Madrid’s Golden Triangle of Art and metro network — the two things tourist cards try to bundle. Whether it’s worth it depends on how many days you have.
🎨 Paseo del Arte Card: €32.80 · Prado + Reina Sofia + Thyssen · 1-year validity · Saves ~€7 vs individual · Best museum value in Madrid
🚇 Metro Tourist Travel Pass: €10 (1 day) → €42 (7 days) · Zone A · Includes airport · Worth it if 7+ trips/day
🏙️ Madrid City Card: Discounts only (no free museum entry) + transport · Buy only at Tourist Info Offices · Limited value for most visitors
🚌 City Tour Hop-On Hop-Off Bus: €21–25 (24h) · €28–33 (48h) · 3 routes, 34 stops · Worth it for day-1 orientation only
✅ Best single buy: Paseo del Arte Card — no contest for art lovers
❌ Worst value: City Tour bus as daily transport (metro is 10x cheaper and faster)
Every tourist city sells passes and cards. Some are genuinely brilliant — they simplify your trip, save you real money and cut queues. Others are elaborate packaging designed to make you feel like you are saving money when you are not. Madrid has both kinds, and working out which is which requires doing the actual maths — which most tourists skip.
I have lived here for over 20 years and watched thousands of visitors walk into Tourist Information Offices and walk out with passes they never fully used. I have also watched people pay €1.22 per metro ride all week when a €22.50 three-day pass would have saved them €20.
This guide runs the real numbers for 2026. For each pass: what it actually covers, the exact price, when the maths works in your favour (the break-even point), who it is genuinely for, and when you should skip it entirely.
Is it actually worth it? The Math behind the Madrid Pass
Many travelers wonder if buying a tourist card is a deal or a trap. Let’s look at a typical 2-day itinerary in Madrid:
- Prado Museum: €20
- Royal Palace (Skip-the-line): €16
- Bernabéu Stadium Tour: €30
- Hop-on Hop-off Sightseeing Bus: €25
- Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum: €13
- Total if paid separately: €104
With a 2-day Madrid Pass (like Go City): You pay approximately €84. Total Savings: €20 per person.
The Verdict: If you plan to visit at least two major attractions per day, the pass pays for itself. If you only want to see the Prado and walk around the parks, you are better off buying individual tickets.
1 Paseo del Arte Card — The Golden Triangle Museum Pass ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

The Paseo del Arte Card covers the three museums of Madrid’s Golden Triangle — one of the most extraordinary concentrations of art in the world
💰 Price: €32.80 (official price, all channels)
🏛️ Covers: Prado Museum (€15 individual) · Reina Sofia Museum (€12 individual) · Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum (€13 individual)
📅 Validity: 1 year from purchase date — visit on different days
🚀 Skip-the-line: Direct entry at Thyssen · Priority queues at Prado and Reina Sofia
🛒 Where to buy: museothyssen.org · Prado ticket desk · Reina Sofia ticket desk · Tiqets
👶 Children under 18: Free entry to all three museums (no pass needed — get free ticket at each museum’s desk)
The maths — does it save money?
| What you visit | Individual cost | With Paseo del Arte (€32.80) | You save |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prado only | €15 | €32.80 | — €17.80 (DON’T buy) |
| Prado + Reina Sofia | €27 | €32.80 | — €5.80 (Don’t buy) |
| Prado + Thyssen | €28 | €32.80 | — €4.80 (Don’t buy) |
| All 3 museums ★ | €40 | €32.80 | ✅ SAVE €7.20 |
The maths is simple: the Paseo del Arte card is only worth buying if you plan to visit all three museums. The break-even requires all three. If you are only doing the Prado and one other, skip it and buy individual tickets.
But if you are visiting all three — which you absolutely should, since the Prado, Reina Sofia (home of Guernica) and the Thyssen together form one of the greatest art experiences in Europe — then the card gives you €7.20 in savings plus direct skip-the-line entry at the Thyssen plus a year of validity so you do not need to rush all three in one day.
That last point matters more than the €7. The Prado alone deserves 2–3 hours of serious attention. The Reina Sofia needs at least 90 minutes. Trying to do all three in a single day means you see everything and absorb nothing. The year-long validity means you can spread them across your stay — Prado Monday morning, Reina Sofia Wednesday afternoon, Thyssen Thursday before lunch. That pacing turns a tick-box exercise into an extraordinary experience.
💡 Important: You cannot use the Paseo del Arte card during the free entry hours at any museum. The Prado is free Mon–Sat 18:00–20:00 and Sun 17:00–19:00. Thyssen free on Mondays 12:00–16:00 and Sundays 10:00–14:00. If you plan to use all free hours strategically, skip the card. But those free hours come with 60–90 minute queues — you decide if that trade-off is worth it.
✅ Verdict: Buy it — if and only if you plan all three museums. It saves you €7, gives you skip-the-line access at the Thyssen, and the 1-year validity removes all time pressure. Buy directly from museothyssen.org or at any of the three museum ticket desks. Under-18s skip it entirely — children are free at all three.
2 Metro Tourist Travel Pass (Título Turístico) ⭐⭐⭐⭐

The Madrid Metro Tourist Travel Pass — unlimited metro, buses and airport transfer on a single Tarjeta Multi card
💰 Price (Zone A, adults): 1 day €10 · 2 days €17 · 3 days €22.50 · 4 days €27 · 5 days €32.50 · 7 days €42
💰 Price (Zone T — whole region): 1 day €15 · 2 days €25.50 · 3 days €34 · 5 days €49 · 7 days €61
🚇 Covers (Zone A): All metro lines + airport (no supplement!) · All EMT city buses · Cercanías suburban trains · Metro Ligero ML1
📅 Validity: Calendar days (not 24h) — activates on first use, expires midnight of last day
🛒 Where to buy: Any metro station machine · Airport terminals T1, T2, T3, T4 · CRTM offices at Sol and Atocha
👶 Children under 11: 50% discount · Under-4s: free
The maths — when does it beat the 10-ride ticket?
The alternative to the Tourist Travel Pass is a 10-ride Metrobus ticket (€12.20 = €1.22/ride), which is already excellent value. The Tourist Pass only wins if you take enough trips per day to exceed what the 10-ride costs for the same number of rides. Here is the exact break-even for each duration:
| Duration | Pass price | Rides needed to break even | Rides/day needed | Worth it if you… |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 day | €10 | 9 rides | 9/day | Flying in/out on same day (airport = €4.50 supplement saved) |
| 2 days | €17 | 14 rides | 7/day | Very intensive sightseeing + airport arrival or departure |
| 3 days ★ | €22.50 | 19 rides | 6–7/day | Medium-intensive trip WITH airport at start or end |
| 5 days | €32.50 | 27 rides | 5–6/day | Active sightseeing trip, metro 3+ times each way daily |
| 7 days | €42 | 35 rides | 5/day | Week-long stay with heavy transport use |
The airport trick — why the 1-day pass is often worth buying on arrival:
Here is the most underrated benefit of the Tourist Travel Pass: it includes the €4.50 airport metro supplement at no extra cost. A single 1-day pass costs €10 and gets you from the airport to the centre (€5.50 value if bought separately), then unlimited travel for the rest of the day. If you land, take the metro into the city and then use the metro 4+ more times that day — you have already broken even. Buy it at the airport metro machine in T2 or T4 the moment you land.
💡 Smart move: Arriving by plane and leaving after 3 days? Buy a 3-day Tourist Travel Pass at the airport (€22.50). It covers your airport arrival trip, all transport during 3 days of sightseeing, and if your flight home is within 3 days of activation, your airport departure trip too. Three airport trips at €4.50 each = €13.50 saved on supplements alone. The maths becomes easy.
If you are NOT flying and plan to take 4 or fewer metro rides per day, stick with the 10-ride Metrobus ticket (€12.20 for 10 rides). It is cheaper, shareable between travellers, and does not expire. See the full Madrid transport guide for everything about tickets.
✅ Verdict: Worth it — specifically for travellers arriving/departing by plane (the airport supplement saving makes the maths easy), and for intensive sightseers taking 6+ metro trips per day. For 1–3 casual daily metro trips, the 10-ride Metrobus ticket is better value.

3 Madrid City Card (Official City Council Pass) ⭐⭐⭐
🏛️ What it is: Official sightseeing card from Madrid City Council — NOT the same as third-party “Madrid City Pass” products
💰 Price: Variable by duration · Available 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 consecutive days (check citycard.esmadrid.com for current pricing)
✅ What’s included: Zone A Tourist Travel Pass (transport) · Discounts at museums and attractions (10–25% off, NOT free entry) · Priority access at some sites · Discounts at affiliated restaurants and shops
❌ What’s NOT included: Free museum entry (the Prado, Royal Palace, Reina Sofia are discounted, not free) · Hop-on hop-off bus
🛒 Where to buy: Only at Madrid City Council Tourist Information Offices (Plaza Mayor, Callao, Royal Palace, Paseo del Prado, etc.) · Cannot buy online
👶 Children under 11: 50% discount · Under-4: free
The honest breakdown:
The Madrid City Card is the official city government pass and it is genuinely misunderstood by many tourists — partly because dozens of private companies sell products called “Madrid City Pass” or “Madrid Tourist Card” that are completely different things. Let me be clear about what the official card actually does.
It gives you the Tourist Travel Pass (unlimited transport) plus discounts at dozens of attractions — typically 10–25% off entry fees. What it does not do is give you free entry. You still pay to get into the Prado, the Royal Palace, the Reina Sofia — just at a reduced rate.
This means the value calculation is more complex than it sounds. You are paying for the pass in order to receive discounts, and whether those discounts exceed the pass price depends entirely on how many discounted attractions you visit. The transport element (Tourist Travel Pass) has a fixed calculable value — the discounts are more variable.
When it makes sense:
- You are staying 3–5 days and plan heavy museum-going: The combination of unlimited transport + attraction discounts can add up to meaningful savings across a full week of sightseeing.
- You want a single card for everything: One card, tap for transport, show QR code for discounts. No managing multiple tickets.
- You are visiting a range of smaller museums: The discounts apply across 50+ affiliated venues — not just the big three. History Museum of Madrid, Círculo de Bellas Artes rooftop, Faro de Moncloa viewpoint, and others offer free entry with the card.
When to skip it:
- ❌ You mainly want the Prado + Reina Sofia + Thyssen: Buy the Paseo del Arte card (€32.80) instead. It is specifically designed for those three museums and gives better value for that exact purpose.
- ❌ You only need transport: Buy the Tourist Travel Pass alone — it is the same transport component without the pass price premium.
- ❌ Short stay (1–2 days): You are unlikely to visit enough attractions to recoup the card’s cost above what transport alone would be.
⚠️ Verdict: Situational — the Madrid City Card makes mathematical sense only for visitors staying 4–5 days with a packed itinerary hitting multiple paid attractions. For most 2–3 day visitors, the Paseo del Arte card + a 3-day Tourist Travel Pass bought separately is better value and simpler.
4 Madrid City Tour — Hop-On Hop-Off Bus ⭐⭐⭐

The Madrid City Tour open-top bus — genuinely useful for a city overview, genuinely poor value as daily transport
💰 Price: 24h adult €21–25 · 48h adult €28–33 · Children (4–12): significant discount · Under-4: free
🚌 What’s included: All 3 routes (Blue/Historical + Green/Modern + Purple) · 34 stops · Audio guide in 10 languages · Free drink at Tablao Flamenco La Quimera · 2-hour walking tour (tip-based)
🗺️ Routes: Route 1 (Blue, 85 min): Royal Palace, Prado, Retiro, Gran Vía · Route 2 (Green, 70 min): Bernabéu, Salamanca, Colón · Route 3 (Purple, 75 min): Malasaña, Ventas, Alcalá
🕐 Frequency: Every 15–30 minutes depending on route and time of day · First bus 09:30, last return ~20:30
🛒 Where to buy: madrid.city-tour.com · On board · GetYourGuide (often cheaper online)
⚠️ Important: Cannot enter the old city (streets too narrow) — bus goes around the outside
What the hop-on hop-off actually does well:
The Madrid City Tour bus is excellent for one specific purpose: getting your bearings on day one. Ride the full Blue (Historic) Route loop without getting off — 85 minutes, audio guide in your language, and suddenly you understand the city’s layout. You have seen where the Royal Palace is relative to Gran Vía, where the Prado sits relative to Retiro Park, and which neighbourhoods are where. That geographical orientation is genuinely valuable when you arrive in a new city.
Some visitors then use it as transport for the rest of their stay. That is where it stops being good value.
Why it fails as daily transport:
- Madrid’s metro costs €1.22/ride with a 10-trip ticket and goes faster than a bus stuck in traffic.
- The bus cannot enter the old city. The narrow streets of La Latina, Madrid de los Austrias and the area around Plaza Mayor — some of the most interesting places in Madrid — are inaccessible by open-top bus. It goes around them.
- Traffic is unpredictable. Multiple reviews flag long waits between buses during peak times, and routes regularly get diverted for demonstrations, events and roadworks.
- A 24h pass valid from 10:00 one day expires at 10:00 the next morning — not from your first boarding. Late starters lose hours.
The break-even calculation:
A 24h pass at €23 (midpoint) versus the 10-ride metro ticket at €12.20 (€1.22/ride). To justify the bus over the metro, you would need to take 19 bus rides in 24 hours — physically impossible given route frequencies and loop times. The bus makes no economic sense as a transport alternative. It makes sense only as a sightseeing product.
💡 Best approach: Buy the 24h ticket on your first morning. Ride the full Blue Route loop without hopping off (85 minutes, treat it like a guided orientation tour). Then hop off at one or two stops that genuinely interest you. After that, put the bus away and use the metro for everything else. You will have gotten the full value of the pass in that single orientation loop — the rest is bonus.
⚠️ Verdict: Use once for orientation — the hop-on hop-off is genuinely useful for a city overview on arrival. It is not a good transport alternative to the metro. If you only want to understand the city layout quickly, one 24h ticket used strategically (full loop + one or two stops) gives you that. Do not buy the 48h pass unless you are very mobility-limited and find the bus genuinely helpful.

Comparison Table: Prices and Savings?
Use the table below to see which combination of cards saves you the most based on your actual itinerary. All costs are 2026 prices.
| Your plans | Pay separately | With card(s) | Saving | What to buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3-DAY VISITS — the most common trip length | ||||
| Prado + Reina Sofia + Thyssen + metro from airport + 5 metro trips/day | €40 museums + €4.50 airport + €18.30 metro = €62.80 | €32.80 Paseo del Arte + €22.50 3-day pass = €55.30 | ✅ Save €7.50 | Paseo del Arte + 3-day Metro Pass |
| Prado + Royal Palace + Reina Sofia + 3 metro trips/day (no airport) | €15 + €15 + €12 + €11 metro = €53 | €32.80 Paseo del Arte (no Thyssen sub for Royal Palace) = NOT equivalent. Pay individually. | ❌ Skip passes | Individual tickets + 10-ride metro card (€12.20) |
| All 3 art museums + 3-day unlimited transport + airport on arrival | €40 + €22.50 pass + €4.50 airport = €67 | €32.80 + €22.50 = €55.30 | ✅ Save €11.70 | Paseo del Arte + 3-day Metro Pass |
| 5–7 DAY VISITS | ||||
| All 3 art museums + Royal Palace + 5 days unlimited metro | €40 + €15 + €32.50 pass = €87.50 | €32.80 + €32.50 5-day pass = €65.30 | ✅ Save €22.20 | Paseo del Arte + 5-day Metro Pass |
| Light museum schedule + occasional metro (3 trips/day) | Individual tickets + 10-ride card = varies, typically €30–45 | Any pass = €55+ | ❌ Skip passes | Pay as you go — individual tickets only |
| FAMILIES (2 adults + 2 children under 18) | ||||
| All 3 art museums, 2 adults + 2 under-18s | 2 × €40 = €80 adults, children free = €80 | 2 × €32.80 Paseo del Arte = €65.60 | ✅ Save €14.40 | 2 × Paseo del Arte · Children get FREE tickets at museum desks |
| ARRIVING BY PLANE | ||||
| Airport metro + 3 days sightseeing + airport departure | 2 × €4.50 airport supplement + €18.30 metro = €27.30 | 3-day Metro Pass = €22.50 (airport supplements included) | ✅ Save €4.80 + unlimited | 3-day Tourist Travel Pass — buy at airport on arrival |
Pro Tip: Most Madrid Tourist Cards do not include the 10% VAT or the ‘Airport Supplement’ for the Metro. If you are buying the red Public Transport Card, remember to add a €3 supplement if you are traveling from Barajas Airport
My Final Verdict — Who Should Buy What
✅ Buy the Paseo del Arte card (€32.80) if:
- You plan to visit the Prado, Reina Sofia AND Thyssen — all three
- You want the flexibility to spread visits across multiple days (1-year validity)
- There are 2+ adults in your group (savings double)
- You are travelling with children under 18 (they are free — the pass saves you from managing their tickets)
✅ Buy the Tourist Travel Pass if:
- You are arriving or departing by plane — the airport supplement saving is immediate
- You plan 6+ metro trips per day across a 3+ day visit
- You value the simplicity of unlimited tapping without counting rides
- You are doing a tight 1-day intensive visit with many stops
⚠️ Skip all passes and pay as you go if:
- You are only visiting 1 or 2 of the art museums
- You plan to walk most places and take occasional metro trips
- Your style is slow, relaxed, spontaneous — you may not use enough to break even
- You are visiting on free entry evenings (Prado free from 18:00, Thyssen free Mondays and Sundays mornings) — note the queue trade-off
💡 The most common mistake: Buying a comprehensive city pass (€80–130 from third-party operators) to “get free entry” to the Prado and Royal Palace, then using only 3 of the 15 included attractions. The maths never works. Buy specific cards for specific purposes — the Paseo del Arte for art, the Tourist Travel Pass for transport. That combination covers 95% of what most tourists actually need.
“Too many options? Let us decide for you. In our Tailor-made Madrid trips, we analyze your interests and include the exact passes you need so you don’t waste a single Euro. contact me“
FAQs
It depends entirely on your trip. Madrid tourist card value 2026: The official Madrid City Card (from esmadrid.com) includes transport + museum discounts (not free entry) — worth it for 4–5 day intensive visitors. The Paseo del Arte card (€32.80) is genuinely excellent value — covers Prado (€15), Reina Sofia (€12) and Thyssen (€13) = saves €7.20 vs individual + 1-year validity + skip the line at Thyssen. Worth it if visiting all 3. The Tourist Travel Pass (€10–42) is worth it if flying in/out (airport supplement included) or taking 6+ metro trips daily. Third-party “Madrid City Pass” products (€80–130) rarely pay off unless you have a packed itinerary hitting 10+ paid attractions. Most visitors get best value from: Paseo del Arte + Tourist Travel Pass bought separately.
Madrid Metro Tourist Travel Pass 2026 prices Zone A (city centre + airport): 1 day €10 · 2 days €17 · 3 days €22.50 · 4 days €27 · 5 days €32.50 · 7 days €42. Zone T (entire region): 1 day €15 · 2 days €25.50 · 3 days €34 · 5 days €49 · 7 days €61. All Zone A passes include the €4.50 airport metro supplement at no extra cost — significant saving if flying in. Personal and non-transferable. Valid calendar days not 24h periods — activates first use, expires midnight last day. Buy at any metro station machine including airport T1/T2/T3/T4. Children under 11: 50% discount. Under-4: free. Alternative: 10-ride Metrobus card (€12.20 = €1.22/ride), shareable between travellers. See full Madrid transport guide →
Paseo del Arte card (officially Abono Paseo del Arte) = €32.80 combined museum pass for Madrid’s 3 Golden Triangle art museums: Prado Museum (€15 individual), Reina Sofia Museum (€12 individual), Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum (€13 individual). Total individual cost: €40. Pass saves €7.20. Also: skip-the-line at Thyssen, priority queues at Prado and Reina Sofia, 1-year validity from purchase (visit on separate days, no rush). Where to buy: museothyssen.org online, or ticket desk at any of the 3 museums. IS IT WORTH IT? YES if visiting all 3. NO if only visiting 1 or 2. Children under 18 FREE at all 3 museums (get free ticket at each museum desk, no pass needed). Thyssen closed Mondays — check before visiting. Pass cannot be used during free entry hours.
Madrid City Tour hop-on hop-off bus 2026: 24h ticket €21–25, 48h €28–33. 3 routes (Blue Historic 85min / Green Modern 70min / Purple 75min), 34 stops total, audio guide 10 languages. WORTH IT FOR: First-day city orientation — ride full Blue Route loop once (85 minutes) to understand Madrid’s geography. The commentary is good and the overview is genuinely useful. NOT WORTH IT FOR: Daily transport (Madrid metro €1.22/ride is faster and cheaper) OR reaching the old city (bus cannot enter narrow streets of La Latina/Madrid de los Austrias). VERDICT: Buy 24h ticket on arrival day, ride the full historic loop once, use metro for everything else. Do NOT buy 48h unless mobility is a concern. Can often book cheaper at GetYourGuide vs direct.
- Temperature
- Precipitation
- Rain Chance
- Wind
- Humidity
- Pressure



