
Carmo Convent (Convento do Carmo)
A roofless Gothic church left in ruins by the 1755 earthquake, kept open to the sky as a memorial.
The call
Worth it if you are watching the budget and you only have one day.
Why
- 01
Hauntingly atmospheric — bare Gothic arches framing open blue sky, the city's most evocative reminder of the quake that remade it.
Our read - 02
The catch: it's small with a modest archaeology collection and an entry fee for what's essentially one ruined nave.
Our read
Is it a fit?
Go if
This is your first trip to Lisbon
An evocative, fast way to grasp what the great earthquake did to the city.
You are watching the budget
Carmo Convent (Convento do Carmo) earns the spend, even on a tight budget.
You only have one day
Short trip or not, keep Carmo Convent (Convento do Carmo).
You are traveling as a couple
As a couple, Carmo Convent (Convento do Carmo) is an easy yes.
Think twice if
You are traveling with kids
With kids, Carmo Convent (Convento do Carmo) needs the right timing and tolerance.
You want context, not just the photograph
Carmo Convent (Convento do Carmo) offers some depth & learning, but not enough to make it the reason to go.
You are planning for two
Carmo Convent (Convento do Carmo) offers some romance, but not enough to make it the reason to go.
Plan it well
- Cost
- ~€7
- Timing
- Daytime under clear sky for the roofless effect
- Allow
- 30–60 min
- Accessibility
- Largely ground-level, but the approach from Baixa climbs
- Getting there
- Largo do Carmo, reachable free on foot beside the Santa Justa lift's upper exit
Consider instead
Sources and method (2)
- Gothic Carmelite church founded 1389; left roofless by the 1755 earthquake and preserved as a ruin, now housing the Carmo Archaeological Museum. golisbon.com ↗
- Adult ticket ~€7 (free for children under 14); closed Sundays; sits beside the upper exit of the Santa Justa lift in Largo do Carmo. lisbonportugaltourism.com ↗