Neoclassical façade of the Palácio Nacional da Ajuda above Belém, Lisbon, showing the central pediment and twin wings.

Lisbon's last royal residence — the palace they fled in 1910

The Palácio Nacional da Ajuda was the official home of the Portuguese royal family from 1861 until King Manuel II fled into exile in 1910. The throne room and state banquet hall remain laid as the Braganza dynasty left them, and since 2022 the Tesouro Real — the crown jewels of Portugal — have been on public display in a purpose-built treasury wing. Above Belém, an uphill walk from Jerónimos.

See ticket options
  • 1796–1910 Built under Queen Maria I, abandoned at the fall of the monarchy
  • Tesouro Real Portugal's crown jewels — opened to the public 2022
  • Throne Room Sala do Trono preserved as the Braganza dynasty left it
  • Above Belém 1 km uphill from Jerónimos, the Coach Museum and Belém Tower

Choose your ticket

Adult (Palace + Tesouro Real)

Adults — combined ticket to the palace and the royal-jewels treasury

€32

  • Skip-the-line entry to the Palácio Nacional da Ajuda
  • Tesouro Real — the Portuguese crown jewels on public display since 2022
  • Throne Room, state banquet hall, royal apartments
  • Royal Library and music room
  • Mobile ticket — no printing needed
Reserve my adult ticket

Family bundle (2 adults · under-13s free)

2 adults — children up to 12 walk in free at the gate

€60

  • 2 adult tickets to the palace and Tesouro Real
  • Children up to 12 walk in free — no ticket needed
  • Skip-the-line for the whole group
  • One booking covers the family
Reserve the family bundle
4.6 from 3,400 verified travellers
Helen P.
United Kingdom
“The Tesouro Real is the single most spectacular museum room I have seen in Lisbon. The crown jewels of Portugal in a purpose-built treasury — worth the uphill walk from Belém on its own.”
2025-09-12
Sophie D.
France
“Far less crowded than Sintra or Jerónimos and arguably more atmospheric — the state rooms genuinely feel as if the royal family walked out yesterday. The throne room is unforgettable.”
2025-07-04
Marco R.
Italy
“An hour in the palace, half an hour in the treasury, then a long walk downhill to Jerónimos for pastel de nata. Perfect Lisbon morning.”
2025-05-22
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About Palácio Nacional da Ajuda

The Palácio Nacional da Ajuda sits on the hill above Belém in western Lisbon, an uphill kilometre from the Jerónimos Monastery and the Coach Museum. It was begun in 1796 under Queen Maria I as the replacement for the Paço da Ribeira, the medieval Lisbon royal palace destroyed in the 1755 earthquake. The first design, by Manuel Caetano de Sousa, was late baroque; after revisions by the Italian-trained architects Francisco Xavier Fabri and António Francisco Rosa, the project shifted to a restrained late neoclassical idiom — and was never fully completed. The southern wing remains structurally unfinished, the original plans for a vast forecourt and parade-ground were never realised, and the palace stands today as the most ambitious unfinished royal project in Portugal.

From 1861 the palace served as the official residence of the Portuguese royal family. King Luís I and Queen Maria Pia of Savoy made it their permanent home; their grandson Manuel II was the last monarch to live there. The dynasty's residence ended abruptly on 5 October 1910, when the republican revolution in Lisbon forced the royal family into exile. They left the palace as they had used it the night before — and the throne room, the state banquet hall (Sala D. João VI), the music room, and the private royal apartments remain laid out today substantially as the Braganza family abandoned them.

Two years before the revolution, on 1 February 1908, King Carlos I and his eldest son Crown Prince Luís Filipe had been assassinated in the Terreiro do Paço in central Lisbon — the regicide that effectively ended the political viability of the Portuguese monarchy. The teenage Manuel II ascended the throne, lived briefly at Ajuda, and was forced into permanent English exile within two years. The palace was nationalised, opened to the public as a museum, and has been operated since by what is now Museus e Monumentos de Portugal.

In December 2022 the Tesouro Real — the crown jewels of Portugal — opened to the public in a purpose-built treasury wing on the south side of the palace. The collection includes the royal regalia, ceremonial swords, gold and silver tableware, and the jewels worn by the Braganza queens and princesses across the nineteenth century. Its opening transformed Ajuda from a quieter heritage site into one of the most significant new museum openings in Lisbon in the last decade, and it is now the principal draw alongside the preserved state rooms.

Practical information

Address
Largo da Ajuda, 1349-021 Lisboa, Portugal
Hours
Tuesday to Sunday 10:00–18:00, last entry 17:30 [VERIFY current schedule]. Closed Mondays. Annual closures: 1 January, Easter Sunday, 1 May, 13 June (Santo António, Lisbon's city saint), 24 and 25 December.
Getting there
By tram: the iconic Tram 18E runs from Cais do Sodré through Alcântara to Ajuda — terminus is a 3-minute walk from the palace. By bus: Carris routes 729, 732 and 760 stop at Largo da Ajuda. By foot: 1 km uphill from Jerónimos and the Coach Museum (15-minute walk, steep). By car: limited paid street parking near the palace; the Belém car parks below are easier.
Time needed
1.5 to 2 hours for the palace state rooms; add 30-45 minutes for the Tesouro Real treasury. If you are pairing with Jerónimos and the Coach Museum in Belém, allow a full day.
What to wear
Comfortable shoes — the palace floor plan is large and you walk continuously. Smart-casual is the working standard. Layers in winter — the state rooms are unheated.
Accessibility
Most of the ground floor and the Tesouro Real treasury are wheelchair accessible. Upper floors have lift access available on request at the ticket desk. Email us before your visit for the current routing.

About our service

Ajuda Palace Tickets acts as a facilitator to assist international visitors in purchasing official tickets directly from Museus e Monumentos de Portugal, the official operator. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service. Our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, the official ticket site is bilheteira.museusemonumentos.pt.

Frequently asked

What are the opening hours?

Tuesday to Sunday from 10:00 to 18:00, with last entry at 17:30. Closed every Monday and on 1 January, Easter Sunday, 1 May, 13 June (Santo António — Lisbon's city saint), and 24 and 25 December. Confirm the current schedule against your travel date when booking, particularly around movable feasts.

Where exactly is the palace?

Largo da Ajuda, 1349-021 Lisboa — on the hill above Belém in west Lisbon, about a kilometre uphill from the Jerónimos Monastery and the Coach Museum. From central Lisbon it is reached most easily by Tram 18E from Cais do Sodré, by Carris bus 729 or 760, or on foot uphill from Belém. The walk from Belém is short but genuinely steep.

Why does the palace exist?

Construction began in 1796 under Queen Maria I as the replacement royal residence for the Paço da Ribeira, the medieval Lisbon palace destroyed in the 1755 earthquake. The first design was late baroque under Manuel Caetano de Sousa; revisions by the Italian-trained architects Francisco Xavier Fabri and António Francisco Rosa shifted the project to a restrained late neoclassical idiom. The palace was never fully completed — the southern wing remains structurally unfinished today.

When did the royal family actually live here?

The Palácio Nacional da Ajuda was the official residence of the Portuguese royal family from 1861, when King Luís I and Queen Maria Pia of Savoy made it their permanent home. Their grandson Manuel II was the last monarch to live in the palace. The royal residence ended on 5 October 1910 when the republican revolution forced the family into exile in England, and the palace was nationalised soon afterwards.

What is the Tesouro Real?

The Tesouro Real (Royal Treasury) is the collection of Portuguese crown jewels and royal regalia, opened to the public in a purpose-built treasury wing on the south side of the palace in December 2022. The collection includes ceremonial swords, gold and silver tableware, and the jewels worn by the Braganza queens and princesses across the nineteenth century. It is the principal new draw at Ajuda and is included in the standard combined ticket.

What are the signature rooms?

Three rooms in particular: the Sala do Trono (Throne Room), still laid as the Braganza dynasty used it; the Sala D. João VI, the state banquet hall, with its long ceremonial table and royal portraits; and the Royal Library, with its nineteenth-century bookcases and reading desks. The Music Room, the private royal apartments of King Luís and Queen Maria Pia, and the Tesouro Real treasury together account for most of what international visitors remember.

How long does a visit take?

Plan for 1.5 to 2 hours for the palace state rooms and add another 30 to 45 minutes for the Tesouro Real treasury. If your interest is principally the crown jewels, you can budget closer to two hours total; if you want to read every interpretive panel in the state apartments, allow three. If you are pairing Ajuda with Jerónimos and the Coach Museum down in Belém, allow a full day for the combined visit.

Is it wheelchair accessible?

Most of the ground floor and the Tesouro Real treasury wing are wheelchair accessible via the main entrance. Upper floors are reached by a service lift, which must be requested at the ticket desk on arrival. The palace has been progressively improving accessibility provisions, and we maintain a current briefing for accessibility-needs customers; email us before your visit for the current routing.

Can I take photographs?

Yes throughout the state rooms and the Tesouro Real treasury, without flash. Tripods and selfie sticks require an advance permit from the operator. The Royal Library is photographable but no flash, because cumulative light exposure damages the historic bindings. Professional photography or commercial filming requires advance permission; we can help arrange this with sufficient lead time.

Is it suitable for children?

Yes — the throne room, banquet hall, and especially the Tesouro Real treasury work well for children of around six and upward. The state apartments are arranged as a one-way route with no opportunity to run, and the security around the crown jewels means small children need to be kept close. Under-twelves walk in free with an accompanying adult; our family bundle covers two adult tickets with up to four under-twelve children walking in free.

How do I get there from central Lisbon?

Tram 18E from Cais do Sodré is the iconic approach — it runs west along the riverfront through Alcântara and turns inland up to the Ajuda terminus, a three-minute walk from the palace. Carris buses 729, 732 and 760 also stop at Largo da Ajuda. By foot, the palace is one kilometre uphill from Jerónimos and the Coach Museum in Belém — a 15-minute walk but steep. By car, paid street parking is limited near the palace; the Belém car parks below are easier with a short walk uphill.

Should I combine Ajuda with Belém?

Yes — Ajuda pairs naturally with Belém because they sit on the same hillside, one kilometre apart, and are conceptually linked: Belém is the maritime monumental complex of the Portuguese empire, Ajuda is the residential palace of the same royal family at its end. The standard combined day-trip is Ajuda in the morning when it is quietest, downhill walk to Jerónimos for lunch and the cloister visit, then the Coach Museum and Belém Tower in the afternoon. Allow a full day.

Is the Jardim Botânico da Ajuda included?

No — the Jardim Botânico da Ajuda is the eighteenth-century botanical garden immediately adjacent to the palace on its eastern side, but it operates as a separate institution with a separate ticket. It is the oldest botanical garden in Portugal, founded in 1768 under King José I, and is genuinely worth thirty to forty-five minutes if you are interested in historic gardens. Tickets are inexpensive and bought at the garden's own entrance on Calçada da Ajuda.

Why is the palace unfinished?

Construction began in 1796 but stalled repeatedly across the nineteenth century — first because of the Napoleonic invasions of Portugal from 1807 and the royal family's flight to Brazil, then because of the civil war of the 1830s and the chronic financial pressure on the Portuguese crown. The original plans for a vast forecourt, a grand parade-ground, and a completed southern wing were never realised. The palace as you see it today is roughly two-thirds of the original conception.

What language are the displays in?

Portuguese and English on all main interpretive panels throughout the palace and the Tesouro Real treasury. The Tesouro Real, as a newer installation, has more substantial multilingual interpretation than the older state-room labels. Audio guides in additional languages are available at the ticket desk on request. Concierge customers can ask for our pre-visit briefing on the key rooms in their preferred language.

Can I change my visit date?

Email us at least 48 hours before your booked slot and we will re-book to any open slot within sixty days at no charge. Inside 48 hours, same-week swaps are not always possible but we work to find one on your behalf. Tickets are not transferable to another name once issued, because the official operator's entry system is name-bound.

Is there a refund if I cannot make it?

Tickets are issued for a specific date and are non-transferable once issued. Refunds are issued in full only in the case of operator-side failure — the palace is unexpectedly closed, a slot we confirmed cannot be honoured, or a serious access disruption prevents your visit. Customer-side cancellations are not normally refundable; we will, however, always offer a rebooked alternative date as far in advance as you contact us.