Madrid Art Day: Prado, Reina Sofía & Thyssen in One Day
Madrid's Golden Triangle of Art packs the Prado, the Reina Sofía and the Thyssen-Bornemisza into one walkable kilometre of the Paseo del Prado. Here is how to see all three in a single day — with the skip-the-line tickets and guided tours worth booking.
At a glance
- 1Prado at opening, skip-the-line
- 2Thyssen-Bornemisza after lunch
- 3Reina Sofía & Guernica
- 4Sunset stroll in the Retiro
Morning: the Prado at opening
Be at the Prado when the doors open at 10am — the galleries around Velázquez's Las Meninas and Goya's Black Paintings fill up fast by late morning. A skip-the-line guided tour (from around €25) is the efficient way in: standard entry is €15, but the ticket queue alone can eat half an hour in high season. Two focused hours cover the essentials — Velázquez, Goya, El Greco and Bosch's Garden of Earthly Delights — leaving energy for the rest of the triangle.
Midday: the Thyssen-Bornemisza
Cross the Paseo del Prado to the Thyssen-Bornemisza, the private collection that fills the gaps the other two leave — Italian primitives, Dutch masters, Impressionists, German Expressionists and American pop art in one chronological sweep. It is the calmest of the three museums, so it suits the post-lunch slot well. Entry tickets with an audio guide start from around €14; an hour to ninety minutes is enough for the highlights before a coffee stop nearby.
Afternoon: Guernica at the Reina Sofía
Save the Reina Sofía for late afternoon, when the tour groups thin out in front of Picasso's Guernica — the 7.7-metre canvas that anchors the whole collection alongside major works by Dalí and Miró. One warning: the museum closes on Tuesdays, so build your art day around that. A guided tour puts the painting's Spanish Civil War story in context; flexible entry tickets with audio guide start from around €15 and let you set your own pace.
Planning the Golden Triangle
All three museums sit within a ten-minute walk of each other along the UNESCO-listed Paseo del Prado, so no metro is needed all day. If you are booking entries separately, the Paseo del Arte combo pass (around €32) covers all three and undercuts individual tickets. Book timed slots in advance — the Prado's free evening window (6–8pm Monday to Saturday) draws long queues and is the worst time for a first visit. End with a sunset walk in the Retiro Park behind the Prado.
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