Palatium
The Palatine Museum sits inside the archaeological park on Palatine Hill, housing artifacts excavated from the imperial palaces where Augustus, Tiberius, and Domitian once lived.
About Palatium
The Palatine Museum sits inside the archaeological park on Palatine Hill, housing artifacts excavated from the imperial palaces where Augustus, Tiberius, and Domitian once lived. You'll see spectacular frescoes from Augustus's house, marble sculptures from palace gardens, and intricate floor mosaics that survived nearly 2,000 years. The collection focuses entirely on finds from this hill, making it the most specific imperial Roman museum you can visit.
The museum occupies a 19th-century building with modern climate-controlled galleries that feel refreshingly cool after walking the ruins outside. Everything connects directly to the archaeological sites you've just explored - those foundation walls suddenly make sense when you see the frescoes that once covered them. The lighting is excellent for photography, and interactive displays help decode the complex imperial family trees and building phases.
Most people rush through to get back outside, but you're missing the best part of your Palatine ticket (museum entry is included). The Augustus house frescoes alone justify slowing down - these survived because they were buried, not because they were restored. Skip the gift shop entirely and spend that time in the fresco rooms instead.
Skip the Queue
Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.
Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.







