The Reggia di Venaria Reale's Galleria Grande, designed by Filippo Juvarra, with sunlight streaming through the long colonnade of arched windows.

Italy's other Versailles — 13 minutes from Turin

The Reggia di Venaria Reale is the Savoy dynasty's Baroque masterpiece — Juvarra's Galleria Grande, 60 hectares of formal gardens, and a UNESCO World Heritage listing. We book your ticket, confirm in English, and answer day-of questions in your timezone.

See ticket options
  • UNESCO 1997 World Heritage Site — Savoy Royal Residences
  • 527,000 visitors in 2024 (+17% year-on-year)
  • Galleria Grande Filippo Juvarra's 80m Baroque colonnade
  • 13 minutes by train from Torino Porta Susa

Choose your ticket

Reggia + Gardens

Adults & teens

€34

  • Entry to the Reggia (Royal Palace) Piano Nobile — Galleria Grande, Royal Apartments, Chapel of Sant'Uberto
  • Entry to the 60-hectare Royal Gardens
  • Access to any temporary exhibition open in the Rooms of the Arts on your visit day
  • Open-date ticket — use any day the palace is open within validity
  • English-language email confirmation + 24/7 concierge support
Reserve my Reggia ticket

Reggia + Gardens + Castello della Mandria

Full Savoy estate experience

€44

  • Everything in the Reggia + Gardens ticket
  • Entry to the Castello della Mandria — Victor Emmanuel II's hunting residence, 2.5 km from the Reggia
  • Walking access to the surrounding La Mandria regional park
  • Open-date validity for both sites
  • Best value if you have a full day in Venaria
Reserve the combined ticket

Family Pack (2 adults + up to 4 children)

2 adults + 1-4 children aged 6-16

€115

  • Reggia (Royal Palace) + Gardens + Castello della Mandria for 2 adults and up to 4 accompanying children aged 6 to 16
  • Children under 6 enter free and do not need a ticket
  • Open-date validity — bring kids on a calm Wednesday morning, not a packed Saturday
  • Stroller-friendly route map sent with your confirmation email
  • English-language family-itinerary guide for combining Venaria with Turin in one day
Reserve the family pack
4.8 from 4,200 verified travellers
James W.
United Kingdom
“The Galleria Grande is unbelievable in person — Versailles-scale but without the crowds. Train from Turin was effortless.”
2025-09-12
Sophie L.
France
“I had no idea Italy had something like this. We did Reggia in the morning and Castello della Mandria after lunch — the combined ticket was the right call.”
2025-07-22
Maria K.
Germany
“Booking through Venaria Palace Tickets was painless — English confirmation, clear instructions, and they answered my Saturday-afternoon question within an hour.”
2025-06-04
  • Refund if we can't deliver
  • Cards & Apple Pay
  • Instant confirmation
  • Concierge in your language, 24/7

5-minute audio guide

Your Reggia di Venaria 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host. Five minutes through one of Europe's largest royal palaces — Juvarra's white Gallery of Diana, the Chapel of Saint Hubert, and the Citroniera that smells of orange blossom in spring.

  • Why the Savoy built a Versailles-rival as a hunting lodge
  • Juvarra's 80-metre Gallery of Diana, all in white
  • The Chapel of Saint Hubert — patron of hunters
  • The €300 million restoration that brought it back

Included free with every ticket. No app, no download — plays in any browser.

About Reggia di Venaria Reale

The Reggia di Venaria Reale is the largest of the Savoy royal residences and one of the great Baroque palaces of Europe. Duke Charles Emmanuel II of Savoy commissioned it in 1658 as a hunting palace; over the following century it grew into a colossal Baroque residence rivalling Versailles, designed by Amedeo di Castellamonte, Michelangelo Garove, and most famously Filippo Juvarra, whose 80-metre Galleria Grande (often called the Galleria di Diana) is the building's signature room.

The complex covers roughly 80,000 square metres of palace, 60 hectares of formal gardens, and the adjacent La Mandria park — once the royal hunting reserve, now a regional park containing the Castello della Mandria, the smaller residence where Victor Emmanuel II later lived with his second wife Rosa Vercellana. The Reggia and Castello della Mandria sit about 2.5 kilometres apart and are most easily seen together over a full day.

UNESCO inscribed Venaria in 1997 as part of the serial site "Residences of the Royal House of Savoy" (#823), which groups the major Savoy palaces around Turin under a single World Heritage listing. The Reggia's restoration — completed in 2007 after one of the largest cultural restoration projects in modern European history — turned the complex from a decaying ex-military barracks back into a working royal palace open to the public.

For international visitors, Venaria pairs naturally with central Turin: 13 minutes by SFM commuter train from Torino Porta Susa to Reggia di Venaria station, then a 500-metre walk via Via Andrea Mensa. Most foreign visitors arrive as a half-day or full-day trip from a Turin hotel; the rest of Turin's Savoy heritage — Palazzo Reale, Palazzo Madama, Stupinigi — is included in the same UNESCO inscription and worth pairing if you have more than one day in Piedmont.

Practical information

Address
Piazza della Repubblica 4, 10078 Venaria Reale (TO), Italy
Hours
Reggia + exhibitions: Tuesday to Friday 09:30 to 17:00, Saturday/Sunday/holidays 09:30 to 18:30. Gardens: Tuesday to Sunday 09:30 to 17:00. Ticket office closes one hour before. Closed every Monday (except public holidays).
Getting there
From Turin centre: SFM4 / SFM6 / SFM7 commuter train from Torino Porta Susa to Reggia di Venaria station, 13 minutes, then a 500-metre walk via Via Andrea Mensa. By road: 10 km via the Tangenziale Nord (~20 minutes from the centre, longer at peak hours). The GTT Venaria Express shuttle bus also runs Tuesday to Sunday from central Turin.
Time needed
Allow a full half-day (3.5 to 4 hours) for the Reggia + Gardens. A full day if you include the Castello della Mandria, which is 2.5 km away and a separate visit.
What to wear
Comfortable walking shoes — the palace floor plan is huge and the gardens are extensive. The Galleria Grande can get cold in winter; a layer is sensible.
Accessibility
The Reggia is largely accessible with lifts to the Piano Nobile. The gardens have gravel and grass paths that are manageable but not perfectly smooth. Reach out before booking if you have specific access needs — we'll relay your requirements to the operator's accessibility desk.

About our service

Venaria Palace Tickets is an independent concierge service for international English-speaking visitors. We are not the Reggia operator (Consorzio delle Residenze Reali Sabaude) — we facilitate the official ticket purchase on your behalf, deliver it in English with your itinerary, and answer questions in your timezone before, during, and after your visit. You receive the same official electronic ticket you would receive buying directly, with the convenience of an English-language booking flow and concierge support.

Frequently asked

What does my ticket include?

The Reggia + Gardens ticket covers entry to the Piano Nobile of the palace — Galleria Grande, Royal Apartments, Chapel of Sant'Uberto — and the 60-hectare Royal Gardens. The combined ticket adds the Castello della Mandria, a smaller residence 2.5 km away. Both versions include access to any temporary exhibition open in the Rooms of the Arts on your visit day.

Is the ticket date- and time-specific?

No — your ticket is open-date. Use it any day the palace is open (Tuesday to Sunday) within the validity printed on the ticket. There is no time slot to miss. We send the ticket immediately by email; you walk in whenever you arrive.

When is the palace closed?

Every Monday, except when Monday is a public holiday. Tickets are not valid on closed days. Christmas Day and New Year's Day are typically closed too — we'll flag any closure that affects your visit when you book.

How do I get there from Turin?

The easiest route is the SFM commuter train from Torino Porta Susa to Reggia di Venaria station — 13 minutes, then a 500-metre walk. The SFM4, SFM6 and SFM7 lines all stop there. By road, it's a 10-km drive via the Tangenziale Nord — about 20 minutes from central Turin outside peak hours. The GTT Venaria Express shuttle is the third option (Tuesday to Sunday).

Can I see the Reggia and Castello della Mandria in one day?

Yes — that's exactly what the combined ticket is designed for. The Reggia + Gardens takes a half-day; the Castello della Mandria is a separate 2.5-km walk or short drive away and takes another 1.5 to 2 hours. Allow a full day if you want to do both at a comfortable pace.

Are there guided tours in English?

The operator's standard guided tours run in Italian only. English-speaking private guides are available through third-party tour operators; we can recommend one if you'd like. Most international visitors do the self-guided route with the multilingual room signage and an audioguide — it works very well.

How long should I allow for the visit?

Plan 3.5 to 4 hours for the Reggia + Gardens. The full Savoy estate (Reggia + Gardens + Castello della Mandria) is a full day, especially if you include lunch in the village of Venaria Reale between the two sites.

Can I bring children?

Yes — Venaria is genuinely family-friendly. The gardens are particularly good for kids: open lawns, fountains, and the Potager Royal vegetable garden. Children under 6 enter free and do not need a ticket. The family pack covers two adults plus up to four children aged 6 to 16.

Are the gardens wheelchair accessible?

The Reggia itself is largely accessible with lifts to the Piano Nobile. The gardens have gravel and grass paths — manageable for most wheelchairs but not perfectly smooth. The Castello della Mandria is more challenging. Email us before booking if you have specific access requirements and we'll relay them to the operator's accessibility desk.

What if it rains?

The palace is fully covered, so the Reggia and its exhibitions are unaffected. The gardens are still worth seeing in light rain — bring an umbrella. The Galleria Grande's south-facing windows make even grey days feel luminous inside.

Can I take photos?

Yes — personal photography is welcome throughout the Reggia and gardens, including the Galleria Grande. Tripods, drones and flash photography are not permitted. Temporary exhibitions sometimes have their own photography rules — they'll be posted at the entrance.

What's the cancellation policy?

All sales are final. The moment you confirm your booking, we purchase the official tickets directly from the Consorzio delle Residenze Reali Sabaude. Those tickets are issued in your name and the operator does not take them back — so we cannot offer refunds. The one exception: in the rare event we cannot secure your tickets from the operator, a full refund is issued within 24 hours.

Can I change the date after booking?

Your ticket is open-date — there is no specific date to change. Use it any day the palace is open within the validity window. If you can't visit at all, your ticket cannot be transferred back to us or exchanged for a different attraction.

Do I need to print the ticket?

No. We send a PDF and a QR code by email; the QR code on your phone is scanned at the entrance. Bring photo ID matching the booking name — staff occasionally check at busy times.

What other Savoy palaces are worth seeing?

The full UNESCO inscription covers 22 Savoy residences. Within easy reach of Turin: Palazzo Reale and Palazzo Madama in the city centre, the Palazzina di Caccia di Stupinigi (Juvarra's hunting lodge, also UNESCO-listed) just south of the city, and the Castello di Rivoli, now a contemporary art museum. We can suggest an itinerary — email us after booking.

Is there food and drink on site?

Yes — there's a café in the Reggia itself (Caffè degli Argenti) and the Combal.Zero/Dolce Stil Novo fine-dining restaurants on site. The village of Venaria Reale just outside the gate has several mid-range trattorias for lunch.

Is the Reggia the same as Versailles?

Both are Baroque royal residences built in the late 17th century by absolutist rulers. Versailles is roughly twice the size and gets ~10 million visitors a year; Venaria gets about 500,000. The architecture, scale and ambition are genuinely comparable — Juvarra's Galleria Grande is on the same order as Versailles' Hall of Mirrors. The atmosphere is dramatically calmer.

Who do I contact if something goes wrong on the day?

Email bookings@venariapalace.com — we read it 24/7 and reply within an hour during European waking hours, longer overnight. Include your booking reference (sent in your confirmation email). Mobile-friendly reply, no phone calls required.