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Verona Card Attractions: The Complete 2026 List
The full list of Verona Card attractions for 2026, including the Arena, Juliet's House and Castelvecchio, plus tips for visiting each one.
7/13/20263 min read
The Verona Card covers 20+ attractions, including the Arena, Casa di Giulietta, Castelvecchio, Torre dei Lamberti, San Zeno Basilica, the Duomo complex, and the Roman Theatre's Archaeological Museum.
Each attraction can be visited once per card.
Casa di Giulietta requires a separate timed reservation, even with the card.
Torre dei Lamberti's elevator (~€1) and the funicular are not included.
Many attractions, including the Arena and Casa di Giulietta, are closed on Mondays.
Verona Card Attractions: The Complete List (2026)
The Verona Card includes free or discounted entry to more than 20 attractions across the city, from the Roman-era Arena to Renaissance churches and museums. Below is the full breakdown of what's covered, what needs advance booking, and what to know before you go.
Major Attractions Covered by the Verona Card
Arena di Verona
The best-preserved Roman amphitheatre in the world still in active use, and Verona's most-visited site. This is typically the single most expensive ticket the card offsets, and the one attraction with genuine skip-the-line access via Gate 5 — see what skip-the-line really covers.
Casa di Giulietta (Juliet's House)
The famous house and balcony associated with Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Important: even with the Verona Card, you must book a free timed entry slot in advance through the official reservation system, selecting the "VR Card" option. See the step-by-step booking guide.
Castelvecchio Museum
A medieval castle turned art museum, home to sculpture and painting collections spanning the medieval and Renaissance periods, plus the Castelvecchio Bridge over the Adige river.
Torre dei Lamberti
Verona's tallest tower, offering panoramic views over the city's rooftops. The Verona Card covers entry to the tower itself, but not the elevator ride to the top (a separate ~€1 fee applies) — you can always take the stairs for free.
Basilica di San Zeno Maggiore
One of Italy's finest Romanesque churches, notable for its bronze doors and cloister.
Verona Cathedral (Duomo) Complex
Includes the cathedral itself along with connected historic sites in the complex.
Scaliger Tombs
The elaborate Gothic funerary monuments of the Della Scala family, who ruled Verona in the 13th–14th centuries.
Archaeological Museum at the Roman Theatre
Set inside a former convent overlooking Verona's Roman theatre, with an excellent view over the city and river.
For a route that strings these together in one day, see the sample itinerary using the Verona Card or the dedicated one-day itinerary guide.
What Else Is Included
Unlimited ATV city bus travel for the duration of the card (Aerobus airport shuttle and intercity routes excluded)
Additional smaller museums and churches beyond the highlights above — the full current list is published by the Comune di Verona and can shift slightly year to year
What's Not Included
The Torre dei Lamberti elevator (stairs are free with the card; the lift costs extra)
The funicular
The Aerobus airport shuttle and intercity buses
A second entry to any attraction — each site is single-use per card
Discounted entry to some private venues (like Giardino Giusti), where the card may only get you a reduced price rather than free entry, depending on the venue
Booking Notes for Specific Sites
Casa di Giulietta: mandatory advance time-slot booking, even with the card, via the official reservation portal.
Arena and Casa di Giulietta: both are typically closed on Mondays — plan accordingly.
Some other attractions allow optional (not compulsory) time-slot reservations through the same portal, which can help you skip queues in peak season.
Planning Tip: Group Attractions by Neighborhood
Because each site can only be used once per card and the clock is running, it's worth clustering nearby attractions together rather than crossing the city repeatedly. The historic center (Arena, Casa di Giulietta, Torre dei Lamberti, Duomo) is walkable in a loop, while San Zeno sits slightly further out and pairs well with a bus ride. See how to use the Verona Card efficiently.
FAQ
How many attractions does the Verona Card include? More than 20 attractions and museums across Verona, plus unlimited ATV city bus travel.
Does the Verona Card include Juliet's House? Yes, but you must reserve a free timed entry slot in advance, even when using the card.
Is the Torre dei Lamberti elevator included in the Verona Card? No — the tower entry is included, but the elevator ride costs an additional fee (approximately €1); the stairs are free.
Can I visit the same attraction twice with one Verona Card? No, each attraction can only be entered once per card.
Are Verona Card attractions open every day? Most are, but several major sites, including the Arena and Casa di Giulietta, are typically closed on Mondays.
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