Is the Las Ventas Bullring Tour in Madrid Worth It?
Las Ventas sits on Calle de Alcalá on the eastern edge of central Madrid, a Neo-Mudéjar arena of red brick and coloured tile that opened in 1931 and remains the most important bullring in Spain. Inside, a self-paced audio tour takes in the ring itself, the bullfighters' chapel where matadors pray before stepping out, and the Museo Taurino, which traces the costume and history of the tradition. This guide covers what the single audio-guided ticket includes, what a visit looks like room by room, and what to know before you book, whatever your own view of the sport inside the ring.
About This Experience
Calle de Alcalá 237, 28028 Madrid
Metro Ventas, lines 2 and 5, right at the ring on the eastern edge of the centre
Daily tours, roughly 10:00 to 18:00; no tours run on event days
Around 15 euros at the door with audio guide, including the Museo Taurino; the $18 ticket covers the same audio-guided route
The most important bullring in Spain, a Neo-Mudejar arena of red brick and ceramic tile, one of the largest bullrings in the world
The arena itself, the bullfighters' chapel, and the Museo Taurino tracing the tradition's history and costume
Check Live Availability & Prices
Tours pause entirely on event days, so weekend slots for the audio-guided route can run short. See current pricing and open times below.
Which Las Ventas Bullring Ticket to Pick
A single audio-guided ticket covers this stop. The $18 tour takes in the arena, the bullfighters' chapel and the Museo Taurino, walked at your own pace with an audio guide that works through the ring's history and the tradition's costume room by room.
It suits anyone drawn to the building itself, a Neo-Mudejar landmark of red brick and coloured tile that ranks among the more striking pieces of architecture in the city, and anyone curious about a tradition that has shaped Spanish culture for centuries, whether or not they approve of it.
What the ticket does not include is a bullfight, and the museum does not take a side on the practice; it presents the history and the costume and leaves the rest to you. Some visitors will want nothing to do with the subject, and that is a reasonable position. For those who do go, it makes for a striking hour on the eastern edge of the centre, one of the more unexpected things to do in Madrid the homepage gathers up.
The Las Ventas Bullring Ticket
The single ticket for touring Las Ventas, its arena, its chapel and the bullfighting museum inside.
from $18 Las Ventas Bullring Tour with Audio Guide
- The arena & bullfighters' chapel
- Museo Taurino included
- Self-paced audio guide
What You'll See
The arena itself is the reason to come even before you consider the museum. Opened in 1931, it is built in the Neo-Mudejar style, red brick banded with coloured ceramic tile, and it stands as one of the largest bullrings in the world. Walking the ring on the audio-guided route, empty of any event, gives a better sense of its scale and its architecture than most photographs manage.
The route moves beyond the ring into the parts of the building most visitors never see.
- The bullfighters' chapel, a small room near the main gate where matadors pray before a fight, kept exactly as it is used
- The Museo Taurino, tracing the costume, posters and history of the tradition across the centuries
- The infirmary and the gates used by both the bulls and the fighters, part of the working machinery of the ring
- The audio guide, which covers the whole route at your own pace and fills in the context behind each stop
How a Visit Flows
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Before you go
Check the event calendar
Tours run on non-event days only, so confirm the ring is not hosting a fight before you book the $18 audio-guided ticket.
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On arrival
Head for Metro Ventas
Lines 2 and 5 drop you right at the ring, on the eastern edge of the centre, with no further walk needed.
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First stop
The arena itself
Start in the ring, where the scale of the Neo-Mudejar brickwork and tile is easiest to take in without a crowd.
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Next
The bullfighters' chapel
A small room near the main gate, easy to walk past if you are moving fast; look for it before you head deeper in.
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Main event
The Museo Taurino
Costume, posters and the history of the tradition, included in the same audio-guided ticket.
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Last stop
The infirmary and gates
The working parts of the building, the gates and infirmary used on fight days, close out the self-paced route.
Know Before You Go
Not suitable for
- Visitors who want nothing to do with the subject of bullfighting, since the tradition is the museum's whole subject
- A rushed stopover between other sights; the ring and the Museo Taurino reward an unhurried hour
- Anyone expecting a live event; the tour runs on non-event days only and includes no fight
What to bring
- Your ticket confirmation, on your phone or printed
- Headphones for the audio guide app, if you prefer your own pair
- A hat or sunscreen in summer, since part of the route crosses the open arena
- Comfortable shoes, the route covers several floors around the ring
Not allowed
- Large backpacks or suitcases, check them at the entrance
- Flash photography inside the Museo Taurino displays
- Food or drink inside the galleries
Insider Tips
A few habits make the visit easier.
- Confirm there is no event scheduled before you book, since tours pause entirely on fight days
- The tilework and brick on the exterior reward a slow walk around the building before you go in
- The Museo Taurino is included in the ticket, so allow time for it rather than heading straight for the exit
- Metro Ventas drops you right at the ring, so there is no need to build in extra time for transit
- Earlier tour slots tend to be quieter than the midday ones
- The bullfighters' chapel is small and easy to miss, look for it near the main gate rather than deeper in the route
Where You're Headed
Las Ventas Bullring Tour Tickets FAQ
How much does the Las Ventas bullring tour cost?
The audio-guided tour is $18. Door admission runs around 15 euros and includes the same audio guide and the Museo Taurino.
What are the tour hours at Las Ventas?
Tours run daily, roughly from 10:00 to 18:00.
Does the tour run every day?
No. Tours pause entirely on event days, when the ring hosts a fight, so check the calendar before you book.
How do you get to Las Ventas?
Take the metro to Ventas, on lines 2 and 5, which drops you right at the ring on the eastern edge of the centre.
What do you actually see on the tour?
The arena itself, the bullfighters' chapel, the Museo Taurino, and the infirmary and gates used by both the bulls and the fighters, all at your own pace with an audio guide.
Does the tour include a bullfight?
No. It is a tour of the ring and the museum, not a fight, and runs only on days when no event is scheduled.
How far ahead should you book?
A day or two ahead is usually enough, though weekend slots can run short, so check the event calendar and book once you know the ring is open that day.
What Visitors Say
Went in mostly for the architecture and came away more interested in the chapel than I expected. The tilework outside is worth the trip on its own.
The Museo Taurino was more thorough than I imagined, and the audio guide let us skip the parts we weren't interested in. Fair warning that it does not shy away from the history.
Booked on a non-event day specifically to see the empty ring, and it delivered. Metro Ventas puts you right at the door, no walking required.