The family — monastery option at Belém Monastery Tickets — 2 adults + 2 youths (6–17). Includes four tickets, one time slot, plus 3 other concierge inclusions. Reserve directly — we secure the official slot the moment you confirm.
What's included
Every booking includes the elements below — handled by our concierge team before your visit and confirmed at the door.
• Four tickets, one time slot
• Skip-the-line for all four
• Children under 6 free at the gate
• Cloister, church, royal tombs
Who this is for
This option is designed for 2 adults + 2 youths (6–17). If you're booking for a different group composition, see the other tiers in our booking widget — each is matched to a specific visitor profile.
On the day
Mosteiro dos Jerónimos is the most-visited monument in Portugal outside the Algarve and a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1983. Built from limestone quarried near Lisbon and carved in the Manueline style — Portugal's signature late-Gothic / Renaissance idiom of ropes, knots, coral and astrolabes — it stands on the Belém riverfront where Vasco da Gama's crew slept the night before sailing for India.
Frequently asked
Where is the meeting point on the day?
There's no meeting point with us — we are your booking concierge, not an on-site tour. Bring the PDF QR ticket we email you and walk to the monastery entrance on Praça do Império. Skip-the-line ticket holders use the priority lane signposted for online bookings; staff scan your QR and you're inside in 5 minutes.
What's the dress code?
Smart-casual is fine. The monastery is still a working religious site — shoulders covered is appreciated in the church. No backpacks larger than a small daypack inside. No tripods without a permit.
Is the monastery the same place as the Belém Tower?
No. They are two separate UNESCO World Heritage buildings in the Belém district of Lisbon, about 300 metres apart along the riverfront. Both share the 1983 UNESCO listing and both are operated by Museus e Monumentos de Portugal. Our combo ticket covers both.
Where is Vasco da Gama's tomb?
Inside the church, in the porch immediately to the left of the western entrance. The tomb dates to 1898 — Vasco da Gama died in 1524 in Cochin and his remains were repatriated to Portugal in stages. The matching tomb on the right holds Luís Vaz de Camões, the poet of Os Lusíadas.