Casa Mila (La Pedrera) Tickets

Barcelona, Spain

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Casa Mila (La Pedrera) Tickets

Casa Milà (La Pedrera) tickets: rooftops, Gaudí stories and days built around one landmark

With Casa Milà (La Pedrera) tickets you can move at your own pace with an audio guide, reserve quieter sunrise or night experiences on the rooftop and link the visit with Gaudí house circuits, city tours and Sagrada Familia or Park Güell stops; in our catalog of activities you will find formats for a quick first contact, half days dedicated to Gaudí and full itineraries that line up several icons in one go.

📚 Choose your experience

La Pedrera day tickets with audio guide

Daytime La Pedrera tickets with audio guide let you slip past the façade, cross the sculpted courtyards and reach the rooftop warriors while listening to Gaudí’s story in your language, with time to pause where the views, light and details grab you.


These self-guided entries are ideal for first‑time visitors who want freedom, families who move at different speeds and travellers fitting La Pedrera between other museums or a relaxed lunch on Passeig de Gràcia.

The audio guide usually offers several languages and themed routes, so you can focus either on architecture, daily life in the modernist apartment or the rooftop skyline; if you prefer quieter rooms, pick very early or later afternoon slots when the building often feels less rushed.

🧭 Quick tips for daytime tickets

  • Arrive a little before your chosen entry time.
  • Keep the audio guide volume low on the rooftop.
  • Carry a light layer; wind can be surprising upstairs.

La Pedrera at sunrise and night

Sunrise and night formats focus on atmosphere rather than speed: you enter when the avenue is almost empty or already glowing, and the rooftop chimneys become the stage for light, music and fewer people around you.


These experiences tend to include a guided storyline through key rooms, special access before regular opening or immersive effects on the rooftop, making them a good choice if you already know Barcelona and want something more cinematic than a standard visit.

For a deeper daytime walkthrough inside the building, you can also look at our dedicated Casa Milà (La Pedrera) tour page, where guided visits explore extra corners and stories beyond what you usually hear with an audio guide.

🌙 Best for this kind of ticket

  • Couples and small groups searching for special moments.
  • Travellers who already saw La Pedrera in daytime once.
  • Photography lovers chasing soft light and empty frames.

Gaudí houses tours with Casa Vicens

Gaudí house itineraries that link La Pedrera with Casa Vicens and other works show how his style evolved from a more oriental, patterned first house to the fluid stone of the later apartments, all in one curated route that joins several entrances under the same narrative.


These tours usually move between buildings on foot or with short transfers, so you get a compact but dense look at Gaudí; they are well suited to visitors who enjoy architectural detail, want a guide to join the dots and prefer a focused half day over several separate bookings.

🏛️ When a Gaudí houses tour makes sense

  • You want several Gaudí interiors in one morning.
  • You prefer a single meeting point and clear routing.
  • Comparisons help you understand the architect better.

La Pedrera and Casa Batlló on the same route

Combined experiences with La Pedrera and Casa Batlló put side by side the rough stone wave and the colourful, almost aquatic façade of the other house, sometimes adding a professional photoshoot or private guiding to make the most of two iconic staircases and rooftops.


In our offer of experiences you will find morning private tours that start in La Pedrera and continue at Casa Batlló, as well as more relaxed photo‑focused sessions that work well for couples, friends or solo travellers who want good pictures without worrying about angles and crowds.

📸 How to organise the Casa Batlló combo

  • Start where you most want rooftop light.
  • Leave time between houses for a coffee break.
  • Check if photoshoot time is included or optional.

Full Gaudí day with La Pedrera, Sagrada Familia and Park Güell

City circuits that link La Pedrera with Sagrada Familia, Park Güell and the historic centre concentrate much of Barcelona’s classic postcard in one structured day, often in small groups where a guide helps you understand how Gaudí fits into the wider city.


These routes work especially well if you have limited days in Barcelona and prefer someone else to coordinate entrances and timing; you can then deepen each stop with our dedicated Sagrada Familia tickets guide and the Park Güell tickets page, which explain viewpoints, routes and access options in more detail.

Expect a steady pace with waking hours devoted almost entirely to Gaudí, so comfortable shoes, water and a light snack in your bag will make the difference between simply “seeing” the sites and enjoying the whole day without fatigue.

🧭 Fitting La Pedrera into a Gaudí marathon

  • Confirm if La Pedrera visit is inside or outside only.
  • Ask where the tour starts and finishes in the city.
  • Save some free evening time to revisit your favourite area.

Frequently asked questions

Do you need to buy tickets in advance for Casa Mila?

For popular moments such as mid‑morning, sunset, sunrise or night experiences, advance booking is strongly recommended, as time slots can sell out and our offer of experiences is organised by schedule and capacity.

Is Casa Mila free entry?

Access to the main visit areas of Casa Milà (La Pedrera) is not free; you need a ticket or guided experience, while only small street‑level spaces such as the shop may be accessible without going through the full visit route.

How much are the tickets for La Pedrera?

Standard daytime tickets with audio guide on GuruWalk usually cost around the price of a typical museum visit in Barcelona, while night, sunrise and full‑day Gaudí circuits sit in higher ranges; check GuruWalk’s activity catalog to see the latest prices before choosing.

Is Casa Milà worth it?

Many travellers consider La Pedrera one of the most complete Gaudí experiences, because you see the rooftop, the attic exhibition, a historic apartment and the courtyards in a single visit, all tied together with explanations that make the strange shapes feel intentional rather than decorative.

How much time do you need at La Pedrera?

With a regular ticket most people spend between one and two hours moving through the courtyards, apartment, attic and rooftop; guided or night experiences may keep you a little longer because the commentary and rooftop moments invite slower pacing.

Is La Pedrera the same as Casa Mila?

Yes, it is the same building: Casa Milà is the original family name of the owners, while “La Pedrera” is the popular nickname meaning “the stone quarry”, now widely used for tickets, tours and official communication.

Which is better, Casa Milà or Casa Batllo?

The answer depends on what you value: Casa Batlló is more colourful and theatrical inside, while La Pedrera offers a larger rooftop, an apartment that shows daily life and a strong structural story; if possible, many visitors enjoy seeing both through our combined experiences.

Is 1 hour enough for Sagrada Familia?

In combined Gaudí days, one hour inside Sagrada Familia is usually enough for a quick circuit around the nave and a handful of photos, but travellers who love architecture or want to visit the towers often prefer more time or a dedicated ticket focused only on the basilica.

Is it customary to tip in Barcelona?

Tipping in Barcelona is generally modest and discretionary: locals often round up a restaurant bill or leave a small extra for very good service, and for tours it is common but not obligatory to give a voluntary tip if you felt the guide added real value to your day.

Can I go to Barcelona if I only speak English?

You can visit Barcelona comfortably with just English, as most tourism staff, guides and many restaurant teams understand it, and signs in major attractions such as La Pedrera or Sagrada Familia usually include English alongside Catalan and Spanish.

About the author

Portrait of Belén Rivas, GuruWalk editor

Author: Belén Rivas, GuruWalk

Publication date: 2025-11-25

Data updated as of November 2025

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