Barcelona · Visitor Guide

Gaudí
Bundle Tickets

One booking, four masterpieces. Sagrada Família, Park Güell, Casa Batlló and La Pedrera — locked-in timed entries, 15–25% saved versus separate tickets, and zero queueing at four of the busiest sites in Europe.

📖 In-depth guide
✓ Updated 2026
Read the Guide
4
Monuments combined
~20%
Saved vs separate
4.7★
Tiqets rating

What to Know Before You Book

One Architect, Four Unmissable Sites

Antoni Gaudí died in 1926 leaving behind seven UNESCO-listed monuments in Barcelona. Four of them define any first visit: the Sagrada Família (his unfinished basilica), Park Güell (the city's most photographed park), Casa Batlló and La Pedrera/Casa Milà (his two extraordinary residential houses on Passeig de Gràcia). All four are run by different foundations with their own booking systems — which is precisely why bundle tickets exist.

Why the Bundle Beats Individual Tickets

Buying separately means juggling four booking pages, four QR codes, four cancellation policies and four risks of mis-timed slots. A combined Tiqets ticket typically saves 15–25% on the cumulative price and, more importantly, sequences the time slots logically so you are not running across the city. For families and short stays (2–3 days), it is the difference between a curated visit and a stressful scramble.

What the Bundle Does Not Include

Watch the fine print: standard bundles cover base entry only. The Sagrada Família tower climb (Nativity or Passion façade), the Casa Batlló rooftop concert experiences and the La Pedrera night visit are sold as add-ons. They are worth it — but they sell out earliest. Book those slots first, then build the rest of the day around them.

Booking a Gaudí Bundle — What to Know

Before You Book

Lock the Sagrada tower add-on first — tower slots are released in limited numbers and disappear weeks before the base entry tickets.
Sequence your day east to west — Sagrada Família at sunrise, Casa Batlló mid-morning, La Pedrera lunch, Park Güell sunset. Most bundles let you choose each slot.
Skip Park Güell on rainy days — it is the only outdoor site. If forecast is wet, swap it for Casa Vicens or Palau Güell on the same bundle.
Check audio guide inclusion — Sagrada and Casa Batlló audio guides are essential and not always bundled by default.

On the Day

Arrive 15 minutes before each slot — security checks and façade photo time eat the buffer. Late arrival voids entry at Sagrada.
Use the Metro, not taxis — Diagonal and Sagrada Família stations are 4 minutes apart. Traffic on Passeig de Gràcia is unpredictable.
Eat between Casa Batlló and La Pedrera — they are 5 minutes apart on the same avenue. Quintonil tapas just behind the block is faster than restaurant menus.
Photograph Park Güell from the upper viewpoint, not the famous bench — better light, no crowd, and the whole city behind you at golden hour.

Gaudí Bundle Tickets — Questions Answered

Yes — combined Gaudí passes typically save 15–25% versus buying Sagrada Família, Park Güell and Casa Batlló separately. The bigger gain is logistical: a single booking covers all timed entries, instead of juggling four reservation systems.
All of them. Sagrada Família, Park Güell (Monumental Zone), Casa Batlló and La Pedrera enforce 30-minute entry windows. Walk-up tickets are limited and usually for slots several hours later. Bundles lock all your slots in advance.
Tower access is a separate add-on. Most bundles include base Sagrada Família entry only. To climb the Nativity or Passion tower, add the tower option at checkout — slots are limited and sell out earliest.
A common one-day route is: Sagrada Família first thing (best morning light through the east windows), Casa Batlló mid-morning, La Pedrera before lunch, and Park Güell late afternoon for sunset over the city. Bundles let you pre-book each slot in this sequence.
Yes, but it is intense. Each visit takes 60–90 minutes plus transfers. Two days is more comfortable and allows for the Sagrada tower climb, the full Park Güell grounds and time to actually photograph the interiors.
Most Tiqets bundle options offer free cancellation up to 24 hours before the first booked time slot. Always check the cancellation terms shown on the booking page before confirming.

Gaudí Bundle — Detailed Scenarios

Sagrada Família tower climb — Nativity façade vs Passion façade

The two open towers offer very different experiences. The Nativity façade (east, morning sun) is the original Gaudí-era construction with finer stone carvings and a tighter spiral staircase descent. The Passion façade (west) is 20th-century work by Josep Maria Subirachs, smoother, and offers a panoramic Mediterranean view at sunset. Most bundles let you pick one tower add-on; choose Nativity for golden-hour interior light through the east windows and Passion for skyline photography.

Park Güell — the free area vs the Monumental Zone

Most of Park Güell is free public parkland: woodland trails, the upper carob viewpoint and the Calvary cross. The Monumental Zone — Gaudí's mosaic dragon, the serpentine bench, the Hypostyle Hall and the Casa-Museu — is the ticketed area where every famous photograph is taken. The bundle covers the Monumental Zone with a timed slot. If you only have an hour and decent legs, climb to the upper free viewpoint at sunset — same panoramic city view, no ticket required.

Casa Batlló or La Pedrera — which interior is the better visit?

Casa Batlló on Passeig de Gràcia is more spectacular: tactile stair-rail, illuminated dragon-back rooftop, augmented-reality "10D" experience baked into the entry price. La Pedrera (Casa Milà) two blocks north is more architectural: undulating façade, ironwork balconies, the Espai Gaudí attic exhibition and the iconic chimney rooftop. Combine both if you can; if you can pick only one, families and first-timers go to Casa Batlló, architecture students go to La Pedrera.

Visiting Gaudí sites with kids — practical considerations

Sagrada Família is stroller-friendly with lifts to both transept levels — but the tower climb has no buggy access and discourages under-6s. Park Güell has steep cobbled paths; a lightweight stroller works, prams struggle. Casa Batlló's "10D" tablets and rooftop animations hold kids' attention longer than the standard audio guide. La Pedrera's rooftop is fenced but not toddler-proof. Most family bundles include free entry for under-7 and a 30% discount for under-13.

One-day vs two-day Gaudí itinerary in Barcelona

A one-day route works only if you skip the tower climbs and reduce Park Güell to a sunset walk: 09:00 Sagrada Família, 11:30 Casa Batlló, 13:00 lunch, 14:30 La Pedrera, 17:30 Park Güell golden hour. A two-day version adds the Nativity tower, the Casa Vicens (Gaudí's first commissioned house in Gràcia), and Colonia Güell with its crypt — the most overlooked Gaudí work, 30 minutes outside the city. Two days unlock the full body of work without the rush.

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