As of today, the Trevi Fountain is chargeable. New fare system for Rome's Civic Museums also goes into effect.


Starting today, Feb. 2, the 2-euro admission fee to the Trevi Fountain for tourists and non-residents in the City of Rome and the Metropolitan City goes into effect. All information on times and ticket purchase.

Starting today, Feb. 2, a paid access ticket to the Trevi Fountain for tourists and non-residents goes into effect, allowing entry to the monument’s inner perimeter at a cost of 2 euros. The fee also applies on the first Sunday of the month. Access will be allowed at the following times: on Fridays from 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., while on other days of the week opening hours will be from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., with last entry every day at 9 p.m. Exceptionally, on Monday, Feb. 2, opening hours will be extended from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Admission will remain free for residents of the Municipality of Rome and the Metropolitan City, upon presentation of an identity document, as well as for people with disabilities and their carers, children under six years of age and tour guides. After the closing time set for 10 p.m., the fountain will be visible to everyone free of charge.

Tickets can be purchased online at the official website, at Civic Museums, Tourist Info Points and affiliated outlets, paying by cash or card. It is also possible to purchase tickets directly at the entrance, by card only.

Tourists at the Trevi Fountain. Photo: Jeff Ackley
Tourists at the Trevi Fountain. Photo: Jeff Ackley

As of February 1, 2026, the new fare system for the Civic Museums of Rome also went into effect: in addition to the Trevi Fountain, five other museum and monumental sites that were previously free of charge become fee-paying.

Museumscurrently free that become chargeable for non-residents: the Giovanni Barracco Museum of Ancient Sculpture, the Carlo Bilotti Museum - Villa Borghese Orangery, the Pietro Canonica Museum of Villa Borghese, the Napoleonic Museum, and the Villa of Maxentius.

Museums currently charged that become free for residents of Rome and the Metropolitan City: Musei Capitolini, Mercati di Traiano - Museo dei Fori Imperiali, Museo dell’Ara Pacis, Centrale Montemartini, Museo della Forma Urbis (Celio Archaeological Park), Area Sacra di Largo Argentina, Archaeological Area of Circus Maximus, Museo di Roma a Palazzo Braschi, Museo di Roma in Trastevere, Galleria d’Arte Moderna, Musei di Villa Torlonia, Museo Civico di Zoologia.

Museumsthat remain free for all: Museum of the Roman Republic and Garibaldian Memory, Museum of Casal de’ Pazzi, Museum of the Walls, Alberto Moravia House Museum.

As of today, the Trevi Fountain is chargeable. New fare system for Rome's Civic Museums also goes into effect.
As of today, the Trevi Fountain is chargeable. New fare system for Rome's Civic Museums also goes into effect.



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