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Double the queues at the Vatican

19/04/2011
by Roisin O’Sullivan
Queues into St. Peter's Basilica can be crazy

Queues into St. Peter's Basilica can be crazy

Visitors hoping to see the Vatican Museums and St. Peter’s Basilica have to queue for a lot longer now than they did a few months ago. The longer waits are down to the fact that many visitors now have to join two lines – one at the Vatican Museums and the other at St. Peter’s Basilica. But what has changed?

Well, Vatican authorities added a new rule to their list a few months ago. Previously visitors used to tour the Vatican Museums leaving the Sistine Chapel for last. Then after they had swooned over Michelangelo’s frescoes they walked through a door on the right and found themselves in St. Peter’s Basilica. Now however, it has been decided that the door on the right, which previously allowed visitors direct access from the Vatican Museums to St. Peter’s Basilica, is closed to most visitors. Instead, access through this door is only granted to groups led by Vatican guides with the specific qualifications. Those visiting the Vatican museums independently or on a tour where the guide does not hold the relevant qualification are not allowed through. Instead they do their lap of the museums, leaving by the door they came in and walk 15 to 20 minutes to the entrance of St. Peter’s Basilica (see map below).

Visitors without a qualified guide must walk 1km to St. Peter's Basilica

Visitors without a qualified guide must walk 1km to St. Peter's Basilica

Better to spend your time inside the Vatican museum

Better to spend your time inside the Vatican museum

Unfortunately the queues in the Vatican can sometimes get a little out of hand so many visitors are then be required to queue for between one and three hours to get into St. Peter’s Basilica on top of whatever time they already spent waiting to get into the Vatican museums.

If you decide to cut out the queues and do the Vatican City on a tour, remember that not all tours are equal. Not all tour guides have access to lead their groups through the restricted access door and only some tours can offer skip the line access into the Vatican museums, saving even more time that could be spent waiting under the blistering Rome sun. Before you book a tour then, you should ask your provider two questions: 

  1. Can all of your guides use the restricted entrance into St. Peter’s Basilica?

  2. Do you have skip the line access?

Dark Rome is happy to be able to answer positively in both cases. All of our tour guides are qualified to use the St. Peter’s Basilica access door and all of our Vatican tours have skip the line access, saving precious vacation hours that could be better spent eating gelato or admiring the Vatican collections. For more information on our range of Vatican tours see here

 
 

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Norman Charette

06/09/2011

Hello: 1. Is there another type of bus tour other than the kind that you hop on and off? Do you have a bus tour that would take in the major non-vatican sights? 2.We are thinking of booking your Vatican tour. Once the tour is over, can we return to the sights just visited with our tour guide? 3. My understanding is that we will be told where to meet our guide once we book the tour? Thank you.

Roisin O'Sullivan

06/09/2011

Hi Norman,

Thanks for your comment. Our Vatican tours don't involve any transport at all. Groups meet their guides in a spot near the entrance of the museums which as you rightly pointed out, will be described in the voucher we send you if you book. Our Vatican tours cover the Vatican Museums and St. Peter's Basilica. At the end of the tour groups are left in St. Peter's Basilica where they are free to explore further or climb the dome without having to re-join the long queues outside.

We don't tend to do bus tours because Rome is reasonably compact - the Vatican is easy to walk around, as is it possible to cover all the key Ancient Roman sights by foot and similiarly, most of the piazzas and popular open spaces of Rome. Taking a bus would just mean missing all those little details, like hidden statues or neighbourhood churches, that make a tour so memorable.

We have a few walking tours that cover the highlights of Rome. Our Best of Rome Walking Tour covers sights like the Trevi Fountain and the Spanish Steps (for more details see here) while our Colosseum and Ancient Rome Tour takes in the Colosseum, Palatine Hill and Roman Forum (for details click here) We even have a Ghosts and Legends Mystery tour that explores the city by foot under the cover of darkness (click here for details). Have a browse around the tour section of our site for variations on these tours and more and if you have any more questions, drop us a line using our contact form and we will respond to you directly.

I hope this helps!

 
 
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