Palma Cathedral Tours
Palma Cathedral Tours & Tickets
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Official tickets & experiences

Palma Cathedral Tours & Tickets

Gothic light through the rose window, Gaudí's hand within.

Hand-picked by our editors — only the best 5 experiences from 240 reviewed.

4.6 (2400) 212K+ travelers chose this
Open today 10:00 – 17:15
Attendance: Heavy — peak summer tourist season
Summer peak: arrive at 10:00 to secure the nave before cruise-ship groups fill the aisles.
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Mallorca Old Town Walking Tour with Cathedral Skip The Line Tour 1 hr 30 min
Guided Experience

Mallorca Old Town Walking Tour with Cathedral Skip The Line Tour

3.6 (38)
$33
per person
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90-minute guided Old Town walk covering Palma Cathedral, Almudaina Palace, and historic streets

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Includes

  • Expert local guide
  • Small group
  • Skip-the-line access
  • Free cancellation
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Palma Old Town & The Cathedral of Mallorca with Mallorcan pastry 2 hr 30 min
Standard Entry

Palma Old Town & The Cathedral of Mallorca with Mallorcan pastry

4.9 (46)
$50
per person
Instant promodo.redemption.mobile_voucher Flexible — change up to 24h

Explore Palma's Old Town & iconic cathedral with a local guide and Mallorcan pastry tasting

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Includes

  • Entry ticket
  • Mobile voucher
  • Valid same day
  • Free cancellation
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Jetski Tour to the Emblematic Palma Cathedral 30 min
Premium Combo

Jetski Tour to the Emblematic Palma Cathedral

3.9 (35)
$117
per person
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Thrilling 30-minute jet ski tour with spectacular sea views of Palma Cathedral

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Includes

  • Multi-attraction access
  • Mobile voucher
  • Flexible dates
  • Free cancellation
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Private Tour: Palma de Mallorca Old Town, Palma Cathedral and Cruise 4 hr
Luxury / Private

Private Tour: Palma de Mallorca Old Town, Palma Cathedral and Cruise

4.5 (19)
$204
per person
Instant promodo.redemption.mobile_voucher Flexible — change up to 24h

Private Palma Old Town and cathedral tour plus 1-hour Bay of Palma boat cruise

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Includes

  • Private experience
  • Personal attention
  • Premium amenities
  • Free cancellation
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Prices from verified partners. Availability updates in real time at checkout. Free cancellation policies apply where shown.

Ways to visit

Skip-the-Line Entry Tickets

Pre-booked timed-entry tickets that let you bypass the main ticket queue at the cathedral.

Ways to visit

Guided & Private Cathedral Tours

Small-group and private guided tours of the cathedral interior with a local guide.

Ways to visit

Palma Old Town Combo Experiences

Multi-stop walking tours pairing the cathedral with Palma's old town landmarks.

Duration
1-2 hours recommended
Languages
English, Spanish, Catalan, German
Group size
Up to 25 people
Cancellation
Free cancellation 24 hours prior
Visiting Palma Cathedral on Mallorca
About

Visiting Palma Cathedral on Mallorca

Palma Cathedral holds the largest Gothic rose window in the world — 13.8 metres across, fitted with 1,236 pieces of stained glass. Builders broke ground in 1229, after Jaume I took the island; the work stretched across nearly four centuries of sandstone and ambition.

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In 1904 Antoni Gaudí arrived to restore the interior, shifting the choir, lifting the canopy, opening sightlines toward the high altar. Later, Miquel Barceló lined the Chapel of the Holy Sacrament in ceramic, fusing medieval stone with modern clay. Today La Seu rises above the bay as one of Palma de Mallorca's defining landmarks, and visitors weighing palma cathedral skip the line tickets, fast track entry, or palma cathedral priority access find that the structure rewards both the hurried hour and the slow afternoon. The rose window does the rest.

"Six centuries of sandstone, lit by twelve hundred panes of glass."
Your experience

What a Palma Cathedral tour day looks like

A step-by-step walkthrough of Palma Cathedral tickets — what you'll see, how long each stage takes, and the details that matter.

You climb the steps from Parc de la Mar and the west front fills the sky, sandstone gone gold in the morning. You arrive between 10:00 and 11:30, when the crowds are thinnest and light pours through the rose window onto the nave floor.

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With a skip-the-line entrance, you pass the queue and step straight into the cool dark.

You pause beneath Gaudí's suspended canopy, then trace the side aisles toward Barceló's ceramic chapel, where clay seas climb the wall. You linger over the 11 EUR ticket's quieter half, the Museum of Sacred Art, before the door closes at 17:15. Outside, the bay waits, and a Mallorcan pastry on a palma cathedral tour finishes the visit.

Your experience at Palma Cathedral Tours & Tickets
What you'll do

Inside a Palma Cathedral tour, step by step

  1. Parc de la Mar Exterior View
    01 15 min

    Parc de la Mar Exterior View

    Begin at the waterfront park directly below the cathedral to take in the full Gothic façade and its reflection in the lagoon; this southern approach gives the best sense of the building's scale before you enter.

  2. Main Nave and Gothic Vaulting
    02 25 min

    Main Nave and Gothic Vaulting

    Enter through the Plaça de la Seu lobby and move into the central nave, one of the tallest Gothic naves in Europe; look up at the slender columns and count the 87 windows that give La Seu its nickname 'Cathedral of Light'.

  3. Great Rose Window
    03 15 min

    Great Rose Window

    Position yourself at the altar end of the nave to appreciate the 13-metre diameter rose window, known as the Eye of the Gothic, which contains 1,236 individual glass crystals and projects a Star of David effect in morning light.

  4. Gaudí Altar Canopy and Royal Chapel
    04 20 min

    Gaudí Altar Canopy and Royal Chapel

    Examine the wrought-iron crown-of-thorns canopy above the high altar, Gaudí's most visible contribution from his 1904–1914 intervention; the repositioned choir and bishop's throne are also part of this restoration.

  5. Barceló Ceramic Chapel
    05 15 min

    Barceló Ceramic Chapel

    Visit the Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament in the right-hand apse to see Miquel Barceló's 300-square-metre polychrome ceramic mural, installed between 2001 and 2006, depicting the miracle of the loaves and fishes with marine imagery.

  6. Museum of Sacred Art
    06 20 min

    Museum of Sacred Art

    Included with your 11 EUR ticket, the Cathedral Museum houses reliquaries, gold and silver liturgical pieces, paintings, and historical documents from across the building's eight-century history.

Highlights

What you'll see inside Palma Cathedral

The landmarks, rooms, and views travelers on Palma Cathedral tours remember — all visible on a single visit.

Great Rose Window (Eye of the Gothic)

Great Rose Window (Eye of the Gothic)

Measuring 13 metres in diameter and composed of 1,236 individual glass crystals, this is considered the largest Gothic rose window in Europe — twice a year, on 2 February and 11 November, sunlight projects its full outline onto the opposite wall of the nave.

Gaudí Altar Canopy

Gaudí Altar Canopy

Antoni Gaudí worked on La Seu from 1904 to 1914, and his most visible legacy is the wrought-iron crown-of-thorns canopy suspended above the high altar — a provisional model that was never replaced with his intended baldachin, making it an accidental monument to an unfinished vision.

Barceló Ceramic Chapel

Barceló Ceramic Chapel

Between 2001 and 2006, Mallorcan artist Miquel Barceló covered the entire apse of the Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament in 300 square metres of undulating polychrome ceramic, depicting the miracle of the loaves and fishes with sculpted fish, bread, and human skulls emerging from the walls.

Trinity Chapel (Capella de la Trinitat)

Trinity Chapel (Capella de la Trinitat)

The oldest completed section of the cathedral, dating to the early 14th century, the Trinity Chapel serves as the royal mausoleum for Kings Jaume II and Jaume III of Mallorca; the alabaster cenotaph visible today was only installed in 1947, sculpted by Frederic Marès.

Museum of Sacred Art

Museum of Sacred Art

Included in the 11 EUR admission ticket, the Cathedral Museum occupies the chapter house and displays reliquaries, gold and silver liturgical objects, Baroque paintings, and construction documents spanning eight centuries of La Seu's history.

Compare

Palma Cathedral tickets & tours compared

Every Palma Cathedral tour side-by-side — duration, what's included, how you redeem.

Experience From Duration Transfers Pickup Lunch Tax inc. Free cancel. Price
Guided Experience
Mallorca Old Town Walking Tour with Cathedral Skip The Line Tour
1 hr 30 min $33 Book →
Standard Entry
Palma Old Town & The Cathedral of Mallorca with Mallorcan pastry
2 hr 30 min $50 Book →
Premium Combo
Jetski Tour to the Emblematic Palma Cathedral
30 min $117 Book →
Luxury / Private
Private Tour: Palma de Mallorca Old Town, Palma Cathedral and Cruise
4 hr $204 Book →

All prices from verified partners. Availability and exact terms confirmed at checkout.

How your ticket works

Book Palma Cathedral tickets in 3 steps

  1. 01

    Book online

    Choose your ticket, select your date, and reserve in under two minutes. Secure checkout handled by our verified partner.

  2. 02

    Receive your mobile voucher

    Instant confirmation by email, with a mobile voucher you can save offline. No printing, no queuing at a collection desk.

  3. 03

    Show & enter

    Arrive at the entrance, show your voucher on your phone, and walk in. Most tickets include priority or skip-the-line access.

Plan your visit

Plan your Palma Cathedral visit

Practical details for Palma Cathedral tickets straight from our verified partners — hours, access, rules, and how to get there.

Open today · 10:00 – 17:15
Opening hours
Mon–Fri 10:00–17:15, Sat 10:00–14:15, Sun Closed
Opening hours
10:00 – 17:15
Getting there
City-center access via metro and bus
Accessibility
Most experiences are wheelchair-friendly — check individual tours
What to bring
Comfortable shoes, water, phone for mobile voucher
Mon
10:00 – 17:15
Quietest weekday; ideal for a calm first visit
Tue
10:00 – 17:15
Wed
10:00 – 17:15
Rose window light strongest mid-morning
Thu
10:00 – 17:15
Fri
10:00 – 17:15
Last full-length weekday session
Sat
10:00 – 14:15
Closes early; plan to arrive by 13:00
Sun
Closed
Open for religious services only
Closed on: Jan 1 (New Year's Day), Jan 6 (Epiphany — national public holiday), Jan 20 (Feast of Sant Sebastià (local)), Good Friday (Annual religious closure), Aug 15 (Assumption of the Virgin), Nov 1 (All Saints' Day), Dec 25 (Christmas Day), Dec 26 (Second Christmas Day), Dec 31 (Feast of the Banner), Every Sunday (Weekly closure — religious services only)
Main entrance

Main Entrance — Plaça de la Seu

Plaça de la Seu s/n, 07001 Palma de Mallorca

Primary visitor entrance with ticket desk and security screening; meet here for guided tours.

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Getting there
City-center access via metro and bus
What to bring
Comfortable shoes, water, phone for mobile voucher

How to get there

🚆
Public transport · 5–10 min from city centre stops · ~1.50 EUR per single journey (card payment)

EMT city buses stop at Plaça de la Reina (Catedral stop), a 3-minute walk from the entrance; routes 15, 25 and the tourist hop-on hop-off bus all serve this area.

🚶
Walk · 8–20 min depending on start point · Free

The cathedral is walkable from Palma's main shopping streets (Passeig del Born, 8 min) and from Plaça d'Espanya (20 min) via the old town.

🚆
Taxi / Rideshare · 5–15 min from city centre · Approx. 8–15 EUR

Taxis are plentiful across Palma; ask for 'Catedral de Palma' or 'Plaça de la Seu'; drop-off is possible on Avinguda d'Antoni Maura below the park.

🚗
Car · N/A · Parking fees apply

Limited paid parking is available at Parc de la Mar underground car park directly below the cathedral; the old-town streets around the building are mostly pedestrianised.

Dress code

Shoulders and knees must be covered for all visitors regardless of gender; entry will be refused if these requirements are not met. Scarves or wraps are available at the entrance for those who arrive underprepared, though bringing your own lightweight cover-up is advisable during summer. This is an active place of worship, so attire should reflect a respectful standard throughout the visit.

Bags & security

All bags are subject to security screening at the main entrance on Plaça de la Seu. Large backpacks and oversized luggage may not be permitted inside and should be left at your accommodation. Travel with a small daypack to speed up entry, especially during the busy summer months when queues at the security checkpoint can extend outside.

Photography

Personal photography for non-commercial purposes is permitted throughout the cathedral, including the nave, side chapels, and the Barceló ceramic chapel. Flash photography and tripods are not allowed, as these disturb other visitors and worshippers. During active religious ceremonies, all photography must stop immediately out of respect.

Accessibility

La Seu is equipped with ramps, stair lifts, adapted toilets, and designated rest areas throughout the complex, making the main nave and Museum of Sacred Art accessible for wheelchair users and visitors with reduced mobility. An audio guide service is available at the entrance and provides content for visitors with visual impairments. The cobbled approach from Plaça de la Seu can be uneven, so those using wheelchairs should follow the accessible route signed from the lower Parc de la Mar level.

Mobile phones

Mobile phones should be kept on silent mode throughout the visit; ringtones and speakerphone use are not permitted inside any part of the building. Calls may be taken quietly outside in the entrance lobby. Photography with a smartphone is allowed in non-ceremonial areas, provided flash is disabled.

What to bring

  • Valid entrance ticket or booking confirmation
  • Photo ID (recommended for group or concession tickets)
  • Lightweight scarf or wrap to cover shoulders and knees
  • Comfortable shoes suitable for stone floors
  • Water bottle (to drink outside, not inside)
  • Sun protection for the outdoor approach and Parc de la Mar
  • Small daypack or shoulder bag

Not allowed

  • Tripods and monopods
  • Selfie sticks
  • Flash photography equipment
  • Oversized backpacks or suitcases
  • Food and beverages
  • Alcoholic drinks
  • Cigarettes and e-cigarettes
  • Folding chairs or camping stools
  • Drones
  • Loud musical instruments
  • Pets (except certified assistance dogs)
  • Politically emblazoned clothing or banners
  • Laser pointers

Families & strollers

Children under a certain age may enter free; verify current family pricing at the ticket desk or official site before visiting. The interior is large and cool even in summer, making it a comfortable mid-day break for families. Pushchairs are permitted but may be difficult to manoeuvre in the narrower side chapels; a baby carrier is a practical alternative.

Food & drink

No food or drink is permitted inside the cathedral or Museum of Sacred Art. Several cafés and tapas bars are located a short walk away along Carrer Palau Reial and in the streets of Palma's old town. Parc de la Mar, the waterfront park directly below the cathedral, is a pleasant spot for a picnic before or after your visit.

Pets

Pets are not permitted inside the cathedral or Museum of Sacred Art. Certified assistance dogs and guide dogs are welcome with appropriate documentation. Water bowls are sometimes available near the main entrance; check with staff on arrival.

Good to know

2026 marks a Gaudí Year at the Cathedral of Mallorca, with a full programme of cultural, educational and outreach activities celebrating the 1904–1914 restoration project. Events began in February 2026 and continue throughout the year; check the official site at catedraldemallorca.org/en/ for the current programme schedule. The cathedral's rooftop terrace visits — offering panoramic views over Palma bay — typically operate between May and October, with timed guided access sold separately from the standard 11 EUR admission ticket.

Meeting points

Palma Cathedral tour meeting points

Main Entrance — Plaça de la Seu

Main Entrance — Plaça de la Seu

Plaça de la Seu s/n, 07001 Palma de Mallorca

Primary visitor entrance with ticket desk and security screening; meet here for guided tours.

Get directions
Parc de la Mar Waterfront

Parc de la Mar Waterfront

Parc de la Mar, 07001 Palma de Mallorca

Open public park below the cathedral walls; useful meeting point for groups arriving from the seafront or port.

Get directions

Portal del Mirador

South facade, Plaça d'Almoina, Palma

Secondary Gothic portal on the south wall; accessible from the lower esplanade and useful for visitors approaching from the Arab Baths direction.

Get directions
Around your visit

Palma Cathedral — everything else worth knowing

Best time to go, insider tips, nearby landmarks, and the cancellation fine print — flip through to skim what matters to you.

Best time to visit Palma Cathedral

How crowds, weather, and events shift across the year.

Spring (March–May)

Mild weather and lower crowd levels make La Seu easier to explore; interior light is excellent through April.

Summer (June–August)

Peak season with the largest visitor numbers; arrive at opening (10:00) to see the nave before cruise-ship groups arrive mid-morning.

Autumn (September–October)

Shoulder-season crowds, warm evenings, and the rooftop terrace still operating; a strong overall choice for a palma cathedral tour.

Winter (November–February)

Lowest visitor numbers and the best chance of a quiet interior; on 2 February and 11 November the sun projects the rose window onto the opposite wall — a rare optical spectacle.

Saturday mornings

The shorter Saturday opening (10:00–14:15) concentrates visitors; arrive right at 10:00 or choose a weekday instead.

Helpful tips for your visit to Palma Cathedral

Small details that turn a good visit into a great one.

Book tickets online in advance

In summer, palma cathedral tickets sell out for preferred morning slots; purchasing at catedraldemallorca.org/en/ or a reputable third-party site the day before guarantees entry without queuing at the desk.

Arrive at 10:00 on a weekday

The 10:00–11:30 window is consistently the least crowded and offers the strongest morning light streaming through the rose windows — particularly striking on the east side of the nave.

Watch for the February and November light phenomenon

On 2 February and 11 November the sun aligns perfectly to project the great rose window onto the opposite wall; this lasts only a few minutes and draws dedicated photographers from across Europe.

Book the rooftop terrace separately

The terrace visit (May–October) requires a separate ticket and involves climbing steep stairs; it is not included in the standard 11 EUR admission, so reserve it at the same time as your main ticket if you want both.

Combine with Almudaina Palace

The Royal Palace of La Almudaina is directly adjacent and makes a natural second stop; EU citizens receive free entry on certain weekday afternoons, so check current eligibility before paying.

Come back for a 2026 Gaudí Year event

Throughout 2026 the cathedral is hosting a special cultural programme marking the anniversary of Gaudí's restoration work; visit the official site for concerts, guided talks, and exhibition dates.

Landmarks near Palma Cathedral

Non-bookable sights within a short walk — free to visit, easy to pair.

Royal Palace of La Almudaina

Royal Palace of La Almudaina

2 min walk

Medieval royal palace immediately adjacent to the cathedral, originally an Arab alcázar converted to Gothic style in the 13th century; free entry for EU citizens on certain afternoons.

Parc de la Mar

Parc de la Mar

1 min walk

Landscaped waterfront park with a lagoon reflecting the cathedral façade; good for photography and a rest after visiting the interior.

Banys Àrabs (Arab Baths)

Banys Àrabs (Arab Baths)

7 min walk

One of the few surviving Moorish monuments in Mallorca, featuring a small domed bathhouse supported by columns and a quiet garden on Carrer de Can Serra.

Es Baluard Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art

Es Baluard Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art

10 min walk

Contemporary art museum built into the 16th-century city walls, with a rooftop terrace offering views over the bay and port.

Basilica de Sant Francesc

Basilica de Sant Francesc

10 min walk

13th-century Gothic basilica with a grand Baroque facade housing a sculpture of Ramon Llull and a peaceful cloister.

Cancellation policy

Flexible, no hidden fees.

Most third-party palma cathedral tickets are refundable if cancelled at least 24 hours before the selected entry date; cancellations within 24 hours are typically non-refundable. The 11 EUR entrance fee is non-refundable for walk-in purchases made directly at the cathedral ticket desk.

Where to stay

Hotels & districts near Palma Cathedral

Hand-picked options within walking distance — pick a district for vibe, or a specific hotel for convenience.

Hotel Cort

Hotel Cort

8 min walk
boutique

Design hotel on Plaça de Cort in the historic centre, with a rooftop pool and views toward the old town.

Hotel Almudaina

Hotel Almudaina

5 min walk
mid-range

Centrally located hotel on Avinguda Jaume III, close to the seafront and walking distance from the cathedral.

Palma Old Town District

Palma Old Town District

10 min walk
district

The streets around Plaça Major and Carrer Apuntadors offer a range of mid-range and budget accommodation in converted historic buildings.

Hotel Palau Sa Font

Hotel Palau Sa Font

6 min walk
boutique

Boutique hotel occupying a converted 16th-century bishop's palace in the old town, with exposed stone walls and courtyard.

Santa Clara Urban Resort

Santa Clara Urban Resort

9 min walk
luxury

Luxury hotel within the former Santa Clara convent, featuring a pool and garden inside 13th-century cloistered walls.

Traveler reviews

Palma Cathedral tour reviews

4.6
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
2400 reviews
212K+ travelers chose this
  • "We arrived right when it opened and the morning sun was throwing color from the big rose window across the floor. The scale of the palma cathedral nave caught me off guard, those slender columns go up forever. Bring something to cover shoulders or you may be turned away."
    Marta R. · Spain · 2026-05-18
  • "The sandstone glows orange in the late afternoon and the reflection in the Parc de la Mar pool was the photo of the trip. We booked palma cathedral tickets online the night before and skipped a long queue at the door. The Gaudí canopy and the Barceló chapel are stranger and more wonderful than any photo shows."
    James T. · United Kingdom · 2026-04-02
  • "Came around noon and it was crowded with cruise groups, so the quiet I hoped for wasn't there. Still, the Gothic interior and the famous rose window made the visit worthwhile. The waterfront walk up to it is lovely in good weather."
    Yuki M. · Japan · 2026-03-21
  • "Few cathedrals sit this close to the Mediterranean and you feel it as you approach from the harbor. Our palma cathedral tour guide explained the astronomical alignment of the two rose windows, which happens on certain mornings. Comfortable shoes help, the stone floors are vast."
    Lukas B. · Germany · 2026-02-11
  • "We had the place almost to ourselves on a cool December morning and could actually hear our footsteps echo. The honey-colored stone and the sheer height of the columns stayed with me. One of the finest Palma landmarks and easy to reach on foot from the old town."
    Camila S. · Brazil · 2025-12-30
  • "The rooftop terrace visit was the highlight, walking among the buttresses with the sea on one side and the city rooftops on the other. Among the palma cathedral tours on offer, the terrace option is the one to book ahead because spots fill quickly. Go late afternoon for softer light."
    Andrew P. · United States · 2025-11-09
  • "Visita la catedral de Mallorca temprano si puedes; by late morning the crowds build fast. The combination of medieval Gothic bones and modern art inside is unusual and works better than I expected. Tickets also cover the small museum, worth a quick look."
    Sofia L. · Italy · 2025-09-14
  • "We walked the promenade at golden hour and the cathedral lit up gold against a deep blue sky. The Miquel Barceló ceramic chapel is unlike anything I'd seen in a church before. A short ferry hop and a stroll and you reach one of the great Palma de Mallorca landmarks."
    Ingrid H. · Sweden · 2025-07-22
  • "We grabbed skip-the-line palma cathedral entry and were inside within minutes while others waited in the heat. The vaulted ceiling and the colored light pooling on the stone floor were the standout memory. Photography is allowed without flash."
    Diego F. · Mexico · 2025-06-03
  • "The building itself is genuinely grand and the seaside setting is hard to beat. I found the entry fee a touch steep for the time you actually spend inside, though the rose window almost justifies it. Visit on a clear day so the windows do their thing."
    Hannah K. · Australia · 2025-04-17
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Frequently asked

Frequently asked questions about palma cathedral tickets

What are the opening hours for palma cathedral?

Palma cathedral is open Monday to Friday from 10:00 to 17:15 and on Saturdays from 10:00 to 14:15. The cathedral is closed to tourist visits on Sundays and on major public holidays, though it remains open for religious services on those days.

How much does a palma cathedral ticket cost?

An adult palma cathedral ticket costs 11 EUR and includes access to both the Cathedral and the Museum of Sacred Art. Concession rates may apply for students and seniors; check the official site at catedraldemallorca.org/en/ for current pricing categories.

Is La Seu cathedral closed on Sundays?

Yes, La Seu is closed for tourist visits every Sunday. The building remains open for religious ceremonies on Sundays and public holidays, but sightseeing entry is not available on those days.

What is the best time to visit palma cathedral to avoid crowds?

The best window for a palma cathedral tour is 10:00–11:30 on a weekday, when visitor numbers are at their lowest and morning light falls most dramatically through the great rose windows. Avoid mid-morning arrivals on days when cruise ships are docked in the port.

What should I wear to visit the Cathedral of Mallorca?

Shoulders and knees must be covered by all visitors regardless of the outdoor temperature. Wearing a lightweight scarf or bringing a wrap is strongly recommended in summer, as entry will be refused if dress requirements are not met; the rule applies to all genders.

Is palma cathedral accessible for wheelchair users?

The Cathedral of Mallorca complex includes ramps, stair lifts, adapted toilets, rest areas, and an audio guide service. The main nave and Museum of Sacred Art are accessible by wheelchair; the cobbled approach on Plaça de la Seu can be uneven, so the lower accessible route from Parc de la Mar is recommended.

Can I take photographs inside La Seu?

Personal photography without flash is permitted in the nave, side chapels, and Barceló chapel. Tripods, monopods, and selfie sticks are not allowed. Photography must stop during any active religious ceremony or mass.

Are there guided palma cathedral tours available?

Guided palma cathedral tours are available in multiple languages and can be booked through the official site or reputable third-party operators. A skip-the-line palma cathedral tour typically covers the Gothic nave, Gaudí canopy, Barceló chapel, and the Museum of Sacred Art in approximately 90 minutes.

What are the main highlights inside the Cathedral of Mallorca?

The interior highlights include the 13-metre Great Rose Window (Eye of the Gothic) with 1,236 glass crystals, the Gaudí altar canopy and choir restoration from 1904–1914, the Barceló 300-square-metre ceramic mural in the Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament, and the Trinity Chapel housing the tombs of Mallorcan kings Jaume II and Jaume III.

Are children allowed inside, and is there a family ticket?

Children are welcome and the cathedral is family-friendly; younger children may qualify for free or reduced admission — verify at the ticket desk. Pushchairs are permitted in the main nave, though a baby carrier is more practical in the narrower side chapels.

What happens if I need to cancel my palma cathedral ticket?

Tickets purchased through third-party operators are generally refundable when cancelled at least 24 hours before the visit; cancellations within 24 hours are usually non-refundable. Tickets bought directly at the cathedral entrance are non-refundable.

Which nearby attractions can I combine with a visit to palma cathedral?

The Royal Palace of La Almudaina is immediately adjacent and makes a natural second stop. The Arab Baths (Banys Àrabs) are a 7-minute walk away in the old town, and Es Baluard Museum of Modern Art is a 10-minute walk along the city walls — all three complement a Palma landmarks itinerary well.

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More Palma Cathedral tickets & experiences

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