Pantheon and Colosseum Combo Tickets: Do They Exist and Are They Worth It?

There’s no single official ticket that covers both the Pantheon and the Colosseum — they’re run by different authorities and sold separately. However, operators do sell combined tours and packages that bundle entry to both (and often more), which can save planning effort and, sometimes, money. Here’s how it works and whether a combo is worth it for you.

Why there’s no official combined ticket

The Pantheon and the Colosseum are managed separately, with their own ticketing systems and prices — the Pantheon at €5 (€7 from 1 July 2026) and the Colosseum at around €18 plus a booking fee. There’s no official pass that merges the two into one ticket, so any “combo” you see is put together by a tour operator rather than the sites themselves.

What operator combos actually include

Operator packages typically bundle timed entry to both monuments, sometimes with a guided tour or audio guide, and occasionally with other highlights like the Roman Forum or a hop-on-hop-off bus. The appeal is convenience: one booking, one checkout, and a planned route, rather than juggling two separate ticketing systems with their own quirks.

Are combo tickets worth it?

  • Worth it if you want both sites sorted in a single booking, prefer a guided or structured visit, or value skipping the official systems’ hassles.
  • Maybe not if you’re on the tightest budget and happy to book each site’s cheapest official ticket separately.

Planning two very different sites

The Pantheon and the Colosseum are about a 25–30 minute walk apart, and they’re very different visits — the Pantheon is a short, flat, single-room marvel, while the Colosseum involves more time, walking and security. A combo or a well-planned day lets you pair them sensibly, often with the Pantheon as a quick stop and the Colosseum as the longer centrepiece.

A sensible one-day route

  1. Morning: the Colosseum (and optionally the Roman Forum), which needs more time.
  2. Midday: lunch and a walk through the centre.
  3. Afternoon: the Pantheon, a quick but unforgettable stop, then nearby Piazza Navona and the Trevi Fountain.

What to check before booking a combo

  • Exactly which sites and extras are included.
  • The time slots for each monument and how they fit together.
  • Whether a guide or audio guide is part of the package.
  • The total price versus booking each official ticket yourself.
  • The cancellation policy.

The bottom line

If you value convenience and a structured day, a combined tour or package covering both the Pantheon and the Colosseum can be a smart, time-saving choice. If you’re optimising purely for price, booking each site’s cheapest official ticket separately may cost a little less — at the expense of more planning and two checkouts.

Book a Pantheon and Colosseum package

To see both icons without wrestling two ticketing systems, book a combined Pantheon-and-Colosseum tour or package online in advance. You’ll get timed entry to both — often with a guide or audio guide included — in a single, simple booking.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a combined Pantheon and Colosseum ticket?

Not an official one — but operators sell combined tours and packages covering both.

Is a combo cheaper than booking separately?

Sometimes, once extras are factored in; for bare entry, booking each official ticket can be cheaper.

How far apart are the Pantheon and Colosseum?

About a 25–30 minute walk.

Can I see both in one day?

Yes — the Colosseum in the morning and the Pantheon in the afternoon works well.

Do combos include a guide?

Many do; always check exactly what’s included before booking.

Is the Pantheon part of the Roma Pass with the Colosseum?

No — the Pantheon isn’t included in the Roma Pass.