The pink-and-cream façade of the Royal Palace of Aranjuez reflected beside the Tagus river gardens

Walk the Riverside Palace Where Spanish Kings Escaped the Summer

Skip-the-line timed entry to the state rooms and royal gardens on the banks of the Tagus — booked in minutes, confirmed instantly in English.

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  • 1561 Royal works begun under Philip II
  • 2001 UNESCO World Heritage listed
  • 300+ Hectares of riverside gardens
  • 40 min By train from central Madrid

Choose your ticket

Adult Ticket

Ages 17-64

€18

  • Timed entry to the palace state rooms
  • Access to the Island & Parterre royal gardens
  • Digital companion guide (English)
  • Instant email confirmation
  • Free date change up to 24h before
Book adult ticket

Reduced Ticket

Children 5-16, students up to 25, EU seniors 65+

€12

  • Timed entry to the palace state rooms
  • Access to the Island & Parterre royal gardens
  • Digital companion guide (English)
  • Valid photo ID / student or age proof required at entry
  • Free date change up to 24h before
Book reduced ticket
  • Book in your languageYour currency, final price.
  • Pro tips includedBest times, secret spots, the room most miss.
  • Ready before you flyMobile ticket, ready in your inbox.
  • 24/7 human supportReal people, instant answers — any hour, any time zone.
Helen P.
London
“The timed entry worked perfectly — we walked straight past a long ticket queue and into the state rooms. The Porcelain Room is jaw-dropping in person.”
2026-05-18
Thomas R.
Munich
“Booked the day before and got an instant confirmation in English. The gardens along the river were the highlight, so peaceful after busy Madrid.”
2026-04-29
Claire D.
Dublin
“We needed to move our date when our train plans changed and the concierge team sorted it in minutes, no fuss. Lovely day out from the city.”
2026-05-07

About 5 minutes audio guide

Aranjuez in Five Minutes: The Court's Riverside Retreat

Before you step inside, here's the story that turns these gilded rooms and shaded gardens from pretty backdrop into the stage of a real royal court — listen as you cross Plaza de Parejas toward the entrance.

Included with your booking — your full guide arrives with your ticket.Get your guide
  • Start at the façade. The salmon-and-cream stone you're facing was shaped over two centuries — begun for Philip II in 1561, then softened into rococo elegance by the Bourbon kings who wanted a Spanish answer to Versailles. This was never a fortress; it was a spring escape, deliberately placed where two rivers meet to keep the court cool.
  • Inside the state rooms, slow down in three places: the Throne Room, where Charles IV signed away his crown in 1808; the Porcelain Room, lined entirely in glazed ceramic vines and figures; and the Arab Cabinet, a jewel of Alhambra-inspired plasterwork. Each room is small by palace standards — read them as private theatre, not public grandeur.
  • Step out into the Parterre and the Island Garden. The genius of Aranjuez is water: fountains, canals and the Tagus itself wrap the gardens in sound and shade. Follow the avenues of ancient plane trees and you're walking sightlines laid out for kings strolling off a heavy lunch.
  • Look beyond to the wider estate — the Prince's Garden and the Casa del Labrador, Charles IV's over-the-top pleasure pavilion. UNESCO listed the whole landscape in 2001 precisely for this fusion of palace, water and design. You're not visiting a building; you're visiting an idea of paradise the court built by a river.

This companion guide is provided by our concierge service to enrich your visit and is independent of the monument.

About Royal Palace of Aranjuez

For more than four centuries this was where the Spanish court fled the heat of Madrid. Set where the Tagus and Jarama rivers meet, the Royal Palace of Aranjuez was conceived as a spring residence — a place of fountains, tree-lined avenues and cool riverside walks designed to rival Versailles. Begun in earnest under Philip II in 1561 and reshaped by the Bourbon kings into the rococo masterpiece you see today, it remains one of the most graceful royal sites in Spain.

Inside, a sequence of state rooms unfolds in gilded, jewel-box intimacy: the Throne Room where Charles IV abdicated in 1808, the dazzling Porcelain Room lined floor-to-ceiling in glazed ceramic, and the Arab Cabinet inspired by the Alhambra. Every salon layers silk, mirror and chandelier into the unmistakable taste of the 18th-century court — a more delicate, domestic counterpoint to the grand palaces of the capital.

Beyond the walls lie the gardens that earned Aranjuez its fame. The Island Garden, cradled in a loop of the river, hides shaded fountains and statuary among ancient plane trees, while the formal Parterre stretches in clipped symmetry before the façade. Further out sit the Prince's Garden and the neoclassical Casa del Labrador, a lavish pleasure pavilion built for Charles IV. The whole cultural landscape was inscribed by UNESCO in 2001 for the way it weaves nature, water and royal design into a single composition.

We are an independent concierge ticket service. We secure your timed-entry slot, confirm it instantly in English, and stay on hand if your plans change — so you arrive, walk past the box-office queue, and step straight into the palace your reserved time.

Practical information

Address
Plaza de Parejas, s/n, 28300 Aranjuez, Madrid, Spain
Getting there
From Madrid, take a Cercanías C-3 train from Atocha to Aranjuez (about 45 min), then a 10-minute walk to the palace. By car it is roughly 50 km south on the A-4; paid parking is available near the gardens. The seasonal historic 'Tren de la Fresa' steam train also runs from Madrid in spring and autumn.
Time needed
Allow 1.5-2 hours for the state rooms and Parterre; half a day if you also explore the Island and Prince's gardens and the Casa del Labrador.
What to wear
No formal dress code. Comfortable walking shoes are recommended for the gardens, which involve long gravel paths and uneven ground.
Accessibility
The palace's main visitor route is largely step-free with lift access between floors; the gardens have firm gravel paths. Wheelchair users and visitors with reduced mobility may enter free with a companion — bring documentation. Contact us before booking if you have specific access needs.

About our service

Royal Palace of Aranjuez Tickets is an independent ticket-concierge service that helps international visitors book skip-the-line entry to Royal Palace of Aranjuez. We are not affiliated with the site or its operator. Our service fee is included in the displayed price, and we refund you in full if a booking cannot be secured.

Frequently asked

How do I get to the Royal Palace of Aranjuez from Madrid?

Take a Cercanías C-3 train from Madrid Atocha to Aranjuez (about 45 minutes), then walk roughly 10 minutes to the palace on Plaza de Parejas. By car it is about 50 km south on the A-4, with paid parking near the gardens.

Is the palace closed on any day of the week?

Yes. The palace is closed every Monday. It is open Tuesday to Sunday, plus it may close on certain official holidays — we'll always confirm your selected date when you book.

What are the opening hours?

April to September the palace opens 10:00-19:00, and October to March 10:00-18:00, Tuesday to Sunday. Last entry is one hour before closing, so plan to arrive with time to spare.

What's included in my ticket?

Your ticket includes timed entry to the palace state rooms and access to the Island and Parterre royal gardens, plus our digital companion guide in English. The guided option adds a live English-speaking guide and priority entry.

Do I need to choose a specific time slot?

Yes. Entry is by timed slot to manage capacity inside the palace. You select your preferred date and arrival window at checkout, and we reserve it for you.

Are the gardens included or do I need a separate ticket?

The Island Garden and the Parterre beside the palace are included with your entry. The Prince's Garden and the Casa del Labrador pavilion are separate areas of the estate — ask us if you'd like to add the Casa del Labrador to your visit.

Who qualifies for the reduced ticket?

The single reduced category covers children aged 5-16, students up to age 25, and EU seniors aged 65 and over. Children under 5 enter free. You'll need to show valid photo ID, a student card or age proof for the reduced rate at the entrance.

Will my ID be checked at the gate?

For reduced or free tickets, yes — staff check children's age, a valid student card, senior age (65+ EU), or disability/unemployment proof. Standard adult tickets are not ID-checked.

Is there free admission at certain times?

The monument offers free afternoon entry windows for EU citizens and residents on Wednesdays and Thursdays. These free slots are very limited and fill quickly; our timed tickets guarantee your reserved entry without queueing for a free slot.

Can I change my date after booking?

Yes. You can change your visit date free of charge up to 24 hours before your slot — just reply to your confirmation email and our concierge team will rebook you while dates remain open.

How will I receive my ticket?

You'll receive an email confirmation almost immediately after booking, in English. Just show it on your phone at the palace entrance at your reserved time — no printing required.

How long should I plan for the visit?

Allow about 1.5-2 hours for the state rooms and the Parterre garden. If you want to wander the Island and Prince's gardens or visit the Casa del Labrador, set aside a half day.

Is the palace suitable for wheelchair users?

The main visitor route is largely step-free with lift access between floors, and the gardens have firm gravel paths. Visitors with reduced mobility and a companion may enter free with documentation. Contact us before booking to discuss specific access needs.

Is an audio guide included?

A standard ticket does not include an on-site audio guide, but we provide a digital companion guide in English you can use on your phone as you walk through the rooms and gardens.

Are you the official palace box office?

No. We're an independent concierge ticket service. We reserve your timed entry, confirm it instantly in English and support you if plans change — saving you the box-office queue on the day.

Can I visit Aranjuez as a day trip from Madrid?

Absolutely. With a 45-minute train ride each way, Aranjuez is one of the easiest royal day trips from Madrid. Many visitors combine the palace, the riverside gardens and lunch in the town in a relaxed half or full day.

What is the Casa del Labrador?

The Casa del Labrador is a lavish neoclassical pleasure pavilion built for Charles IV within the Prince's Garden, richly decorated with silk, marble and gilt. It sits a short distance from the main palace and can be visited as part of the wider estate — ask us about adding it.