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Domus Aurea (Nero’s Golden House)

The Domus Aurea is the buried remains of Emperor Nero’s vast Golden House, hidden on the Oppian Hill just a 5-minute walk from the Colosseum. It can only be visited on a pre-booked guided tour (usually weekends, around 75–90 minutes) that includes a virtual-reality headset reconstructing the palace. Advance booking is essential and hard hats are provided.

The Domus Aurea represents Nero’s enormous palace complex established following the Great Fire of AD 64. The grounds encompassed gardens, banquet rooms, decorated halls, and an artificial lake situated in the valley where the Colosseum stands today. For Colosseum visitors seeking historical context, this site provides meaningful supplementary information.

  • AD 64 — Nero begins the palace after the fire
  • Fri–Sun — current official visit days
  • €26 — realistic official educational tour option
  • €47 — typical partner tour fallback when official slots are unavailable

Domus Aurea Tickets and Tour Options

Official Educational Tour

Domus Aurea is not offered as a normal self-guided visit; access is structured around scheduled educational tours. The realistic official option costs usually €26; no standalone ticket exists for independent wandering. English tours frequently sell out far ahead; alternative languages may remain available.

Guided Tour Option

Partner tours cost approximately €47, with augmented reality elements, serving as alternatives when official English slots are unavailable.

What Matters When Booking

  • No self-guided visit: Domus Aurea access is possible only in the Educational Tour format.
  • English-language slots often close months in advance.
  • Spanish, Italian, and French slots frequently remain available.
  • Partner guided tours should be checked early if official options don’t work.

Official educational slots sell out far in advance. If the date you want is gone, a partner guided tour is the reliable fallback.

Check Guided Tour

What Is the Domus Aurea?

After the great fire of AD 64 swept through Rome, Emperor Nero seized a huge swathe of the ravaged city centre to build himself an extravagant pleasure palace: the Domus Aurea, or “Golden House.” It was not a single building but a sprawling complex of pavilions, colonnaded halls, dining rooms, and landscaped grounds spread across some 80 hectares, complete with vineyards, woodland, and an artificial lake where the Colosseum now stands.

The palace earned its name from the lavish use of gilding, mother-of-pearl, and coloured marbles. Ceilings were painted with delicate frescoes and inlaid with ivory; ancient writers describe rotating dining chambers and ceilings that showered guests with flowers and perfume. The Roman historian Suetonius famously recorded that, on moving in, Nero remarked he could “at last begin to live like a human being.”

The most celebrated surviving space is the octagonal room (sala ottagonale), crowned by a domed ceiling with a central oculus that flooded the chamber with daylight. It is considered a forerunner of later Roman engineering marvels such as the dome of the Pantheon.

How It Came to Be Buried

Nero’s reign ended in disgrace in AD 68, and his successors moved quickly to erase his memory. The artificial lake was drained to build the Colosseum, the Baths of Trajan were raised directly on top of the palace, and the remaining rooms were stripped, filled with rubble, and sealed beneath the new structures. Ironically, this burial preserved the frescoes remarkably well. They lay forgotten until the Renaissance, when artists including Raphael lowered themselves through holes in the ceilings to study the decorations — the “grotesque” style of ornament takes its name from these underground “grottoes.” You can read more about the era on our Colosseum history page.

The Domus Aurea was not a single structure but a palace landscape spread across central Rome, with the visitable remains now mostly on the Oppian Hill.

  • What it was: a vast imperial palace complex featuring buildings, gardens, woods, vineyards, decorated halls, baths, banquet rooms, and an artificial lake.
  • What you see today: mainly preserved spaces above and near the Colosseum rather than the full palace estate.
  • Why it feels underground: later emperors buried and reused portions of Nero’s palace, protecting decorated rooms and later inspiring Renaissance artists who discovered these chambers as “grottoes.”

How Domus Aurea Is Connected to the Colosseum

The strongest connection is geographical and political. Nero’s Domus Aurea included an artificial lake in the valley between Rome’s hills. After Nero’s death, the Flavian dynasty drained or removed that private lake and used the same valley for the Colosseum.

That was a public statement as much as a building project. The new amphitheatre showed that land once absorbed by Nero’s private pleasure palace was being returned to the Roman people as a place of public spectacle.

If the Colosseum answers “what did Rome build here?”, Domus Aurea answers “what was here before, and why did the Flavians replace it?”

Where Is the Domus Aurea?

The site lies on the Oppian Hill (Colle Oppio), the green park that rises directly above and beside the Colosseum, roughly a 5-minute walk from the amphitheatre. The entrance is on the park side via Viale della Domus Aurea. From the Colosseo stop on metro Line B, walk up into Colle Oppio park and follow the signs.

Open the location on Domus Aurea. Because it is so close to the amphitheatre, it pairs naturally with other sights nearby — see our guide to attractions near the Colosseum.

How to Visit the Domus Aurea Today

The Domus Aurea is an active archaeological and conservation site, so access is carefully controlled. There is no free walk-in entry — you can only go inside as part of an official guided tour, and tours generally run on weekends (Saturday and Sunday), with occasional extra dates in peak season.

What the Tour Includes

A typical visit lasts 75–90 minutes and leads you through the excavated halls, corridors, and the octagonal room while a guide explains the history and the ongoing restoration. The highlight is a virtual-reality (VR) headset experience: at a set point in the tour you don a headset and watch the bare brick rooms transform into Nero’s gilded palace, with its frescoes, gardens, and the long-vanished lake digitally rebuilt around you.

Booking, Hard Hats & Practicalities

Advance booking is essential. Slots are limited and frequently sell out days or weeks ahead, so reserve as early as you can. On arrival you will be given a hard hat to wear, as you are walking beneath an active excavation. The underground rooms stay cool and damp throughout the year, around 10–15°C, so bring a light layer even in summer.

Guided access to the Domus Aurea is run alongside Colosseum experiences and sells out fast. Reserve your spot online before you travel.

Check Tour Availability

Current Official Snapshot

Yes, you can visit, but access requires scheduling. The official Parco archeologico del Colosseo pages currently list Domus Aurea visits on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, with timed visits and scheduled entry. The official area page advises visitors to wear comfortable shoes and suitable clothing because the temperature inside the monument is around 10 degrees Celsius.

  • Days: Friday, Saturday and Sunday
  • Visits: scheduled about every 15 minutes
  • Last admission: currently listed as 3:30 PM
  • Format: educational tour is the realistic booking option
  • Languages: English, French, Spanish and Italian slots may appear
  • Closed: first Sunday of each month and selected dates
  • Temperature: around 10 degrees Celsius inside

Where Is the Entrance?

Domus Aurea is in the Colle Oppio area above the Colosseum. The official pages describe the entrance around Viale della Domus Aurea / Via Labicana, inside the Colle Oppio park area.

  • From the Colosseum: usually a short uphill walk toward Colle Oppio, approximately 10 minutes.
  • Metro: use Colosseo on Metro Line B, or Colosseo – Fori Imperiali where Line C access applies.
  • Bus or tram: the official page lists nearby bus lines 51, 85, 87 and tram 3.

Why It’s Worth Visiting

Unlike the crowded Colosseum, the Domus Aurea offers an intimate, atmospheric look at imperial Rome that few visitors ever see. Standing inside the very rooms that inspired Renaissance masters, then watching them digitally restored to their golden splendour, is one of the most vivid history lessons in the city. For anyone interested in Nero, Roman art, or how the Colosseum came to be built, it is an unmissable companion to the main monument.

If you are planning a fuller day in ancient Rome, combine it with a Colosseum ticket or a guided Colosseum tour for the complete story of the Flavian Amphitheatre and the palace it replaced.

Practical Tips

Choose a weekend slot and book it weeks ahead in high season. Wear closed, comfortable shoes for uneven, damp flooring, and bring a jacket for the cool interior. Leave large bags behind, as they are not permitted inside. Arrive about 15 minutes before your start time to collect your hard hat and meet your guide. The site involves some steps and is not fully accessible, so check ahead if you have mobility needs.

Is Domus Aurea Worth Visiting?

  • Best for Colosseum context: it provides one of the best answers to why the Colosseum was built in this exact valley.
  • Best for Nero and archaeology: the visit adds Nero, buried rooms, frescoes, Renaissance rediscovery, and active conservation.
  • Skip if you want a simple add-on: timed access and limited days make it less flexible than free-roaming attractions such as the Roman Forum edge or Monti.

Domus Aurea vs Colosseum: Should You Visit Both?

Choose the Colosseum if:

  • You want the iconic amphitheatre.
  • You are short on time in Rome.
  • You want arena architecture, Roman entertainment, and the standard ancient Rome visit.

Add Domus Aurea if:

  • You want to understand what stood here before the amphitheatre.
  • You are interested in Nero, palace architecture, frescoes, or buried Roman spaces.
  • You can match your visit to Friday, Saturday, or Sunday availability.

Suggested Itinerary: Colosseum + Domus Aurea

  • Morning Colosseum first: best for first-timers — book your Colosseum ticket as the anchor, then add Domus Aurea if the timed slot fits without rushing.
  • Domus Aurea first: best for Nero focus — start with the palace story, then walk downhill toward the Colosseum and the Flavian replacement of Nero’s lake.
  • With Roman Forum: best ancient Rome day — Colosseum, Domus Aurea, and selected Forum/Palatine time can work, but do not overbook back-to-back entries.
  • With Monti: best relaxed finish — after Domus Aurea, walk into Monti for coffee, lunch, or dinner instead of adding another major monument.

Anchor your day with a Colosseum ticket, then fit the Domus Aurea educational tour around your timed slot.

Plan Your Visit

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you visit the Domus Aurea today?

Yes, but only on a guided tour. The Domus Aurea is an active archaeological site and is not open for free walk-in entry. Tours typically run on weekends (Saturday and Sunday), last around 75 to 90 minutes, and must be booked in advance because spaces are strictly limited.

Where is the Domus Aurea located?

The Domus Aurea sits on the Oppian Hill (Colle Oppio) directly above and beside the Colosseum, about a 5-minute walk from the amphitheatre. The entrance is on the Colle Oppio park side, reached by walking up from the Colosseum metro stop on Line B.

Does the Domus Aurea tour include a VR experience?

Yes. Most guided visits include a virtual-reality headset segment that digitally reconstructs the palace as it looked in Nero's time, complete with frescoed ceilings, marble walls, and the gardens that once surrounded it. It is one of the highlights and a key reason the site is so memorable.

What should I wear and bring to the Domus Aurea?

Wear closed, comfortable shoes and bring a light layer, as the underground rooms stay cool (around 10 to 15 degrees Celsius) and humid year-round. Hard hats are provided and required because you are walking through an active excavation. Large bags are not permitted.

Is the Domus Aurea included in a Colosseum ticket?

No. The Domus Aurea requires a separate, dedicated guided-tour ticket and is not covered by standard Colosseum, Roman Forum, or Palatine Hill entry. Book it independently and well ahead of your visit, as weekend slots sell out quickly.

How long does the Domus Aurea visit take?

Plan for roughly 75 to 90 minutes inside, including the guided walk through the excavated halls, the octagonal room, and the virtual-reality reconstruction. Arrive 15 minutes early to collect your hard hat and meet your guide.

How is Domus Aurea connected to the Colosseum?

The Colosseum was built in the valley where Nero’s artificial lake once stood. That lake belonged to the Domus Aurea complex, so the Colosseum is physically and symbolically tied to Nero’s palace.

How much are Domus Aurea tickets?

Domus Aurea visits are possible only in the Educational Tour format. The official option is usually about €26. If official slots are gone, partner guided tours are often around €47, depending on date and terms.

Where is the Domus Aurea entrance?

The entrance is in the Colle Oppio area, around Viale della Domus Aurea / Via Labicana, above the Colosseum. Leave extra time to find the entrance if you have a timed slot.

Is Domus Aurea better before or after the Colosseum?

Either works. First-time visitors should usually anchor the Colosseum ticket first, then fit Domus Aurea around it. History-focused visitors may prefer Domus Aurea first, then the Colosseum as the Flavian replacement of Nero’s lake.

Ready to Step Inside Nero’s Golden House?

Weekend tours with the VR reconstruction are limited and book up quickly. Secure your guided access today and explore the buried palace beside the Colosseum.

Check Tour Availability