoes and the Chalet of the Countess of Edla. Book your timed-entry tickets in seconds and walk past the queue at the Robles Gate.
Buy TicketsThe Palácio Nacional da Pena sits on a rocky peak 480 metres above the village of Sintra, on the site of a 16th-century Hieronymite monastery that was ruined in the 1755 Lisbon earthquake. In 1838 the young King consort Ferdinand II — born in Coburg, married to Queen Maria II of Portugal, devoted patron of the arts — bought the ruins and commissioned the German mineralogist and engineer Baron Wilhelm Ludwig von Eschwege to remake them as a Romanticist summer palace. Work continued from 1840 to 1854. The result is one of Europe's defining works of 19th-century Romanticism: a deliberate, theatrical layering of Moorish, Gothic, Manueline and Renaissance styles, painted in the brilliant ochre yellow and deep red you see today after the 1990s restoration. The palace and its surrounding 200-hectare park of imported trees were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1995 as part of the Cultural Landscape of Sintra. Tickets are sold in 30-minute timed slots that sell out daily in summer. For planning, see our visitors guide, the latest opening hours and our best time to visit page.



The smartest way to visit Pena Palace
Walk straight up to the Robles Gate with a pre-booked 30-minute timed slot. Pena Palace sells out almost daily from April through October and on every weekend — booking ahead is the only reliable way in.
Add the official audio tour in English, Portuguese, Spanish, French, German, Italian and Mandarin. Narrators walk you through the Indian Room, the Stag Room with its imitation-bamboo ceiling, the Noble Hall and the Queen's breakfast room.
Plans change. Cancel up to 24 hours before your visit for a full refund — no questions asked, no fees, no fine print.
Show your ticket directly from your phone at the Robles Gate. No printing, no paper, no queueing at the lower ticket office.
The detail that surprises most visitors is that Pena was designed not by a Portuguese architect but by a German engineer trained in mining. Ferdinand II — King consort, cousin to Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, an accomplished watercolourist who painted Sintra obsessively — chose Wilhelm Ludwig von Eschwege precisely because he had no architectural orthodoxy to defend. Together they spent fourteen years sketching, demolishing, rebuilding and adding: a Moorish horseshoe-arch gateway here, a Manueline armillary sphere there, a Triton sea-monster carved into the bay window above the new wing, an octagonal yellow tower borrowed from Bavarian fairy castles.
The palace was structurally complete in 1847 and decorated through 1854. Ferdinand kept extending it almost until his death in 1885. After the 1910 revolution that ended the Portuguese monarchy, Pena was nationalised and opened to the public as a museum. The vivid yellow and red you see today comes from a meticulous 1990s restoration by Parques de Sintra that returned the palace to its original 19th-century livery — for fifty years before that, the entire building had faded to a uniform grey, with the colours only known from old watercolours. Standing in the courtyard at the foot of the yellow tower, you are looking at one of the world's most photographed buildings and the spiritual ancestor of every "Disney castle" silhouette that followed.
Visit Pena Palace in 3 simple steps
Pick a date and a 30-minute timed-entry slot for the palace interior. The park itself is open all day on the same ticket. Add the shuttle bus (€3 return) if you don't want to walk up the woodland hill, or upgrade to a small-group expert tour for a deeper visit.
Secure checkout with instant email confirmation. Your mobile ticket arrives in minutes, ready to scan at the Robles Gate at the top of the hill — no waiting in the queue, no printing required.
On the day, take bus 434 from Sintra station up the Serra, get off at the Pena stop, walk through the lower park to the Robles Gate and present your ticket. Make sure to arrive 15 minutes before your timed slot — they're strictly enforced.
Everything you need to know before your visit