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10 Top Things to Do in Lisbon
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Lisbon rewards the kind of traveller who is happy to get lost. The Portuguese capital sprawls across seven hills above the Tagus estuary, and the best things to do in Lisbon range from medieval castle ramparts to a repurposed industrial food hall on the waterfront. This guide ranks 10 top things to do in Lisbon - the sights that genuinely earn a place on your itinerary whether you have a long weekend or a full week to explore.
Each entry below includes the exact street address, nearest tram or metro stop, and a practical Pro Tip drawn from on-the-ground experience. We have grouped attractions geographically to help you plan efficient routes: the Belém waterfront cluster (Jerónimos Monastery, Belém Tower, Pastéis de Belém, and LX Factory) fills a solid morning, while the Alfama and castle loop works best in the afternoon when the light hits the terracotta rooftops. Central Baixa connects the Santa Justa Lift, Praça do Comércio, and Time Out Market on foot in under 20 minutes.
Lisbon's public transport - metro, trams, buses, and ferries - reaches every spot on this list. A charged Viva Viagem card or a 24-hour Lisboa Card keeps things simple and saves money on admission fees. Read on for the full breakdown of the top things to do in Lisbon, Portugal, from the hilltop fortress of São Jorge Castle to the modern aquariums of the Oceanário de Lisboa at Parque das Nações.
1São Jorge Castle - Lisbon's Hilltop Fortress with Panoramic Views

São Jorge Castle (Castelo de São Jorge) sits at the highest point of Lisbon's oldest district, and the 360-degree views from its ramparts make it the single best vantage point in the city. Originally a Moorish fortification from the 11th century, the castle was later expanded by Portugal's first king, Afonso Henriques, after he captured Lisbon in 1147. What stands today is largely a 20th-century restoration, but the scale of the walls, eleven towers, and archaeological site underneath tells the story of 2,000 years of continuous habitation on this hill.
The inner citadel includes a small archaeological museum displaying artefacts from the Iron Age, Roman, and Moorish periods. Peacocks wander the gardens. The periscope in the Torre de Ulisses (Tower of Ulysses) projects a real-time 360-degree image of the city onto a concave dish - a camera obscura that is easy to miss but fascinating to watch. Budget at least 90 minutes to walk the walls, explore the ruins, and simply sit on the ramparts watching the red rooftops cascade down toward the Tagus River. Adult admission costs around €15-17 in 2026.
Pro Tip: Arrive before 10:00 or after 16:00 to avoid the densest crowds. The late-afternoon light turns the limestone walls golden and gives you the best photography conditions over the Tagus. Buy tickets online in advance - the queue at the gate can reach 30-45 minutes in summer.
2Jerónimos Monastery - UNESCO Masterpiece of Manueline Architecture

Jerónimos Monastery (Mosteiro dos Jerónimos) is the crown jewel of Belém and a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1983. King Manuel I commissioned the monastery in 1501 to celebrate Vasco da Gama's successful sea voyage to India, and the building took nearly a century to complete. The architectural style - Manueline - is unique to Portugal, blending late Gothic structure with maritime motifs: ropes carved in stone, armillary spheres, exotic animals, and coral-like columns that seem to grow from the floor.
The church (Igreja de Santa Maria de Belém) is free to enter and contains the tombs of Vasco da Gama and poet Luís de Camões. The paid section - the two-storey cloisters - is where the real architectural spectacle lies. Delicate stone tracery frames every archway, and the upper level offers a different perspective on the carved details. Admission to the cloisters costs €10 for adults. The monastery opens Tuesday to Sunday from 10:00 to 17:30 (winter) or 18:30 (summer), and is closed on Mondays and major holidays.
Pro Tip: The queue for the cloisters stretches around the building by 11:00 on weekends. Either book online or arrive at opening time on a Tuesday or Wednesday. A combined ticket with Belém Tower saves a few euros and skips the second queue.
3Belém Tower - The Iconic Fortress on the Tagus

Belém Tower (Torre de Belém) is the postcard image of Lisbon - a fortified tower standing at the edge of the Tagus River where Portuguese explorers once set sail for unknown continents. Built between 1514 and 1520 in the Manueline style, the tower served as a ceremonial gateway to the city, a customs point, and later a political prison. It shares UNESCO World Heritage status with Jerónimos Monastery and is one of the most photographed landmarks in Portugal.
The interior is compact - narrow spiral staircases connect four floors, each offering progressively better views. The rooftop terrace looks across the river to the Cristo Rei statue on the south bank. Carved stone balconies, Moorish-influenced watchtowers, and a rhinoceros sculpture on the western facade (one of the earliest European depictions of the animal) reward close inspection from the outside. Standard adult admission is €8, and the tower is open Tuesday to Sunday from 09:30 to 18:00.
Pro Tip: The tower admits limited visitors at a time, so summer waits can exceed an hour. Sunday mornings before 14:00 are free for Portuguese residents, making weekday mornings the quieter option for international visitors. Walk the 15-minute waterfront promenade from Jerónimos Monastery rather than catching another tram - the riverside path passes the Padrão dos Descobrimentos monument.
4Tram 28E - The Classic Route Through Lisbon's Historic Heart

Tram 28E is a working public transport line that doubles as one of Europe's most scenic rides. The vintage yellow Remodelado trams - built in the 1930s and still running on their original wooden-slatted seats - rattle through Lisbon's steepest and narrowest streets on a route that connects Martim Moniz in the east to Campo Ourique in the west. Along the way, the tram squeezes past apartment balconies in Graça, climbs through the Alfama district below São Jorge Castle, crosses the Baixa grid, and ascends into the Estrela neighbourhood.
The full route takes about 40 minutes end to end. A single ride costs the standard Carris fare (around €3.00 cash on board, or €1.80 with a charged Viva Viagem card). The tram passes the Lisbon Cathedral (Sé de Lisboa), the Miradouro das Portas do Sol, the Basílica da Estrela, and the Jardim da Estrela. It is a public bus route, not a tour, so there is no commentary - but that is part of the appeal.
Pro Tip: Board at the Martim Moniz terminus before 09:00 or after 17:00 to get a seat. Mid-morning trams fill up quickly and pickpockets operate in the crowds - keep bags zipped and in front of you. Riding the full loop once, then hopping off at specific stops on a second pass, is the most efficient way to see the route.
5Alfama District - Lisbon's Oldest Neighbourhood of Fado and Tile-Covered Streets

The Alfama district survived the devastating 1755 earthquake that levelled most of Lisbon, and its medieval street plan remains intact - a tangle of stairways, alleyways, and laundry-draped lanes that has resisted straight lines for nearly a thousand years. This is Lisbon at its most atmospheric. Azulejo tiles cover entire building facades in patterns of blue, yellow, and green. Fado music drifts from doorways in the evening, and small tascas (taverns) serve grilled sardines on paper tablecloths.
Start at the Miradouro das Portas do Sol for a sweeping view across Alfama's terracotta rooftops toward the river, then work your way downhill through the maze. Key stops include the Lisbon Cathedral (Sé de Lisboa), the oldest church in the city dating to 1147, and the Feira da Ladra flea market (Tuesdays and Saturdays at Campo de Santa Clara). The neighbourhood is compact enough to cover on foot in two to three hours, though getting deliberately lost is half the experience.
Pro Tip: Walk downhill, not up. Take Tram 28E or bus 737 to the top (near São Jorge Castle), then let gravity guide you through the alleyways down to the riverfront. Wear shoes with grip - the calcada (cobblestone) pavements are polished smooth and slippery after rain.
6Time Out Market Lisboa - Lisbon's Premier Food Hall at Cais do Sodré

Time Out Market Lisboa occupies one wing of the Mercado da Ribeira, a 19th-century market hall at Cais do Sodré. Since opening in 2014, it has become the most visited food destination in Lisbon, pulling together 26 restaurant kiosks curated by Time Out magazine's critics. The concept is straightforward: each stall is run by a chef or restaurant that earned a strong review, and you eat at communal tables in the centre of the hall.
Highlights include Henrique Sá Pessoa's stall (from the Michelin-starred Alma), seafood from chef Alexandre Silva, and the pastéis de nata from Manteigaria. Eight bars serve Portuguese wine, craft beer, and cocktails. The market opens daily from 10:00 to midnight, with no admission fee - you pay only for what you eat. The traditional Mercado da Ribeira fruit-and-vegetable market still operates in the opposite wing on weekday mornings, which is worth a wander for fresh produce and local atmosphere.
Pro Tip: Lunchtime (12:30-14:00) packs the communal tables to capacity. Arrive at 11:30 or after 15:00 for a calmer experience. Grab a seat first, then send one person to order - tables vanish fast. The market has free Wi-Fi and three ATMs inside.
7Praça do Comércio - Lisbon's Grand Riverfront Square

Praça do Comércio is the grandest public square in Lisbon and the natural starting point for exploring the Baixa district. Before the 1755 earthquake, the royal Ribeira Palace stood on this spot. The rebuilt square - designed by architect Eugénio dos Santos - is framed on three sides by symmetrical yellow arcaded buildings that now house government offices, restaurants, and the Lisboa Story Centre. The fourth side opens directly onto the Tagus River at the Cais das Colunas marble steps, where ferries once landed royalty.
The centrepiece is the equestrian statue of King José I, and the ornate Rua Augusta Arch on the north side frames a pedestrian view straight through the Baixa grid to Rossio Square. Climbing the Rua Augusta Arch (€3 admission) delivers rooftop views over the square and the river. The square is free to explore at any hour, and its waterfront position makes it a natural sunset spot where locals and visitors gather on the marble steps overlooking the estuary.
Pro Tip: The Terreiro do Paço metro station on the Blue Line exits directly onto the square - one of the most convenient metro-to-attraction connections in Lisbon. Combine Praça do Comércio with the Rua Augusta Arch climb and a walk through Baixa to the Santa Justa Lift in a single two-hour loop.
8Elevador de Santa Justa - The Iron Lift Connecting Baixa to Chiado

The Elevador de Santa Justa is a 45-metre iron lift that connects the flat streets of the Baixa district to the elevated Largo do Carmo in Chiado. Designed by Raoul Mesnier du Ponsard - a student of Gustave Eiffel - and completed in 1902, the lift was originally powered by steam before converting to electricity in 1907. Its neo-Gothic ironwork, filigree arches, and polished wood cabins make it as much a piece of engineering heritage as a transport link.
Two cabins carry up to 24 passengers each between the lower and upper platforms. The real prize is the rooftop observation deck at the very top (additional €1.50), which offers a compact but impressive panorama over the Baixa grid, São Jorge Castle, the Tagus River, and the ruins of the Carmo Convent next door. A round-trip elevator ticket costs €5.30, though holders of a Lisboa Card or charged Viva Viagem card ride for free or at the standard transit fare.
Pro Tip: The queue at street level can wind around the block. Skip it entirely by walking up to the Largo do Carmo via the steep streets of Chiado and accessing the observation deck from the top for just the €1.50 platform fee - same view, no wait. The Carmo Convent ruins right beside the upper exit are worth a quick visit.
9Lisbon Oceanarium - One of Europe's Largest Aquariums

The Lisbon Oceanarium (Oceanário de Lisboa) was built for Expo '98 and remains one of the largest indoor aquariums in Europe. Designed by American architect Peter Chermayeff, the building sits in the middle of an artificial lagoon in Parque das Nações and holds roughly 8,000 marine creatures across 500 species. The central tank - visible from every floor - holds 5 million litres of seawater and is home to sunfish, sharks, rays, and a giant grouper that has become an unofficial mascot.
Four smaller habitats recreate the ecosystems of the North Atlantic, Antarctic, temperate Pacific, and tropical Indian Ocean, complete with penguins, sea otters, and a kelp forest that sways with artificial currents. The Oceanarium rotates temporary exhibitions - previous shows have explored deep-sea creatures and bioluminescence. Adult tickets cost €25 (€15 for children aged 3-12, free under 3). Opening hours are daily from 10:00 to 19:00 (extended to 20:00 in summer). Timed-entry tickets purchased online are strongly recommended.
Pro Tip: Visit on a weekday afternoon - school groups dominate weekday mornings and families fill weekends. The Parque das Nações area around the Oceanarium has a riverside promenade, the Vasco da Gama shopping centre, and a cable car running along the waterfront, so the trip easily fills half a day.
10LX Factory - Lisbon's Creative Hub in a Converted Industrial Complex

LX Factory occupies a former textile factory and printing complex beneath the Ponte 25 de Abril bridge in the Alcântara district. Since its conversion in 2008, the industrial compound has filled with independent shops, design studios, restaurants, bookshops, and street art. The anchor tenant is Ler Devagar ("Read Slowly"), a cavernous bookshop set inside the old printing warehouse, with a vintage printing press on the ground floor and books stacked three storeys high.
Restaurants range from brunch spots to rooftop cocktail bars with views of the bridge and the river. On Sundays, an open-air market takes over the central courtyard with vintage clothing, vinyl records, ceramics, and street food. Entry to LX Factory is free and there are no set opening hours for the complex itself, though most shops and restaurants operate from around 10:00 to midnight. The complex sits conveniently between central Lisbon and Belém, making it a natural lunch stop when travelling between the two.
Pro Tip: Time your visit for Sunday to catch the weekly market, or for a Friday or Saturday evening when the rooftop bars and restaurants are liveliest. Ler Devagar bookshop alone is worth the detour even if you are not a reader - the interior is one of the most photographed spaces in Lisbon.

CEO and co-founder
Tomas is the co-founder and director of Trip1, an European company specializing in reservation services. He launched the company in 2025 with a focus on building scalable, efficient operations.
10 Top Things to Do in Lisbon - FAQ
No - covering all 10 in a single day would mean rushing through each one without absorbing anything. A realistic plan splits them across two or three days. Day one could cover Belém (Jerónimos Monastery, Belém Tower, Pastéis de Belém, LX Factory), day two the historic centre (São Jorge Castle, Alfama, Tram 28E, Praça do Comércio, Santa Justa Lift), and day three the Oceanarium at Parque das Nações. If you only have one day, pick your top five and save the rest for a return trip.
Group them geographically to avoid backtracking. Start early in Belém with Jerónimos Monastery (opens 10:00) and Belém Tower, then walk to Pastéis de Belém and LX Factory. After lunch, take tram 15E to Cais do Sodré for Time Out Market, then head uphill through Baixa to the Santa Justa Lift and Praça do Comércio. On a separate day, ride Tram 28E through Alfama and finish at São Jorge Castle. The Oceanarium in Parque das Nações sits on the opposite side of the city and works best as a standalone half-day.
Jerónimos Monastery and São Jorge Castle both benefit from advance online booking, especially from April to October when queues can exceed 45 minutes. The Lisbon Oceanarium strongly recommends timed-entry tickets bought online. Belém Tower also sells out during peak season. Time Out Market, Praça do Comércio, LX Factory, and the Alfama district are free to explore and require no tickets at all.
Budget roughly €60-70 per adult for admission fees alone. Jerónimos Monastery costs €10, Belém Tower €8, São Jorge Castle around €15-17, the Oceanarium €25, and the Santa Justa Lift viewpoint €1.50. Several attractions on this list - Praça do Comércio, Alfama, Time Out Market, and LX Factory - are free to enter (though you will spend on food at the markets). A 24-hour Lisboa Card (€27) covers Jerónimos, Belém Tower, the Santa Justa Lift, and unlimited public transport, which can save you money.
Lisbon has far more than 10 highlights. The National Tile Museum (Museu Nacional do Azulejo) is excellent for understanding Portugal's ceramic tradition. Sintra - a UNESCO-listed town 40 minutes by train - deserves a full day for its fairytale palaces. The Miradouro da Graça and Miradouro da Senhora do Monte offer panoramic city views without the castle admission fee. Bairro Alto comes alive after dark with its bar scene, and the Belém Cultural Centre (CCB) hosts rotating art exhibitions worth checking.
Absolutely. Jerónimos Monastery remains one of Lisbon's most impressive landmarks and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The Manueline architecture - carved limestone cloisters, vaulted ceilings, and intricate maritime motifs - is unlike anything else in Europe. The tomb of Vasco da Gama sits inside the church, which is free to enter. The paid cloisters section is where the real architectural detail lies and is well worth the €10 admission.
Yes - every attraction on this list is reachable by Lisbon's public transport network. The metro covers the Oceanarium (Oriente station, Red Line) and central Lisbon (Rossio, Baixa-Chiado on the Green Line). Tram 15E runs from Praça da Figueira to Belém for the monastery, tower, and Pastéis de Belém. Tram 28E winds through Alfama past São Jorge Castle. Time Out Market and LX Factory are both walkable from Cais do Sodré station. A charged Viva Viagem card or 24-hour pass covers all buses, trams, and metro lines.



