The Noble Floor of the Biblioteca Joanina at the University of Coimbra — gilded baroque shelving in exotic dark wood, painted ceiling and a portrait of King João V, in one of three halls aligned like the naves of a basilica.

The gilded baroque library a king built — and bats still guard at night

University of Coimbra full visit, including the Biblioteca Joanina — King João V's 1717 baroque library of 60,000 rare volumes, plus the Royal Palace, St Michael's Chapel and the university's historic museums. One combined ticket; the library is the jewel.

See ticket options
  • 1717 Begun under King João V, completed 1728
  • 60,000+ Rare volumes, 16th–18th century, on jacaranda shelves
  • Bat-guarded A resident bat colony eats the insects that damage books
  • UNESCO 2013 University of Coimbra — Alta and Sofia

Choose your ticket

Senior (65+)

Same full visit, reduced senior rate

€23

  • Timed entry to the Biblioteca Joanina — your reserved 20-minute slot
  • The Royal Palace, St Michael's Chapel and the historic museums
  • Two-day validity on every space except the fixed library slot
  • Reduced senior rate for visitors aged 65 and over
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve senior ticket

Youth (7–18)

Same full visit, reduced youth rate

€17

  • Timed entry to the Biblioteca Joanina — your reserved 20-minute slot
  • The Royal Palace, St Michael's Chapel and the historic museums
  • Reduced rate for visitors aged 7 to 18
  • Children under 7 enter free — no ticket needed
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve youth ticket
4.8 from 58 verified travellers
Claire M.
Dublin, Ireland
“The library is genuinely breathtaking — gold everywhere, painted ceilings, the smell of old paper. You only get 20 minutes inside and you feel every second of it. So glad we had a slot booked, because the queue for same-day was being turned away.”
April 2026
Stefan W.
Hamburg, Germany
“I didn't realise the same ticket covered the Royal Palace and the chapel — both stunning, and far quieter than the library. We spread it over two afternoons. The story of the bats that protect the books delighted our teenagers.”
March 2026
Yuki N.
Nagoya, Japan
“Coimbra is the oldest university I've ever set foot in and it shows in the best way. The Joanina is the headline, but the chemistry laboratory and the cabinet of curiosities were a lovely surprise. Book the library slot in advance and you can't go wrong.”
February 2026

5-minute audio guide

Your Biblioteca Joanina 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit. Five minutes that turns 20 minutes inside the library into the story of a king's baroque masterpiece — the gold from Brazil, the 60,000 books, and the bats that have guarded them for 300 years.

Included with your booking — your full guide arrives with your ticket.Get your guide
  • Why King João V built Portugal's most spectacular baroque library
  • What to look for in the 20 minutes inside — the three halls, the gilding, the ceilings
  • The bats that protect 60,000 rare books from insects at night
  • How to use the rest of your ticket — the Royal Palace, the chapel and the museums

Included free with every ticket. No app, no download — plays in any browser.

About University of Coimbra

The Biblioteca Joanina is the most spectacular library in Portugal and one of the great baroque interiors of Europe. It was commissioned by King João V — the gold of Brazil paid for it — and built between 1717 and 1728 on the upper terrace of the University of Coimbra, which traces its roots to 1290 and is among the oldest universities in the world. Behind walls more than two metres thick, three lavishly decorated halls open one into the next like the naves of a basilica, lined with two storeys of gilded shelving in exotic jacaranda wood brought from Brazil, beneath painted ceilings and a portrait of the king who built it. The shelves hold over 60,000 rare volumes, printed between the 16th and 18th centuries, on theology, law, medicine, philosophy and science.

The Joanina has guardians most libraries would envy: a small colony of bats that lives in the building and emerges at night to feed on the moths and other insects that would otherwise eat the paper and bindings. Each evening the reading tables are covered with leather sheets to protect them, and each morning the covers are cleared — a 300-year-old conservation routine that still works. The thick walls and a heavy teak door hold the temperature and humidity remarkably steady, which is why books here have survived centuries that destroyed collections elsewhere.

There is no library-only ticket: the Biblioteca Joanina is visited as part of the combined University of Coimbra ticket, alongside the Royal Palace (the Paço das Escolas), the gilded St Michael's Chapel and the university's historic museums. Entry to the library itself is in strict 20-minute slots for small groups, so the time on your ticket is the time you go in; the other spaces you can explore before, after, or across two days. The whole university hill — the Alta and the Rua da Sofia below — was inscribed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 2013.

Practical information

Opening hours
The university monuments are open daily, generally from around 09:00, with seasonal variations and a midday break in winter. The Biblioteca Joanina is entered only in timed 20-minute slots; the time on your ticket is your library entry time. We confirm current hours and your slot with your booking.
Address
Universidade de Coimbra, Paço das Escolas, 3000-995 Coimbra, Portugal
Getting there from Lisbon
≈1h45 by car via the A1, or fast Alfa Pendular / Intercidades trains to Coimbra-B (roughly 1h40–2h), then a short connecting train or taxi to the city centre and the climb up to the university.
Getting there from Porto
≈1h15 by car via the A1, or about 1h–1h15 by Alfa Pendular / Intercidades train to Coimbra-B.
Getting there from Coimbra centre
The university sits at the top of the old town (the Alta). It is a steep 10–15 minute walk up from the riverside and Baixa, or a short taxi / local bus ride.
Time needed
Allow 2–3 hours for the whole university — the library slot itself is 20 minutes, but the Royal Palace, St Michael's Chapel and the museums fill the rest.
Accessibility
The historic library is reached by stairs and the university sits on a steep hill, so parts of the visit are challenging for visitors with limited mobility. Some spaces are accessible; contact us before booking and we will confirm the current arrangements.
Photography
Photography is generally not permitted inside the Biblioteca Joanina to protect the books and paintings; it is allowed in many of the other university spaces. Please follow the signs and staff guidance.
Food
Cafés and restaurants fill the Alta and the Baixa below, and the university's own courtyards make a fine spot to pause between the library, the chapel and the palace.

About our service

Joanina Tickets acts as a facilitator to help international visitors book combined University of Coimbra tickets — which include timed entry to the Biblioteca Joanina — for the university, a public institution. We do not resell tickets; we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service, and our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, tickets are sold via the university's own visit platform at visit.uc.pt.

Frequently asked

What's included in the ticket?

A combined University of Coimbra visit: timed entry to the Biblioteca Joanina (your reserved 20-minute slot), plus the Royal Palace (Paço das Escolas), St Michael's Chapel and the university's historic museums — the chemistry laboratory, the cabinet of curiosities and the academic museum. The library is the highlight; the ticket covers the whole monumental university.

Can I buy a ticket just for the Biblioteca Joanina?

No. There is no library-only ticket. The Biblioteca Joanina is visited as part of the combined University of Coimbra ticket, which also includes the Royal Palace, St Michael's Chapel and the museums. The library is what most people come for, but it is always sold within the wider university visit.

Why does the library have a 20-minute time slot?

To protect the books and the building, the Biblioteca Joanina admits only small groups — around 50 people at a time — in strict 20-minute slots. The time printed on your ticket is your library entry time. It is enough to take in the three halls; the rest of the university you visit before, after, or on a second day.

Do the library slots really sell out?

On busy days, yes. Because each 20-minute slot is capped, popular times — late morning and early afternoon in high season — can fill up, and same-day visitors are sometimes turned away from the library while still seeing the rest of the university. Booking ahead locks in your entry time.

Is the rest of the ticket valid for the same day only?

The Biblioteca Joanina slot is fixed to the date and time on your ticket. The other spaces — the Royal Palace, St Michael's Chapel and the museums — are typically valid across two days from your chosen date, so you can spread the visit and avoid rushing.

Who built the Biblioteca Joanina and when?

It was commissioned by King João V of Portugal — which is why it is called the 'Joanina' — and built between 1717 and 1728, paid for largely by gold from Brazil. It is regarded as the finest baroque library in Portugal and one of the great baroque interiors in Europe.

How many books are in the library?

The shelves hold more than 60,000 rare volumes, printed between the 16th and 18th centuries, covering theology, canon and civil law, medicine, philosophy, geography and science. They sit on two storeys of gilded shelving made from exotic jacaranda wood brought from Brazil.

Is it true there are bats living in the library?

Yes — a small colony of bats lives in the Biblioteca Joanina and emerges at night to feed on the moths and other insects that would otherwise damage the books. Each evening the reading tables are covered with leather to protect them; each morning the covers are cleared. It is a 300-year-old conservation method that still works.

Can I take photographs inside the library?

Photography is generally not permitted inside the Biblioteca Joanina, to protect the centuries-old books, gilding and ceiling paintings from light damage. You can usually photograph many of the other university spaces — please follow the signs and the staff's guidance.

How long does the whole visit take?

Allow about 2 to 3 hours for the full university. The library slot itself is 20 minutes, but the Royal Palace, St Michael's Chapel and the historic museums easily fill the rest, and the university courtyards and views over the city are worth lingering over.

What else is on the ticket besides the library?

The Royal Palace (Paço das Escolas) with its Great Hall of Acts, St Michael's Chapel with its remarkable baroque organ, and the university's historic museums — the chemistry laboratory, the cabinet of curiosities and the academic museum. Together they tell the story of one of the world's oldest universities.

Is the visit suitable for children?

Yes. The gilded library, the story of the book-guarding bats and the cabinet of curiosities all appeal to children. The youth rate covers ages 7 to 18, and children under 7 enter free. Note the library is a calm, quiet space, so the 20-minute slot suits older children best.

Is the University of Coimbra wheelchair accessible?

Partly. The university sits on a steep hill and the historic library is reached by stairs, so some of the visit is challenging for visitors with limited mobility, though several spaces are accessible. If mobility is a concern, contact us before booking and we will confirm the current arrangements with the university.

How do I get to the University of Coimbra?

Coimbra is on the main Lisbon–Porto rail line: about 1h40–2h from Lisbon and around an hour from Porto by fast train to Coimbra-B, then a short connection or taxi into the city. The university sits at the top of the old town, a steep 10–15 minute walk up from the river, or a short taxi or bus ride.

Is the University of Coimbra a UNESCO World Heritage Site?

Yes. 'University of Coimbra – Alta and Sofia' was inscribed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 2013, recognising the historic upper-town university quarter and the Rua da Sofia below as a place that has shaped higher education and the Portuguese language for centuries.

When is the best time to visit?

Early in the day or late afternoon, and outside the summer peak if you can. The library slots fill fastest in high-season late mornings, so an earlier slot is calmer and easier to book. Spring and autumn offer mild weather and thinner crowds across the whole university.

Can we change the date or slot?

The Biblioteca Joanina slot is tied to a specific date and time, so changes depend on availability. If your plans shift, reply to your confirmation email as early as you can and our concierge team will request a new slot with the venue on your behalf. Changes can't be guaranteed, but the earlier you tell us, the better the chance of securing one.