Sagrada Familia tickets explained
The Sagrada Familia sells four things that all sound similar and cost very different amounts. Here is exactly what each tier includes, the one most people should buy, and why the towers are not the upgrade they look like.
2026 centenary note
The Gaudi centenary is driving sell-outs and a small surcharge on some tickets. Tower slots in particular vanish first. Book timed entry days ahead, not on the day.
The one to buy
Entry plus one tower, first morning slot
For most visitors the basic entry is enough; the building is the experience. If you want the view, add one tower (Nativity for the older facade, Passion for the city panorama) and take the earliest slot you can. Skip the towers entirely with very young kids or if you use a wheelchair; they involve a narrow spiral descent on foot.
The four tiers, side by side
Sagrada Familia: ticket tiers
Basic entry
EUR 26
Basilica access plus the audio-guide app on your phone
Entry + one tower
EUR 40
Basilica plus a lift up the Nativity or Passion tower
Guided experience
EUR 33
A live guide for roughly 1.5 hrs, basilica only
Sagrada + Park Guell
EUR 62
Both sites on one timed combo, booked together
Prices are per adult and are 2026 prototype figures. Children, students and Barcelona residents pay less; under-11s are often free with a booked slot.
What "basic entry" actually gets you
Basic entry covers the basilica interior, the museum in the crypt level, and the audio-guide app you run on your own phone (bring earphones). It does not include either tower or a live guide. For a first visit this is genuinely enough: the columns, the light through the stained glass, and the scale of the nave are the point, and you set your own pace.
The guided tier
The guided ticket adds a live guide for about ninety minutes and explains the symbolism you would otherwise miss, the tree-like columns, the colour logic of the windows, the two finished facades. It does not include a tower. Worth it if you like context delivered out loud rather than through an app.
The towers, honestly
You pick one tower at booking, not both. The lift carries you up; you walk down a tight spiral staircase with no lift option, which rules it out for anyone unsteady on stairs and for wheelchair users. The Nativity towers face the older, more ornate facade; the Passion towers give the cleaner city view. The view is good, not essential. If your budget is tight, spend it on the slot timing instead.
The Park Guell combo
The combined Sagrada plus Park Guell ticket bundles both timed entries at a modest saving and saves a second checkout. It only helps if you are doing both on a planned day; otherwise book each site for the exact slot you want.
Sagrada tickets: official vs Viator vs GetYourGuide
Prices checked 24 May 2026. Prototype data; live prices arrive when the booking API connects. We earn a commission on Viator and GetYourGuide bookings; the price you pay is the same.Official is cheapest. Resellers cost a little more but cancel free and deliver to your phone, useful if your plans might shift in a busy centenary year.
How we checked this
Tier names and from-prices sourced from the official Sagrada Familia ticketing site, then compared against Viator and GetYourGuide listings for the same entry type. Tower access rules and the centenary surcharge confirmed against official ticketing. Prices move; we date them and re-check.
Verified 24 May 2026 · the barcelonageek editorial team
The story
A basilica 144 years in the making
Why it is still unfinished, and why that is the point.
- 01
1882
The first stone
Construction began under architect Francisco de Paula del Villar, who resigned after a year. Antoni Gaudí took over in 1883, aged 31.
- Foundation stone
- 19 March 1882
- Gaudí takes over
- 1883
- 02
1883–1926
Gaudí's life's work
Gaudí gave the basilica 43 years and, in his final years, lived on site. He died in 1926 after being struck by a tram, and is buried in the crypt beneath the building.
- Gaudí died
- 10 June 1926
- Resting place
- The Sagrada Família crypt
- 03
1954–2000
The nave fills with light
The interior took shape with hyperboloid vaults, double-curved surfaces Gaudí calculated to channel light, and thousands of square metres of stained glass that turn the nave into a kaleidoscope.
- Nave vault height
- 45 m (60 m at the apse)
- Stained glass
- about 8,500 m²
- 04
2000–2025
The towers rise
Of the 18 planned towers, the 12 Apostle towers are complete. The central tower of Jesus Christ is set to be the tallest church structure in Europe, kept just shorter than Montjuïc so nothing exceeds the natural hill.
- Towers planned
- 18
- Central tower
- about 172.5 m
- 05
~2026
Completion in sight
After more than 140 years, the six central towers are the final chapter, timed to mark the centenary of Gaudí’s death.
- Centenary
- 1926–2026
Common questions
Which Sagrada Familia ticket is best for most people?
Basic entry is enough for a first visit. If you want a view, add one tower and take the earliest slot. The guided tier suits anyone who prefers spoken context to the audio app.
Can I visit both Sagrada towers?
No. You choose one tower, Nativity or Passion, when you book. Nativity faces the ornate older facade; Passion gives the cleaner city panorama.
Is the official site cheaper than Viator or GetYourGuide?
Yes, the official site is almost always cheapest. Resellers add a small markup in exchange for free cancellation and instant app delivery, which is worth it if your plans might change.
Do I need to book ahead in 2026?
Yes. The Gaudi centenary is causing faster sell-outs and a small surcharge. Book your timed slot days ahead, and book tower slots first since they go soonest.
Related guides
Which Gaudi site first?
The four sites ranked, with a one-day order.
GaudiPark Guell timed entry
Free Sunday windows and the best light.
GaudiMore Gaudi guides
Back to the Gaudi & Modernisme hub.
Researched by the barcelonageek editorial team. Last updated 24 May 2026. We name the official booking site first on every ticket, and earn a commission only if you choose Viator or GetYourGuide; the price you pay is the same. How we research · Aviso legal