Barcelona Pass: Save up to 50% – Includes Sagrada Familia

REVIEW · BARCELONA

Barcelona Pass: Save up to 50% – Includes Sagrada Familia

  • 4.0175 reviews
  • 2 to 5 days (approx.)
  • From $202.51
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Operated by Go City - Spain · Bookable on Viator

This pass turns Barcelona into your own playlist. With the Go City app, you can plan on the fly and swap days around, then stack visits across 45+ attractions. The big headline is Sagrada Familia access, plus you get a mix of Gaudí sights, museums, cruises, and even a football stadium tour.

Two things I like a lot: first, the freedom to choose what you actually care about, without being stuck on a fixed tour route. Second, the pass includes multiple timed, guided-style experiences (like Sagrada Familia and Park Güell) that help you see more than the typical self-guided walkthrough. One drawback to keep in mind: some top tickets need reservations, and the pass is tied to your consecutive calendar days once you start using it.

In This Review

Key Things to Know Before You Buy

Barcelona Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Sagrada Familia - Key Things to Know Before You Buy

  • Sagrada Família guided entry is included, but you must reserve ahead for the time slot.
  • Park Güell guided entry is also reservation-based, and the guide focuses on details you’d likely miss.
  • You’re not locked into one “tour”: the pass supports a mix of architecture, art, food, parks, and fun extras.
  • The Go City app is central: it handles your schedule planning and ticket access via the digital pass.
  • Many activities are timed or capacity-limited, so you’ll want a quick plan before your first day.
  • You can build multi-day routes (2, 3, 4, or 5 days) that work whether you’re solo, a couple, or traveling with family.

A Flexible Pass That Lets You Build Your Own Barcelona Days

Barcelona Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Sagrada Familia - A Flexible Pass That Lets You Build Your Own Barcelona Days
This is not a single guided tour. It’s a digital admission pass that you use like a menu, picking attractions across 2, 3, 4, or 5 consecutive days. Once you start, the pass runs for your chosen number of consecutive calendar days (not rolling 24-hour periods), so your first used ticket really matters.

I like that it’s designed for real schedules. One day you can focus on Gaudí. Another day you can do museums and markets. If your energy level drops after a long walk, you can switch to something indoor-friendly like a science museum or an exhibition space. The pass also includes a companion smartphone app with planning help and a PDF-style guide.

The pass covers a lot of ground, but you still need to do the one job it does not do for you: deciding what order makes sense. Barcelona is a city of neighborhoods. Using it well means grouping nearby sights and batching timed entries.

Other Sagrada Familia entry tickets in Barcelona

Value Check: When $202.51 Makes Sense

Barcelona Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Sagrada Familia - Value Check: When $202.51 Makes Sense
At $202.51 per person, you’re paying for convenience and ticket consolidation, not just one admission price. The value shows up when you actually use multiple included attractions on multiple days.

Here’s the practical way to judge the deal. If you plan to visit several paid-feeling highlights, like Sagrada Familia, Park Güell, a major museum, and one or two “experience” tickets (bus, stadium, cruise, brewery tour, Montjuïc transport), it starts to look like a bargain. If you only want one or two stops, you’ll likely spend more than you need.

Also, the pass includes a lot of “activity-style” options that add cost outside the pass. Think timed tours, guided entries, and experiences like the stadium tour and port cruise. Those are exactly the things that make a pass pay off.

Sagrada Família and Park Güell Guided Tickets That Are Worth Reserving

If you only pick a couple of included experiences, I’d prioritize these two.

Sagrada Família guided tour

Sagrada Família is the centerpiece of Barcelona modernism, and the guided option is built to go beyond the postcard view. You join an experienced arts-trained guide for history, hidden symbols, and behind-the-scenes secrets. The ticket time is about 1 hour 30 minutes, and advanced reservation is required.

Why I think that matters: Sagrada Família can feel overwhelming at first. A guide gives you a framework for what you’re seeing, so you spend your energy on understanding rather than just staring. It’s also one of the easiest included items to plan around, since the meeting point is near public transportation.

Park Güell guided tour

Park Güell follows the same logic: a guide points out the park’s most important sculptures and lots of hidden details. It’s about 1 hour 15 minutes, and advanced reservation is required.

Park Güell is sprawling and visually dense. With a guided route, you don’t waste time wandering for the highlights. You also get context for why the architecture looks the way it does, rather than treating the place like a theme park of weird shapes.

The Gaudí Architecture Route: Casa Milà, Casa Batlló, Casa Vicens, and More

Barcelona Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Sagrada Familia - The Gaudí Architecture Route: Casa Milà, Casa Batlló, Casa Vicens, and More
Gaudí fans can eat very well with this pass, because it spreads his work across multiple neighborhoods and experience types.

Casa Milà (La Pedrera)

Casa Milà is widely considered one of Gaudí’s crowning works. Your visit slot here is about 2 hours, and admission is included. This is a strong choice if you want a detailed architectural experience without committing to another long guided tour later.

Quick tip: since you’ll likely be doing several Gaudí stops, keep your Casa day focused. For example, pair Casa Milà with another nearby modernist building rather than trying to cross town repeatedly.

Casa Batlló

Casa Batlló is another major stop with a roughly 2-hour visit window. Admission is included, and you get a free smart guide to bring the Batlló family history and Gaudí’s ideas to life. If Casa Milà is about sculptural stone massing, Casa Batlló leans into character and storytelling.

Casa Vicens Gaudí

Casa Vicens is Gaudí’s first house, and it’s also described as his first important work. Admission is included, with a 1-hour visit duration. It’s a different mood than the headline Gaudí sites, and that variety is a real win if you’re touring multiple buildings.

Gaudí Experience (interactive exhibition)

If you want a break from walking and stairs, the Gaudí Experience is an interactive exhibition about the life and works of Gaudí. It’s about 1 hour and admission is included. It’s a good evening option or a rainy-day swap when you still want context.

Gaudí’s Crypt and Colonia Güell

This is where the pass encourages you to expand beyond central Barcelona. The site is a historic textile village dating back to 1890, tied to industrial heritage. Your time here is about 2 hours, and admission is included.

It’s also an excellent counterweight to the heavy hitters. Central Gaudí can feel like nonstop spectacle. Colonia Güell feels like stepping into a working-world chapter of the story.

Modernism Beyond Gaudí: Sant Pau, Poble Espanyol, MACBA, and CaixaForum

Barcelona Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Sagrada Familia - Modernism Beyond Gaudí: Sant Pau, Poble Espanyol, MACBA, and CaixaForum
Barcelona’s culture isn’t only Gaudí. The pass nudges you into other art movements and museum quality stops.

Recinte Modernista de Sant Pau

Sant Pau is one of Europe’s most important Art Nouveau complexes. You get around 2 hours here, admission included, plus manicured gardens and permanent exhibitions. It’s a great choice if you want something beautiful but different from Gaudí curves.

MACBA and MEAM (contemporary art)

You can hit Barcelona’s contemporary art scene with MACBA (about 2 hours) and MEAM (about 1 hour). These are both admission-included options. If contemporary art is your thing, stacking them in one afternoon can be efficient.

CaixaForum

CaixaForum is another art and exhibition venue with a 2-hour window. It’s included, and it can be a smart add-on when you want a calmer indoor visit between outdoor stops.

Poble Espanyol

Poble Espanyol recreates the soul of Spanish culture, art, architecture, and cuisine in a Montjuïc setting. It takes about 3 hours with admission included. Think of it as a cultural village you can stroll through at your pace, with less pressure than a tight city-walking day.

Modernism and curated special interests

You’ll also find more focused museum options such as KBr Fundació Mapfre Barcelona Photo Center (about 1 hour), and Museu de l’Art Prohibit (about 2 hours), which centers on censored works. If you like museum topics with a point of view, these are easy to slot in.

Montjuïc, the Waterfront, and Cable-Car Panoramas

If you want city views without turning it into a full hiking mission, build one day around Montjuïc and the harbor.

Telefèric de Montjuïc (cable car)

This is a short but high-reward ride. It’s about 10 minutes, and it’s included. You get a 750-metre journey up Montjuïc and views that connect several Barcelona landmarks.

Montjuïc walking tour

The Montjuïc walking tour is about 2 hours, and it focuses on the more mystical side of Barcelona plus panoramas and gardens. Admission is included, and this is a good choice to balance out the cable car ride.

Columbus Monument and the waterfront walk

This is built for maritime history and big-sky views. The waterfront experience includes a 1.5-hour walking tour plus Columbus Monument, totaling around 2 hours. It’s included, and it’s a great way to end a day without overthinking dinner plans.

Las Golondrinas port cruise

If you want a different angle of the city, the Las Golondrinas boat cruise covers about 9 miles and takes around 1 hour 30 minutes. Admission is included. You pass highlights like the Colom area, Castell de Monjuïc, and the Maremagnum stretch, with the ship setting sail from the Colom area.

Museums and Family Hits: Aquarium, Zoo, Illusions, and Science

Barcelona Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Sagrada Familia - Museums and Family Hits: Aquarium, Zoo, Illusions, and Science
One of the strongest things about this pass is that it doesn’t force you into adult-only sightseeing. There are plenty of “today we’re having fun” options too.

L’Aquarium de Barcelona

This one is ideal for families and anyone who likes a sensory break. You get access to over 11,000 animals, 450 different species, an underwater tunnel, and features like live feedings and shark divers. It’s about 2 hours with admission included.

Barcelona Zoo

Barcelona Zoo is about 3 hours, included. It sits in Parc de la Ciutadella, so it can pair well with a green-space day. It’s also one of the most straightforward ways to fill a slower day.

CosmoCaixa (science museum)

CosmoCaixa is a science-focused museum with more than 30,000 m² dedicated to discovering science of the world. It’s about 1 hour and includes admission. The museum also mentions interactive workshops and activities for all ages, which is exactly the kind of thing that keeps kids happy without making adults bored.

Museum of Illusions and similar fun stops

The Museum of Illusions (about 1 hour 30 minutes), Big Fun Museum (about 1 hour), and Barcelona Wax Museum (about 1 hour) are the pass’s “fun photo day” offerings. They’re not the kind of exhibits that require deep study. They’re about joy, quick momentum, and memorable pictures.

Moco Museum

Moco Museum is about 1 hour 30 minutes, admission included, and your ticket includes an exclusive poster gift. It also runs experimental immersive displays and art by world-class artists, so it’s a nice change from classic galleries.

Food, Walking Tours, and Neighborhood Texture

Barcelona Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Sagrada Familia - Food, Walking Tours, and Neighborhood Texture
Barcelona’s best days often come from neighborhoods, not just monuments. This pass includes multiple walking and food experiences that help you do that without guessing.

Market time: La Boqueria walking tour

You can join a walking tour that focuses on Las Ramblas and La Boqueria, plus beyond. It’s about 2 hours, and advanced reservation is required. This is a good fit when you want a local food setting, but you don’t want to figure out routes and timing on your own.

Tapas in the Gothic Quarter and La Barceloneta

You get a tapas tasting and Gothic Quarter tour (about 3 hours) with expert guidance, plus a separate tapas food tour in La Barceloneta (about 3 hours). The La Barceloneta option also includes a note about saving 25% on tapas at hand-picked local restaurants, and it requires advanced reservations.

If you’re building a first or second visit to Barcelona, these are great “orientation by appetite” experiences.

El Born and El Raval walking tours

El Born offers a Barcelona Gothic Quarter and Old Town walking tour (about 1 hour 30 minutes). El Raval offers a Raval walking tour about the dark history of Barcelona (about 2 hours). Both options require advanced reservation.

These can be especially helpful if you want atmosphere and context. Just be realistic about walking time and wear shoes that don’t hate you.

Picasso Museum walking tour

There’s a Life of Picasso walking tour with museum entry. The time is about 2 hours, and admission to the Picasso Museum is included, but you only get entry from your guide after the walking tour. That structure is useful because it turns the city walk into part of the museum experience.

Flamenco at Rambla de Catalunya

For evenings, you have a one-hour flamenco show at 5pm in a restored 19th-century theatre. Your ticket includes a beverage choice from the bar, like sangria, wine or cava, beer, or soft drinks. Advanced details like the show lineup aren’t listed, but the time and theatre style are clearly defined.

Sports, Stadiums, and Unique Experiences That Feel Like a Day Event

If you’re traveling with a sports fan, this pass has a big card.

Spotify Camp Nou stadium tour

The FC Barcelona stadium tour is about 90 minutes and included. It’s described as the largest football stadium in all of Europe, and the tour gives behind-the-scenes access in an immersive setting.

This is one of those experiences that works even if you’re not a die-hard. Seeing how a massive stadium works is fun in its own right.

Escape Hunt near Sagrada Família

Escape Hunt is listed as about 400 m² with six game rooms, and it’s just two minutes walk from Sagrada Família. The experience is about 1 hour and includes different mystery choices based on true stories of early 1900s Barcelona.

This is a smart plan when you want a break from constant sightseeing and a group activity that doesn’t require serious walking.

Segway tour in Parc de la Ciutadella

The Barcelona Segway Tour in Parc de la Ciutadella is about 1 hour and requires advanced reservation. It’s a first-timer friendly way to move through one of Barcelona’s most picturesque green spaces.

Estrella Damm Factory beer experience

If you like food-and-drink culture, Estrella Damm Factory is about 1 hour and requires reservation. You can sample four beers made with 100% natural ingredients, per the description. This is a good pick for adults who want something local and structured.

Day Trips That Extend the Pass: Girona, Figueres, Dalí, and Montserrat

Barcelona can be a “base city” for the day. This pass includes a couple of longer escapes.

Girona, Figueres & Dalí Museum (Julià Travel)

This is a day trip of about 9 hours. The pass includes travel and guided touring of Girona and the Dalí Museum area. It’s a strong choice if you want to trade another Barcelona museum day for a story-driven itinerary.

Girona Game of Thrones tour (Julià Travel)

Also about 9 hours, and it includes transportation to and from Girona in air-conditioned comfort plus a guided tour of streets and historic buildings. Girona’s listed as a filming location for Game of Thrones.

Montserrat with bus transfer

Montserrat is “on your own” with bus transfer, and it runs about 5 hours. This is the kind of half-day trip that gives you dramatic views and a change of pace without needing to plan routes.

If you’re tight on time, this is one of the best ways to feel like you got out of Barcelona.

How to Plan Smoothly With the Go City App

Here’s how to avoid the common friction points with any digital attraction pass.

First, start early in your trip with your first attraction. Your pass activates on your first use, and then it stays valid for your number of consecutive calendar days. If you delay your first visit, you can accidentally waste part of your paid window.

Second, treat reservation-required items as your schedule anchor. Sagrada Familia and Park Güell are both explicitly reservation-based. Plus, some tours like market walking and certain guided neighborhood options also require advanced reservation. Plan those before you decide where to eat or which museum you want “whenever.”

Third, use the app to keep everything together. Your ticket is digital, available immediately after order confirmation, and you sync it in the Go City app using the Get ticket flow. The app and guidebook are meant to show opening times and tips, which matters when you’re stacking multiple timed visits.

Finally, keep flexibility for walking and transit. Transportation to and from attractions is not included unless stated, so you’ll want to group stops by neighborhood. The pass ends back at the meeting point for the experiences that have one.

Should You Book This Barcelona Pass or Keep It Simple?

I’d book this pass if you want a multi-day mix of big-name sights and smaller experiences, and you’re willing to plan a little around reservation-required items. The best reason to buy is when you’ll use multiple included ticket types, especially Sagrada Familia, Park Güell, and at least a few museums or experience stops.

Keep it simple instead if your plan is mostly one or two attractions, or if you hate making reservations at all. The pass can still be useful for some flexibility, but timed entry realities mean you need at least a light planning mindset.

If you’re the type who likes to build a day like a playlist—architecture in the morning, art in the afternoon, food or views at sunset—this pass fits your style. Just reserve the reservation items, and use the app to keep the schedule from turning into chaos.

FAQ

What is included with the Barcelona Pass?

The pass is a digital admission ticket for 45+ activities across 2, 3, 4, or 5 days. It also includes the Go City app with planning help and a PDF-style guide.

Is Sagrada Familia included?

Yes. Sagrada Família is included, and the Sagrada Família guided tour requires advanced reservation.

How much does the pass cost?

The price shown is $202.51 per person.

How long is the pass valid?

Passes are valid for the number of consecutive calendar days purchased. They activate when you visit your first attraction and remain valid for the consecutive days you selected.

Do I need reservations?

Some activities require advanced reservation, including Sagrada Familia, Park Güell, and several tours. You should use the Go City app to reserve where necessary.

How do I get the pass on my phone?

Your pass is available immediately after order confirmation. You then tap Get ticket to update your email and sync your pass in the Go City app.

Can I visit an attraction more than once?

Each attraction can only be visited once with the pass. Included attractions can also be subject to change.

Are food and drinks included?

No. Food and drinks are not included.

Is transportation included?

Transportation to and from attractions is not included unless an option explicitly states it includes transfers (like Montserrat with bus transfer).

Is the pass refundable?

No. The experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed once purchased.

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