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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

  1. 1Prado at opening, skip-the-line
  2. 2Thyssen-Bornemisza after lunch
  3. 3Reina Sofía & Guernica
  4. 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.

Madrid art day — FAQ

Can you visit the Prado, Reina Sofía and Thyssen in one day?
Yes — the three museums line a single kilometre of the Paseo del Prado. Do the Prado at 10am opening, the Thyssen after lunch and the Reina Sofía in the late afternoon, booking timed entries ahead. Note the Reina Sofía closes on Tuesdays.
Is the Paseo del Arte pass worth it?
If you are visiting all three museums, the combo pass at around €32 is cheaper than three separate tickets (roughly €15 + €14 + €15). Guided tours are booked separately and usually include the entry.
Where is Guernica displayed?
Picasso's Guernica hangs in the Reina Sofía, not the Prado — a common mix-up. It is in room 205.10 among the museum's Spanish Civil War collection, and late afternoon is the quietest time to see it.