Adult Ticket
Ages 25-64
€18
- Skip-the-line palace entry
- Access to the formal fountain gardens (open days)
- Free self-guided audio companion
- Instant mobile e-ticket
- Multilingual support before you travel
Skip the queue at the Bourbon summer palace near Segovia. Instant mobile tickets, a free self-guided audio companion, and friendly support before you travel.
See ticket optionsAges 25-64
€18
Children 5-16, visitors 65+, students to 25
€12
“The fountains were running the day we visited and it was magical. Booking through here meant we walked straight past a long queue and into the palace.”
“Gorgeous Bourbon interiors and gardens that genuinely feel like a little Versailles. The audio companion was a lovely free extra.”
“Easy mobile ticket, clear instructions, and support replied to my question within hours. Made our Segovia day trip stress-free.”
5 minutes audio guide
Stand before the long Baroque facade and imagine a homesick king. Philip V, born at Versailles and grandson of the Sun King, came to these Segovian hills to recreate the paradise of his childhood. What he built became known as the Versailles of Spain.
Fountain displays follow a seasonal calendar and only rarely run all at once. Check the day's schedule so you can time your garden walk to catch the water in motion.
When Philip V, Spain's first Bourbon king, bought this hillside near Segovia in 1719, he set out to build a private paradise that would rival the Versailles of his grandfather, Louis XIV. The result is La Granja de San Ildefonso: a restrained Baroque palace begun in 1721, wrapped in gilded State Rooms, Flemish tapestries, Carrara marble and glittering chandeliers from the royal glassworks nearby.
The gardens are the true showpiece. Laid out in the formal French style across roughly 1,500 acres, they descend the natural slope of the Guadarrama foothills so that gravity alone drives water through twenty-six sculptural fountains. On scheduled display days the jets leap dozens of metres into the air, retelling myths of Diana, Apollo and the Fates in stone, lead and rushing water.
La Granja served as a beloved summer retreat for generations of Spanish monarchs, who escaped the heat of Madrid for cooler mountain air, hunting and court ceremony among the parterres. Today the palace and its grounds are preserved as a museum, and the small town that grew up around the royal works remains a designated historic site.
We are an independent concierge ticket service. We are not the monument or its operator: we simply make visiting easier, bundling skip-the-line entry, instant digital delivery, a free audio companion and real human support into one straightforward booking so you can spend your day on the marble and the fountains, not in the queue.
La Granja Palace Tickets is an independent ticket-concierge service that helps international visitors book skip-the-line entry to Royal Palace of La Granja de San Ildefonso. We are not affiliated with the site or its operator. Our service fee is included in the displayed price, and we refund you in full if a booking cannot be secured.
Plan your visit
When to arrive for thin crowds, golden light on the Baroque facade, and the famous fountains in full flow — a concierge's month-by-month and hour-by-hour guide.
A concierge transport guide from Segovia and Madrid by train, bus and car, with road numbers, journey times and parking detail.
The must-see state rooms, the Flemish tapestry collection, the 18th-century fountain gardens, and a concierge route to see them all in one visit.
It sits in the town of Real Sitio de San Ildefonso, in the hills near Segovia in central Spain, about 80 km (50 miles) north of Madrid and roughly 15 minutes by road from Segovia.
It is about a 90-minute drive northwest of Madrid. By public transport, take a train or bus to Segovia, then a regional bus or taxi to San Ildefonso. The Segovia-Guiomar high-speed station connects to Madrid in under 30 minutes.
Skip-the-line entry to the palace State Rooms, access to the formal gardens on open days, a free self-guided audio companion, an instant mobile e-ticket, and multilingual support before you travel.
The single reduced category covers children aged 5-16, visitors aged 65 and over, and accredited students up to 25 with a valid student card. Bring photo ID and proof of eligibility, as it is checked on the day.
No. The monument uses one combined concession category, so we offer a single Reduced ticket that applies to eligible children, seniors and students alike.
The gardens are generally free to enter on ordinary days. On scheduled fountain-display days an additional garden or fountain ticket may apply, and those dates are limited and popular, so plan ahead.
The monumental fountains operate on a published seasonal schedule, typically spring through autumn, with only a few days each year when every fountain plays at once. Check the current display calendar before choosing your date.
No. The palace is closed every Monday, and on a small number of public holidays. We recommend planning your visit for Tuesday through Sunday.
Generally Tuesday to Sunday, with longer summer hours (around 10:00-19:00, April to September) and shorter winter hours (around 10:00-18:00, October to March). The palace and ticket desk close about an hour before the stated closing time.
Allow around 2.5 to 3.5 hours: roughly an hour for the State Rooms and longer to explore the vast gardens, especially if the fountains are flowing.
Yes. Our Guided Palace and Gardens experience adds a live expert guide who shares the story of the Bourbon court and the Versailles-inspired gardens, with the audio companion included for the rest of your visit.
Your e-ticket is delivered by email within seconds of booking. Just show it on your phone at the palace entrance on Plaza de Espana; there is no need to print anything.
Yes, entry is by timed slot to manage capacity inside the palace. Choose your date and time at checkout and arrive a few minutes before your slot.
Tickets are time-specific, so we cannot always refund a change of plans, but if the monument fails to honour a valid ticket we will refund you in full. Contact our support team and we will help wherever we can.
Many ground-floor State Rooms offer step-free access, but some historic areas and garden paths involve steps, gravel and slopes. Contact us before booking and we will share detailed guidance for your visit.
No. We are an independent concierge ticket service that bundles skip-the-line entry, instant delivery, a free audio companion and human support into one easy booking. We are not the monument or its operator.
Bring your mobile e-ticket and, for any reduced or free ticket, photo ID plus proof of eligibility in the same name as your booking. Comfortable shoes and a light layer are wise for the gardens.