Avignon Palais des Papes Tickets
About this activity
Smartphone tickets accepted
- Your booking is confirmed instantly
- This activity is in your language
- This option has FREE cancellation: book it without any risk!
Experience Highlights
Tickets to the Papal Palace are the entrance ticket to this splendid Gothic building that housed the Popes during the so-called Avignon Captivity. Thanks to a tablet called Histopad - equipped with augmented reality and 3D technology - you will be able to understand how people lived during the 14th century. You will also have the opportunity to visit the splendid gardens.
- Ticket for the Papal Palace
- Intuitive tablet that recreates daily life in past centuries
- Access to the magnificent gardens
- Voyage Extraordinaire immersive show
What’s included
- Multimedia guide (Tablet)
- Entrance to the Papal Palace
- Access to the gardens of the Papal Palace
- Headphones
Select date and time
Keep in mind you need to arrive 30 minutes before start
Step by Step
This ticket grants access to the Papal Palace of Avignon, one of the most visited monuments in France. With a surface area of 15,000 m2, it is the largest Gothic palace in the world and its construction is due to the will of three popes: John XXII, Benedict XII and Clement VI. To learn about its history and immerse yourself in the atmosphere of yesteryear, in addition to the entrance ticket, you can use a tablet (Histopad) with the following functions:
- Animated maps to organise the route
- 7 languages available, including Spanish
- Augmented reality to see 14 rooms as if it were the 14th century.
- Music
- Interactive treasure hunt designed for young children
In addition, you can zoom in and "move" (virtually) certain objects. The Histopad is automatically activated at the start of the route and its operation is simple and intuitive. To catapult yourself into the past, simply frame a setting and admire a historically accurate reconstruction.
The birth of this palace is linked to the Avignon Captivity, a term that identifies the abandonment of Rome by the popes. In the 14th century, the Eternal City was going through a period of turmoil and violence and Pope Clement V decided to move his court to France. Gradually, the former episcopal building was transformed into the imposing structure we can admire today.
Within its walls are rooms such as the Consistory (where popes received cardinals, ambassadors and kings), the pope's bedroom, frescoes, the magnificent Chapel of St. Martial and much more.
This sumptuous building is complemented by the gardens which are actually made up of three distinct areas: Jardin du Palais (or Jardin Benoît XII, the largest), the Jardin du Pape and the Orchard Urbain V, a more recently created orchard (inaugurated in 2018).