Best Leaning Tower of Pisa tickets for your trip
Choose based on how you want to visit — cheapest entry, guided tour, or last-minute availability.

Leaning Tower Climb: Skip-the-Line + Mobile Ticket

Florence to Pisa Round-Trip Train + Leaning Tower Tickets

Pisa: VIP 1.5-Hour Small Group Tour & Skip-the-Line Access
- 100% ticket guaranteeReceive tickets on time for the experience you’ve booked.
- Free cancellation*Get a refund if your plans change — most options up to 24h before.
- Instant mobile ticketShow your ticket on your phone — no printing needed, confirmed instantly.
Booking via our partners may cost slightly more than the official site, but most options include skip-the-line entry, free cancellation, and instant mobile delivery.
The best Leaning Tower of Pisa combo ticket is Leaning Tower of Pisa, Cathedral & Baptistery: Guided Tour (€81, 4.7/5). For budget travelers, Leaning Tower of Pisa & Cathedral: Entry Ticket costs just €25 with 2,296 verified reviews. If you're day-tripping from Florence, Combo: Florence to Pisa Round-Trip Train + Leaning Tower Tickets includes round-trip transfers.
Leaning Tower of Pisa, Cathedral & Baptistery: Guided Tour
Leaning Tower of Pisa & Cathedral: Entry Ticket
Combo: Florence to Pisa Round-Trip Train + Leaning Tower Tickets
Last Updated: 2026-05-25
This guide includes affiliate links to verified ticket and tour partners (Headout, Tiqets, Viator). We may earn a commission if you book through them. Official ticket prices from Opera della Primaziale Pisana are listed below the recommendations so you can compare directly — we always show both.
How much does climbing the Leaning Tower of Pisa cost in 2026?
The official adult price to climb the Leaning Tower is €20, set by Opera della Primaziale Pisana — the cathedral authority that runs the monument. There is no reduced rate — every adult, student, or senior pays €20. Certified disabled visitors enter free with a helper.
The €20 price is for climbing the tower itself — a 30-minute slot covering the 294 spiral steps. It does not include the Cathedral, Baptistery, Camposanto, or Museum of the Opera (those bundle in the combo ticket covered in the next section).
Two real-world gotchas the official tickets page makes explicit: tickets are non-refundable and non-reschedulable, and the name on the ticket must match an ID at check-in. If you miss your time slot, you do not get a replacement.
The €20 cited here is correct as of 2026-05-25. The official portal updates pricing seasonally — if you're visiting in 2027+, verify via opapisa.it before buying.
If you'd rather not gamble on a non-refundable €20 slot — say you're not 100% sure of your arrival date — the Skip-the-Line + Mobile Ticket option in our recommended bundle above costs €41 and includes free cancellation up to 24 hours and instant phone delivery. Same climb, lower trip-planning risk.
Tower-only vs combo: what does the €7 upgrade actually include?
Tower only
Combo (Tower + 4 monuments)
Combo without Tower
| Tour | Price | Rating | Best For | Provider |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leaning Tower of Pisa, Cathedral & Baptistery: Guided Tour | €81 | 4.7/5 (44) | Best Overall | headout |
| Leaning Tower of Pisa & Cathedral: Entry Ticket | €25 | 4.5/5 (2,296) | Best Value | tiqets |
| Combo: Florence to Pisa Round-Trip Train + Leaning Tower Tickets | Check site | 4.4/5 (4,137) | Best Florence Combo | headout |
| Explore Pisa City with Skip-The-Line Leaning Tower Climbing | €89 | 4.77/5 (82) | Best Skip-the-Line | viator |
| Pisa All-Inclusive Guided Tour of Baptistery, Cathedral & Tower | Check site | 5/5 (3) | Best All-Inclusive | headout |
How far in advance can you book Leaning Tower of Pisa tickets?
The official booking window opens 15 days before your visit date per the opapisa.it FAQ — not 30 days, not 90 days. Tickets are released on a rolling basis at that 15-day mark, then sell out fast for peak summer time slots (typically 10:00-13:00 on weekends).
Most online sources get this wrong. The official FAQ is unambiguous: "tickets are purchasable from 15 days prior to the date of the visit until the day of the visit." If you tried to book in March for a July visit, opapisa.it would have nothing to sell you yet.
This matters for trip planning. If your itinerary is locked in months ahead, you cannot book the official tower climb via opapisa.it until the 15-day window opens. That's a real planning gap: you either wait and hope the slot you want is still available, or you book a third-party bundle that pre-reserves inventory.
Resellers like Headout and Tiqets pre-purchase inventory and can sell time slots months in advance — that's the value-add over opapisa.it for travelers who need certainty. Our recommended Skip-the-Line + Mobile Ticket option above is bookable any time, with free cancellation up to 24 hours before your slot.
Do I need a ticket just to visit the Leaning Tower of Pisa?
No — the Piazza dei Miracoli is free public space. You can walk the lawn, photograph the tower, and admire the cathedral's facade without paying anything. Tickets are required only to climb the tower and enter the four monument interiors.
This trips up first-time visitors constantly — TripAdvisor's Leaning Tower FAQ lists "Is it possible to walk, sit, or picnic in the green space of the Miracles Square?" as one of the most-asked questions.
The grass directly in front of the tower — where everyone takes the "holding it up" photo — is free public space, open from sunrise to sunset, no ticket booth at the perimeter. The same is true of the cathedral facade view, the western lawn, and most of the southern walking paths.
What you pay for: (1) climbing the tower itself; (2) entering the Cathedral interior (free with a timed reservation, but it IS a reservation); (3) entering the Baptistery, Camposanto, or Museum of the Opera.
If you're not planning to climb but still want depth on the square, the €11 combo-without-Tower ticket from opapisa.it covers all four interiors for under the price of a pizza. For a full guided visit including the climb, our Pisa Leaning Tower and Cathedral Guided Tour option above bundles the entry plus expert context.
Who can climb the Leaning Tower? Age, accessibility, and helpers
Per the official ticket rules, children under 8 cannot climb the tower — strict, no exceptions. Under-18s must be accompanied by an adult. Certified disabled visitors enter free with a helper (slot-restricted: before 10:00 or after 18:00).
The age cutoff is enforced at the entrance, not on the booking page — TripAdvisor users report children being turned away "3 days shy of 8." The official policy is "children not turning 8 by end of year not permitted." If your child's birthday is in November and you visit in October, expect rejection. There are no refunds for tickets purchased for under-8s.
The climb is 294 steps with no elevator, narrow spiral staircase, no rest landings. The tower's 4-degree lean is visceral on the way up — visitors prone to motion sickness or vertigo should reconsider. Heart conditions and mobility issues make the climb genuinely inadvisable.
For accessibility: disabled visitors (with documentation) and their helpers enter the other monuments free, but the tower climb itself is structurally inaccessible to wheelchairs and walkers.
What can you bring? Bag size, cloakroom, and security
Max permitted bag size for the tower climb is 20×30×38 cm per the opapisa.it FAQ — anything bigger goes to the free cloakroom by the security check. Arrive 15 minutes before your time slot for security and bag drop.
The 20×30×38 cm limit is roughly small-backpack size — a normal day pack with a camera and water bottle is fine; a wheeled carry-on is not. The cloakroom is located on the south side of the Piazza near the ticket office (not at the tower itself), so build in walking time between dropping your bag and reaching the tower entrance.
Security is metal-detector and bag-search style, similar to any major Italian museum. Phones, cameras, and small water bottles are allowed. Drones, tripods, and selfie sticks are not.
The "15 minutes early" rule on opapisa.it is for security plus bag drop. If you arrive at your scheduled time slot, you've already missed the cushion. Late = no entry, no refund.
When is the best time to climb the Leaning Tower of Pisa?
Climb in the shoulder seasons — April-June or September-October — for mild weather and shorter queues. Within the day, the first slot at 9:00 AM or the last slot at 7:30 PM (closing at 8:00) give the smallest crowds and softest light for photos.
July and August midday slots routinely sell out 7 days ahead and have the longest on-site queues — climbing in 35 °C inside a stone tower is also genuinely unpleasant. The April-June and September-October window combines mild Tuscan weather with manageable foot traffic.
Within any given day, the early-morning slot beats the late-afternoon slot for two reasons: (1) the climb itself is cooler before mid-morning sun heats the spiral, and (2) the queue at security is shortest at opening. The very last slot of the day clears the queue but you lose the soft light for tower-base photos.
Pricing is flat across seasons (see the official price section above) — the €20 climb price doesn't change; only availability varies.
Our Skip-the-Line + Mobile Ticket option lets you book the peak summer slots that opapisa.it sells out fastest, often when official inventory is gone.
Where do you actually buy Leaning Tower tickets — official vs reseller?
The only official Leaning Tower ticket portal is opapisa.it — run by Opera della Primaziale Pisana, the cathedral authority that manages the monument. Sites like towerofpisa.org, pisapass.com, and pisatowertickets.com are unrelated unverified resellers with no affiliation to OPA Pisa, often charging €35-50 for the same €20 ticket.
A real TripAdvisor user question is "What is the official site to book on?" — visitors actively distrust the SERP and try to find the genuine portal. The honest answer: only opapisa.it. Anything else with "tower of pisa" or "pisa" in the domain is a third-party reseller.
Verified ticket-marketplace partners (Headout, Tiqets, GetYourGuide, Viator) are a different product entirely from those unverified resellers. They sell bundles — skip-the-line guarantees, mobile delivery, free cancellation, guided tours, multi-monument combos — not just the same ticket at a markup. The €41 in our recommended bundle above pays for the time-slot guarantee + cancellation flexibility + mobile delivery, not for the ticket itself.
How to tell the difference:
- Official: opapisa.it (and only opapisa.it)
- Verified marketplace: Headout, Tiqets, GetYourGuide, Viator — listed in the recommended bundle at the top of this page
- Unverified reseller: domains containing "tower of pisa" or "pisa tickets" that aren't the four marketplaces above. Often higher prices, often non-refundable, no clear customer support path
If you want the lowest price and can lock in a specific time slot 15 days ahead, book direct on opapisa.it. If you want flexibility, skip-the-line guarantee, or a guided visit, our recommended marketplace bundles above are the honest value-add path.
Can you visit Pisa as a day trip from Florence or Rome?
Yes, you can visit Pisa as a day trip from both Florence and Rome, though the visit differs due to travel times. From Florence, Pisa is approximately 85 kilometers away and can be reached by train in about one hour, making it a convenient option for a day trip. Trains run frequently between the two cities, with tickets costing around €8-€12 one way. This allows visitors to spend several hours exploring the Leaning Tower of Pisa, the Cathedral, and the Baptistery before returning to Florence in the evening.
From Rome, the journey is longer, approximately 350 kilometers, taking around 3 to 3.5 hours by train. High-speed trains are available but tickets are more expensive, typically ranging from €30 to €50 one way. Due to the longer travel time, a day trip from Rome to Pisa is possible but more rushed, and many travelers prefer to stay overnight in Pisa or combine it with other nearby destinations to make the most of their visit.
Photography tips: where to stand for the classic "holding up the tower" shot?
For the classic "holding up the Leaning Tower of Pisa" photo, the best spot is on the grassy area directly in front of the tower, about 10 to 15 feet away. Position yourself so that the tower is fully visible in the frame, and align your hands with the top or middle section of the tower to create the illusion of holding or pushing it. Using a wide-angle lens or smartphone camera helps capture the entire tower and your pose without distortion.
Morning hours, especially between 8:00 and 10:00 AM, provide softer lighting and fewer crowds, making it easier to get a clear shot. Avoid midday when the sun is overhead, as shadows can be harsh. If you want a professional photo, consider hiring a local photographer; prices typically range from €20 to €50 for a 15- to 30-minute session. Always be mindful of other visitors and avoid blocking pathways while setting up your shot.
“Booking tickets in advance is essential to avoid long queues, especially during peak season. Opt for combo tickets that include the Cathedral or Baptistery to maximize your visit. Early morning slots offer a quieter experience and better photo opportunities of the tower’s lean angle.”
How do I choose the right Leaning Tower of Pisa ticket?
Choosing the right Leaning Tower of Pisa ticket depends on several factors:
- Timing: Book tickets ahead to skip long lines; early morning visits tend to be less crowded.
- What's included: Consider options with audio guides, live guides, or combo tickets including the Baptistery for a fuller visit.
- Train logistics: From Florence, trains run frequently to Pisa Centrale; plan arrival times to align with your ticket slot.
- Photography tip: Capture the tower’s lean best from the northwest side, where the angle is most visible against the sky.
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