The double walls and conical-roofed towers of the Cité de Carcassonne at sunset, in Aude, southern France — a medieval fortified city restored by Viollet-le-Duc and UNESCO-listed since 1997

Carcassonne Tickets — Adult — Château Comtal

Skip the on-site queue · audio guide included

Reserve adult ticket

The adult — château comtal option at Carcassonne Tickets — skip the on-site queue · audio guide included. Includes château comtal interior + 1.2 km ramparts walk, plus 3 other concierge inclusions. Reserve directly — we secure the official slot the moment you confirm.

What's included

Every booking includes the elements below — handled by our concierge team before your visit and confirmed at the door.

• Château Comtal interior + 1.2 km ramparts walk • Audio guide included (FR/EN/ES/IT/DE/CA + sign language) • Skip the on-site ticket queue (can run 30–60 min in summer peak) • Refund if we can't secure your slot

Who this is for

This option is designed for skip the on-site queue · audio guide included. If you're booking for a different group composition, see the other tiers in our booking widget — each is matched to a specific visitor profile.

Frequently asked

What's included in the skip-the-line ticket?
Priority entry to the Château Comtal (the castle inside the cité), access to the full 1.2 km ramparts walk, and the interior exhibitions. The cité's streets, shops, and the Basilique St-Nazaire are free to wander without a ticket — you only pay for the castle and ramparts.
When's the queue worst?
July–August 11:00–15:00 is the worst. Peak-day castle queues hit 45–60 minutes without a pre-booked ticket. Morning (10:00 open) and late afternoon (after 16:00) are calmer. Skip-the-line cuts any queue to under 5 minutes.
How long does a visit take?
Allow 1.5–2 hours for the Château + ramparts at a steady pace. Add another 1–2 hours if you want to wander the cité's streets, visit the Basilique St-Nazaire, and have lunch inside the walls. Most visitors spend 4 hours total.
Are the cité streets paid entry?
No. The cité — the inner walled city with its cobbled streets, shops, restaurants, and the Basilique St-Nazaire — is free to enter and wander. What you pay for is the Château Comtal (the castle) and the ramparts walk above, which is the UNESCO-worthy bit.