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23 options • from $20.86
Pompeii: Guided Tours
- Live guide in English, German, French, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Spanish, Chinese
- Duration: 2h
- Group of max.: 12 - 25 people
Pompeii & Vesuvius: Day Trips
- Duration: 6h - 7h 30mins
- Group of max.: 10 - 17 people
Pompeii: Small-Group Guided Tour from Rome + Sorrento Visit
- Duration: 12h
- Live guide in English
- Group of max. 18 people
Pompeii: Guided Tour + Roundtrip From Naples
- Live guide in English, Italian, French, Spanish
- Duration: 4h - 8h 30mins
- Group of max.: 20 - 35 people
Guided Tour + Roundtrip From Rome
- Live guide in English, Italian, French, Spanish, German, Portuguese
- Duration: 8h - 12h
- Group of max.: 24 people
Pompeii: Skip The Line Entrance + Day Trip From Rome
- Duration: 12h
- Audio guide
Pompeii & Vesuvius: Guided Tour + Day Trip from Naples
- Duration: 8h
- Live guide in English, French, Spanish
- Group of max. 30 people
Transportation Only: Roundtrip by Shuttle Bus from Naples to Pompeii
- Duration: 4h 50mins
- Live guide in English, German, French, Italian, Spanish
Pompeii, Herculanuem & Vesuvius: Skip The Line Tickets + Roundtrip From Naples
- Duration: 8h
- Audio guide
- Group of max. 17 people
Naples City Card
- Pompeii
- Naples Underground
- Naples City Audio Guide
Pompei Entry Ticket + Virtual Museum of Pompeii In the Past
- Pompeii
- MAP – Magic Ancient Pompeii: Entry Ticket
Pompeii: Guided Tour & Skip The Line Entry + Roundtrip from Sorrento
- Duration: 4h 30mins
- Live guide in English, French, Spanish
- Group of max. 30 people
Pompei & Amalfi Coast: Day Trips
- Live guide in English
- Duration: 7h - 13h
- Group of max.: 8 - 17 people
Pompeii: Transport Only From/To Pompeii
- Duration: 20mins - 40mins
Pompeii, Herculanuem & Vesuvius: Skip The Line Tickets + Roundtrip From Pompeii
- Duration: 5h 30mins
- Audio guide
- Group of max. 16 people
Pompeii: Entry Ticket with Audio Guide + Roundtrip from Salerno by Train
- Duration: 4h
- Live guide in English, German, French, Italian, Spanish
- Audio guide
Pompeii and Mount Vesuvius: Tour from Naples + Wine Tasting
- Live guide in English, Italian, Spanish
- Audio guide
- Group of max. 40 people
Pompeii: Guided Day Trip from Rome + Lunch
- Duration: 11h
- Live guide in English, Spanish
- Group of max. 30 people
Vesuvius & Pompeii Pass
- Pompeii
- Vesuvius Skip The Line Ticket + Transfer
- Pompeii Self Guided Audio Tour
Pompeii: 3D Walking Tour with Entrance Ticket
- Duration: 2h
- Audio guide
- Group of max. 20 people
Pompeii: Entrance + Roundtrip Transport from Rome
- Duration: 11h
- Audio guide
Vesuvius: Skip the line ticket + One-Way Transport From Ercolano to Pompei
- Duration: 6h
- Group of max. 24 people
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Pompeii FAQs
Tiqets provides a range of different Pompeii ticket options that you can download easily to your smartphone. Simply scroll through the options on this page, make your choice, and your tickets will be sent to you via email instantly.
Alternatively, you can buy tickets in person at Pompeii. However, it’s highly recommended that you buy your tickets in advance to avoid long queue times. It’s no fun standing in line during the summer months!
There are a lot of options available to visitors looking for Pompeii tickets – it can be hard to choose!
Purchasing a basic reserved entry ticket does exactly what you would expect. You’ll receive entry to wander the Pompeii ruins at your leisure, allowing you to see the Forum with Vesuvius in the background, the aqueduct, street fountains, public baths, and more.
The best value of Pompeii tickets includes a guided tour of the ruins – why go all that way only to miss the fascinating history and context of Pompeii?
There are also tickets with guided transport from Naples and Rome, which are a great way to save money and stress while traveling.
There are several private car parks surrounding the Pompeii ruins. You’ll be spoiled for choice once you arrive, with chirpy attendants all vying for your business. The going rate to park is around €10 for the day.
From Rome
- Total distance: 250 kilometers
- You can book a fully guided trip from Rome to Pompei with entrance tickets included if you want to take the stress out of your trip
- By train: Expect a journey that takes just over two hours via the Frecciarossa and Frecciabianca high-speed trains. This is the quickest way to reach Pompeii from Rome
- By car: With the famously unpredictable Italian traffic at play, it can take up to three hours to travel by car from Rome to Pompeii
From Naples
- Total distance: 25.5 kilometers
- By train: In 30 minutes, you can take the Circumvesuviana train that runs between the Napoli Piazza Garibaldi train station to the Pompei Villa dei Misteri stop, or hop on the high-speed Campania Express
- By car: In just under half an hour, you can get from Naples to Pompeii if you travel along A3 and skirt the perimeter of Mt. Vesuvius National Park
- Take the worry out of traveling and book entry to Pompeii with roundtrip transport from Naples included
Top things to see in Pompeii
Out of all the ancient treasures excavated in the lost city, the Pompeii bodies are the most visceral. The Pompeii bodies were found when archaeologists detected cavities in the dig site wherever they located human bones. Each hollow cavity preserved a three-dimensional negative imprint of the victims exactly as they were when Vesuvius smothered the city.
By pouring liquid plaster into these cavities, letting it set, and carefully excavating the results, archeologists uncovered not just the exact spot where people died, but a haunting sculpture of their final moments. Preserved in suspended animation nearly 2,000 years later, the Pompeii bodies are a mind-blowing sight to behold.
The House of the Vettii is one of the most spectacular villas in Pompeii. Home to a remarkable collection of frescoes, the villa was owned by the Vettii brothers, two former slaves who became freedmen and eventually successful wine merchants.
The Vettii brothers had bold taste in interior design; their house is like a walk-in art gallery of majestic frescoes depicting a myriad of dramatic scenes from Greek mythology. You can see demigod Herakles strangling a tangle of serpents, Ixion being tied to a flaming wheel by Hermes, legendary hero Achilles on Skyros, a wrestling match between Pan and Eros, Dionysus discovering Ariadne, and lots more. Stopping by the House of the Vettii is a must when visiting Pompeii.
Easily the most grandiose of all the buried treasures of Pompeii, the Pompeii amphitheater is the oldest surviving Roman amphitheater and the first to have been built out of stone.
An absolute must-see, the Pompeii amphitheater might be slightly smaller than the mighty Colosseum in Rome, but it still had the capacity for around 11,000 spectators. Needless to say, the amphitheater of Pompeii is in significantly better condition too. Buried under several meters of compacted ash that sealed out all moisture, it was protected from the elements for thousands of years. This ancient arena is as breathtaking as any other ruins in Italy.
Mount Vesuvius is an ominous specter that looms over the city of Pompeii. It's a constant, bone-chilling reminder of the city's fiery fate. So while you're in town, why not show the mountain who's boss and visit Mount Vesuvius? While it's still an active volcano, there are frequent tours to the summit and the risk is low thanks to modern seismology. There are lots of ways to visit Mount Vesuvius, from fully guided tours to hiking trails, special tours with wine tastings, and more.
The Pompeii Baths prove that if there was one thing the Romans loved more than gladiator death matches, it was a nice warm bath. These ancient wellness spas were central to life in the Roman Empire, and the Pompeii baths are some of the best-preserved examples of Roman baths anywhere, despite the earthquakes, volcano eruptions, and war they've endured.
There are three large public bathhouses in total in Pompeii: the Stabian Baths, the Forum Baths, and the Central Baths. They all shared a similar design, with spectacular art and remarkable engineering being the recurring theme. There are beautiful frescoes on the walls and ceilings and decorative terracotta statues of gods and heroes. Snooping around the Pompeii baths is a total must.
Pompeii reviews
About: Pompeii
Pompeii was lost to us for many centuries until it was rediscovered again, initially in 1599, and properly in the 1700s. It is one of the world's greatest archaeological sites. The volcanic eruption wiped out the population of Pompeii, but the town they lived in was remarkably well-preserved because of the combination of ash and lack of moisture that sealed the town, and essentially turned it into a time capsule.
Pompeii
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Visiting Pompeii: Your Ultimate Guide to the Lost City
Majestic frescoes, steamy graffiti, and one angry volcano, here's all you need to know about visiting the lost city of Pompeii.