Adult — Full Visit
Ages 25+ · Park + Apartments
€36
- Royal Apartments + Scalone d'Onore + Court Theatre
- 3-km axial park + Cascata Grande
- English Garden + Bath of Venus
- Skip-the-line priority queue
- Flexible rebooking if we can't secure your slot
Reggia di Caserta skip-the-line — 1,200 rooms, an axial park three kilometres long, and Europe's most dramatic Baroque cascade. The Bourbons' answer to Versailles, built bigger.
See ticket optionsAges 25+ · Park + Apartments
€36
Park + English Garden, no Apartments
€25
“Did Versailles the month before. Caserta is bigger. The Scalone d'Onore made my wife cry — marble, scale, light all at once. We got through the palace in 90 minutes, then the shuttle out to Cascata Grande was the best €8 of the trip.”
“Walked the park from palace to cascade both ways. 6 kilometres in July heat. Kids hated us. Take the shuttle. The cascade itself is extraordinary — Diana and her hounds carved in marble at the base of a mountain.”
“Pairs perfectly with Pompeii. Pompeii in the morning (scale, outdoors, rough), Caserta in the afternoon (interiors, shade, opulence). Different register of 'you see everything', same day.”
Charles VII of Naples commissioned the Reggia di Caserta in 1751 with a direct brief: outdo Versailles. His architect Luigi Vanvitelli delivered — 1,200 rooms, 1,742 windows, 34 staircases, and an axial garden three kilometres long ending in a 78-metre cascade down the face of a mountain. The palace opened in 1780; the gardens took another fifty years to finish.
The royal apartments hold some of the finest Bourbon-era interiors in Europe — the Throne Room with its 44-metre ceiling fresco, the court theatre, the royal chapel modelled on Versailles, and the private apartments preserved largely as Queen Maria Carolina (Marie Antoinette's sister) left them. The Scalone d'Onore, the grand staircase, is what even seasoned palace-goers stop dead in front of.
The park is the other half of the visit. A canal runs 3 kilometres from palace to the base of Mount Tifata, broken by five colossal fountains and ending at the Cascata Grande with a marble tableau of Diana and Actaeon. George Lucas shot Naboo's royal palace here (Episodes I and II). It's also the one Italian site where bringing a bike or the shuttle makes the difference between seeing the gardens and giving up halfway.
Caserta Palace Tickets acts as a facilitator to assist international visitors in purchasing skip-the-line tickets directly from the Reggia di Caserta (Italian Ministry of Culture), 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 reggiadicaserta.cultura.gov.it.
Priority entry at the main gate, plus access to the full complex: the royal apartments (throne room, court theatre, chapel, private apartments), the 3-km axial park with its five monumental fountains, the Cascata Grande at the far end, and the English Garden (Maria Carolina's exotic-plant garden in the northeast corner). All on one ticket.
Take the shuttle, especially in summer. The park is 3 km each way (6 km round trip) on a straight line with minimal shade. Most visitors who walk both directions burn out before seeing the Cascata. Shuttle is a standard add-on (our most-popular tier bundles it at €8 above the base). Bike rental at the gate is an alternative — fun if the weather's cool.
3.5–4 hours minimum: palace 1.5h, park 2h with the shuttle (or 3h+ walking), English Garden 45 min. A full day if you want to linger in the royal apartments or have lunch in town.
Yes — by volume (about 2 million cubic metres vs Versailles's 1.3 million), by room count (1,200 vs Versailles's ~2,300 smaller rooms — measured differently, but Caserta's spaces are bigger), and by axial length. Charles VII's brief to Vanvitelli was explicitly to out-build the French.
Easy from Naples (35-min train, every 30 min). From Rome: doable as a long day trip (~1h30m by train each way); easier as an overnight with Pompeii or Herculaneum before/after.
Yes — our most common pairing. Pompeii in the morning (outdoor, big, exposed), Caserta in the afternoon (indoor, opulent, shaded). Both reachable from Naples by local train. Can do both in one long day, better as two. We don't sell a combo ticket — we'll route you to our Pompeii concierge service.
Yes — the palace is closed every Tuesday. The park stays open. If your only day is Tuesday, you can still do the gardens and the cascade.
Two situations trigger a full refund: (a) we cannot secure your chosen slot, or (b) the palace closes (25 Dec, 1 Jan, Tuesdays). Outside those, tickets are non-transferable once issued. Reply to your confirmation email 48h+ ahead and we'll try.
The Reggia di Caserta is the largest royal palace in the world by interior volume — about 2 million cubic metres — with around 1,200 rooms, 1,742 windows, 34 staircases, and a footprint of 247 m × 184 m over five storeys. Charles VII commissioned it in 1751 specifically to rival Versailles.
Yes. UNESCO inscribed the 18th-Century Royal Palace at Caserta with the Park, the Vanvitelli Aqueduct, and the San Leucio Complex on the World Heritage List in 1997, citing it as 'the swan song of the spectacular art of the Baroque'.
Trenitalia regional trains run from Napoli Centrale to Caserta every 15–30 minutes, with a 35–45 minute journey. From Caserta station the palace gate is a signposted 5-minute walk straight ahead. A regional ticket costs only a few euros.
Yes, but it is a long day. Take a Frecciarossa or Italo from Roma Termini to Napoli Centrale (~1h10m) then a regional connection to Caserta (~35–45 min). Door-to-door is roughly 2h20m each way. Most visitors prefer to base in Naples and combine Caserta with Pompeii.
The Royal Apartments doubled as Queen Amidala's palace on Naboo in Star Wars Episode I (1999) and Episode II (2002). Mission: Impossible III (2006) and Angels & Demons (2009) also used the palace, mainly as Vatican-interior stand-ins.
Yes. The axial composition of canals, basins, and fountains runs approximately 3 km from the rear of the palace to the Cascata Grande at the foot of Monte Briano — a 6 km round-trip walk on flat gravel with very limited shade. Most visitors take the shuttle or hire a bicycle at the gate.
Yes — the palace interior is closed every Tuesday. The park and English Garden remain open on Tuesdays. The whole site is closed only on 25 December and 1 January.
Under-18s of any nationality enter the Reggia di Caserta free of charge under Italian state-museum policy. Bring photo ID. EU citizens aged 18–25 qualify for a reduced ticket with ID.
Yes. Italy's Ministero della Cultura runs a free-admission programme on the first Sunday of every month at state museums including the Reggia di Caserta. No advance booking is taken; queues at the main gate are long. Concierge-booked skip-the-line tickets do not operate on free Sundays.
Yes — the most common pairing for our visitors. Pompeii in the morning (outdoor, vast, exposed) and Caserta in the afternoon (indoor opulence, shaded park). Both are reachable from Napoli Centrale within an hour by regional train. Two separate skip-the-line tickets — we route through to our Pompeii service.