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Is it worth visiting the Vatican Museum? Among the things to do in Rome, I was disappointed by the walled City. Here’s why.
Going to Rome and not making a trip to the Vatican Museum would probably raise just as many eyebrows as telling someone that you didn’t go and check out the Colosseum.
You can’t help but feel compelled to go because it’s famous and its setup is intriguing.
It’s all kinds of beautiful in an architectural and artistic sense, but despite being a religious seat, I was just expecting to see a lot more than a giant museum. Having said that, if you are fully immersed in artistic accomplishment, then you will, without a doubt, love it here.

Is it Worth Visiting the Vatican Museum in Rome? – Walled City Truths
Article Contents
Preconceptions Before Visiting Vatican City
It probably is a little naïve to think I was going to see a glimpse (however small) of the dark history of the walled city of the Vatican, established in 1929, now classed as the smallest independent state in the world.
It’s shrouded in such mystery and intrigue (and that in itself sells), but I still went there wanting to witness something of the grittiness that we hear of about this ambiguous walled enclave. I’m too inquisitive for my own good sometimes.
But when you make your way over to the other side of Rome’s Tiber River, you don’t get to view a ‘city’.
Sure, it has a population of over 800 people, employs nearly 2000, has its own postal system, currency, police and the infamous Swiss Guards, but you don’t really get to witness any of that in operation, so it doesn’t really count. It just sounds good.
I made it worse for myself as I walked toward the Vatican City entrance, taking in the tall, imposing walls. The dark, mysterious feeling they generated made you feel as if you were about to walk into something secretive. I loved taking pictures of the wall; it added to a sense of excitement that we were about to start a grand investigative adventure.
Sadly, not, since your Vatican Museum tickets are not Vatican City tickets. You’ll be ushered into a formulated hallway trail before you know it.
Even without a Vatican Museum tour, which could feed you the tiny details for hours on how and when particular artworks were acquired, there is still plenty to see inside.
The interior décor of the Vatican is beyond stunning in spectrums of glistening gold, regal reds and the delicate, bold paintwork of all the murals. That in itself is a highlight. Neck cranking though it is, you can’t get past the beauty of the floor-to-ceiling designs and their colourful stories.
The statues, carvings, and paintings were monumental, intricate, and dazzling, although they came thick and fast in overwhelming numbers. It didn’t help that we had recently come from Florence, having strolled through the beauty of the Uffizi to stare admiringly at the Adonis that is the Statue of David in the Accademia. But isn’t that all a part of cultural sightseeing in Italy?

Always look up when visiting the Vatican Museum. The ceilings tell many stories.
The Bold Truth of a Vatican Museum Visit
In a short time, the entire Vatican setup became frustrating.
Corridor after corridor, like a never-ending journey of an extreme cover-up by painting, we were like a herd of cattle wandering from one room to the next, being shoved past groups of overzealous tourists on Vatican tours, with leaders waving those annoying flags and umbrellas.
The garden, which features the giant golden globe structure, is a nice reprieve, as is the less crowded, famous spiral staircase in the Vatican.

The famous Vatican Museum Spiral Staircase is an architectural highlight
The only salvation was finally arriving at the Sistine Chapel, where I found Michelangelo’s biblical frescoes quite magnificent, and later, out into St. Peter’s Square to St. Peter’s Basilica, which essentially serves as the endpoint for the crowds. It made the colossal herding feel worth it, as it is a spectacular sight.

St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican
While I don’t feel it was completely wasted time (it is, after all, a UNESCO World Heritage Site), I do feel that so much of it is off-limits that it takes away the edge of being within an independent sovereign state.
That was what I wanted to see, just a small part of it. Museum buildings and being let outside into a couple of gardens didn’t really feel like a very thorough experience.
To me, the museum is not only a big show of wealth, but it feels like artistic brainwashing for all the underground things that take place there, so that when you leave, it takes you a couple of hours to think: ‘Oh, what about the religion thing?’
That’s no doubt the point on a visit to the Vatican.
Vatican Museum Tickets and Guided Tours
There are various Vatican Tickets, and it is advised to pre-book online and purchase the ‘skip the line’ ticket to avoid the horrendous queues that quickly amass here. I would recommend the escorted option below, where you will be amongst the first people through the door and in the Vatican exhibitions.
Vatican City Tickets: General Admission
- Skip-the-Line Tickets to the Vatican Museums and Sistine Chapel cost €28.
- Escorted Skip The Line Tickets to the Vatican Museum & the Sistine Chapel. Ticket costs €35. This ticket gives you access to morning slots (8:00 AM and 8:30 AM) that are not available to those with regular tickets. This also eliminates the intense crowds.
Vatican Tour Tickets
- Guided Tour of the Vatican Museums, Sistine Chapel and St. Peter’s Basilica ticket costs €56.
- Guided Tour of the Vatican Museums and Sistine Chapel ticket costs €39.90.
Vatican Museum Hours
- The site’s opening hours for Vatican guided tours and general entrance are from 9 am to 4 pm.
- The Vatican is closed every Sunday.
Vatican Necropolis Tours
- The Vatican Scavi Tour visits the Vatican Necropolis below Saint Peter’s Basilica, where you can see the Tomb of Saint Peter. The guided tour costs €13 Euros and lasts for 90 minutes. A limited number of tickets are issued daily to ensure this archaeological site remains protected.
Further reading for your time in Rome
READ MORE: What to Do in Rome














Ann roberts says
Have no desire to visit, but all the tour groups include it on their tours. So have to do your own tour so can avoid going places you would rather not visit
Becki says
You can always opt out of activities you don’t want to do – it’s not compulsory to attend every single thing.
Nico says
Hi Becki,
Yeah I just finished a very underwhelming tour of the Vatican and was wondering if ANYONE felt like me. It’s a bit of the “emperor’s new clothes” kind of thing to me. Even the Sistine Chapel was “meh” and the cattle gates and smelly corridors were plain awful. I’m really not a complainer and I checked myself several times to try and be objective but I just kept getting back to the place of believing it just wasn’t worth the time, crowds and money. There’s so much to see and do in Roma, I would tell anyone with limited time and money to give the Vatican museums a pass.
Nico
Teresa G says
I am so happy to have found your travel site! I love living vicariously through other travelers 🙂 Even though I am a devout Catholic, the last two times I have been to Rome, I have opted out of the expected Vatican Museums visit. It was really hard to justify spending HOURS in the museum when there was so much more of the Vatican and Rome to see. The Sistine Chapel was freaking fantastic, though 😉
I would love to offer a few suggestions if you (or one of your readers) are at the Vatican again, hoping to get a glimpse of Catholic culture and heritage in the Vatican. First, I would suggest the free SCAVI tour, in the excavation underneath the Vatican. Or, you could hop in the St. Peter’s Basilica line very early in the morning and ask anyone speaking English if they are attending a Mass. Usually, the dozens of side and crypt altars have Masses simultaneously first thing in the morning. This could be an incredible cultural experience. Not to be missed, is the climb to the top of the dome of St. Peter’s — the view cannot be matched! Finally, if you do make it inside of St. Peter’s, on the righthand side of the church, there is an “Adoration Chapel”. This is a fantastic way to observe Catholic culture in action. It’s a chapel in which the “Blessed Sacrament” (the consecrated bread that Catholics believe turns into the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Jesus) is reserved and worshiped. Although, beware: you are only allowed to enter the room if you stay at least one half hour. But take your time and look around the beautiful side chapel that tourists rarely see and also observe the other people who are in the most intimate moments of their religious experience.
I hope this is of assistance to you or one of your readers desiring to visit the Vatican and experience Catholic culture.