The Initiation Well at Quinta da Regaleira, Sintra — a 27-metre spiral staircase descending into the earth through nine landings lit by daylight from above

The 27-metre well wasn't dug for water

Quinta da Regaleira — Sintra's atmospheric estate of tunnels, grottos and alchemical gardens, designed in 1910 by an esoteric millionaire who encoded masonic symbolism into 4 hectares of stone. The Initiation Well at its heart is a spiral descent built for ritual. Your timed slot avoids the 90-minute queue that forms at the gate by 11am.

See ticket options
  • UNESCO Cultural Landscape of Sintra, 1995
  • 1904–1910 Built by Luigi Manini for Carvalho Monteiro
  • 27 m Initiation Well — 9 landings, 135 steps
  • 4 ha Palace, chapel, tunnels, grottos, gardens

Choose your ticket

Adult

Quinta da Regaleira full estate

€34

  • Full estate access · palace, chapel, wells, tunnels, gardens
  • Skip-the-line priority entry
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
  • Flexible rebooking if we can't secure your slot
Reserve my adult ticket

Youth

Ages 6–17 (with parent/guardian)

€28

  • Full estate access · palace, chapel, wells, tunnels, gardens
  • Skip-the-line priority entry
  • Valid with photo ID at entry (birth year / senior ID)
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve youth ticket

Senior

Ages 65+ (photo ID required at entry)

€28

  • Full estate access · palace, chapel, wells, tunnels, gardens
  • Skip-the-line priority entry
  • Valid with photo ID at entry (birth year / senior ID)
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve senior ticket
4.7 from 87 verified travellers
Hannah K.
Melbourne, Australia
“The Initiation Well at opening is worth every minute of the early start — we had it almost to ourselves at 10:15, then the tunnels were empty all the way to Leda's Grotto. By noon the queue at the rim was 30 minutes long.”
March 2026
David T.
Toronto, Canada
“Brought phone torches for the tunnels as the concierge suggested. Genuinely dark in sections and the stone is slippery. Closed shoes, phone light, and the atmosphere is extraordinary — like an Indiana Jones set designed by a 19th-century occultist.”
February 2026
Sophie L.
Paris, France
“We did Regaleira in the morning and Pena after lunch. The concierge mapped the bus 435 → 434 switch so we didn't waste an hour waiting. Different operators so no official combo ticket — but the schedule works if you plan it.”
January 2026
  • Refund if we can't deliver
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  • Concierge in your language, 24/7

5-minute audio guide

Your Quinta da Regaleira 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit. Five minutes on António Augusto Carvalho Monteiro's esoteric obsession — the Italian opera-set designer Luigi Manini who built it, the Initiation Well's nine spirals, and what every symbol on the property means.

  • Carvalho Monteiro: who he was and what he was trying to build
  • Luigi Manini — opera scenographer turned architect
  • The Initiation Well: 27 metres deep, 9 spirals, every detail symbolic
  • Hidden tunnels, grottoes, and the Templar references

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

About Quinta da Regaleira

Quinta da Regaleira is the early-20th-century Romantic estate built 1904–1910 in the valley below Sintra town by Italian architect Luigi Manini for the Brazilian-Portuguese millionaire António Augusto Carvalho Monteiro. Nicknamed "Monteiro dos Milhões" — Monteiro of Millions — Carvalho Monteiro made his fortune in Brazilian coffee and precious stones, then spent a decade turning a modest 17th-century estate into an esoteric theatre of symbols.

The palace itself is the entry point, but the site's fame belongs to what lies beneath: the Initiation Well, a 27-metre-deep inverted tower with a spiral staircase of nine landings and 135 steps, never used for water — built as a ceremonial descent. At the bottom, a compass rose with the Templar cross and Carvalho Monteiro's arms. The well connects to an underground tunnel network that winds past grottos, waterfalls, and the smaller Unfinished Well, emerging at Leda's Grotto and the estate's artificial lakes.

The iconography is deliberate and dense — Freemasonry, Knights Templar, Rosicrucianism, alchemy, and Dante's Divine Comedy are all legible in the architecture to those who know to look. UNESCO inscribed Regaleira, along with Pena Palace and the other Sintra monuments, as the Cultural Landscape of Sintra in 1995 — the first European cultural landscape ever listed.

Practical information

Opening hours
April–September 10:00–19:30 · October–March 10:00–18:30. Last admission 17:30 year-round. Closed 24 and 25 December and 1 January. The palace, chapel, and exhibition spaces close 30 minutes before the gardens.
Address
R. Barbosa du Bocage 5, 2710-567 Sintra, Portugal
Getting there from Sintra station
Tourist bus 435 (Scotturb 'Circuito Villa Express') loops past Regaleira in about 10 minutes. 24-hour hop-on/hop-off ticket covers the 434 (Pena/Castelo) and 435 loops. Walking: about 1.3 km / 15–25 minutes uphill through Sintra's historic centre via Volta do Duche.
From Lisbon
CP train from Rossio or Oriente to Sintra (~40 minutes), then bus 435 or walk.
Accessibility
Limited. Uneven cobbles, stone staircases, dark tunnels, and sloped garden paths. Main palace floor is accessible; wells, tunnels, and most gardens are not. Free entry for one companion of a wheelchair user.
Photography
Personal photography welcomed throughout. Flash and tripods not permitted inside the palace interior. Commercial or drone photography requires prior authorisation from Cultursintra.
Audio guide and map
Audio guide €5 and printed site map €0.50 — sold at the on-site ticket office only (not online). Audio is in English, Portuguese, Spanish, French, German, and Italian.
Footwear
Closed, grippy shoes essential — tunnel stone is wet and slippery year-round.
Children
Welcome; tunnels require parental supervision. Under 6 enter free but still require a ticket.
Dress
No formal code. Layers — Sintra sits 5–7°C cooler than Lisbon with frequent morning mist.

About our service

Quinta da Regaleira Tickets is an independent concierge service. We facilitate timed-entry ticket purchases from Fundação Cultursintra (FCG), the official operator, on behalf of international visitors. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service. Our service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, the official ticket site is regaleira.pt.

Frequently asked

What's included in the Regaleira ticket?

Full estate access: the palace main floor, the Chapel of the Holy Trinity, the Initiation Well and Unfinished Well, the underground tunnel network, the grottos (Leda's, Catherine's, Orient), the gardens, lakes, and all outdoor structures. Audio guide is a separate €5 supplement from the operator.

How long do I need?

Minimum 1.5–2 hours to see the palace, Initiation Well, and main tunnels. Budget 2–3 hours to cover the full estate without rushing, especially in peak season when the Initiation Well queues.

Can I go into the tunnels?

Yes — the tunnel network is open to visitors and connects the Initiation Well to Leda's Grotto and the artificial lakes. Sections are dark and the stone is slippery. Bring a phone torch and wear closed, grippy shoes.

Is Regaleira wheelchair accessible?

Partially. The palace main floor is accessible. The wells, tunnels, and most garden paths are not. A companion accompanying a wheelchair user enters free with appropriate ID.

Is it worth it?

Yes, for most visitors — Regaleira is widely rated 4.5/5 on review platforms. The Initiation Well alone is a standout image of Sintra. Visitors who are disappointed typically rush it (under 90 minutes) or arrive at peak midday when the Well queues.