A combined ticket to ~16 of Venice's art-filled churches.
🛡️ Independent — no pay-to-rank🔎 Graded for who you are✓ Verified 2026-06-17How we grade →
The verdict
Who it's worth it for
Great for
Travellers on a budget
If you've only got a day
Couples
Solo travellers
History & culture buffs
Photographers
The genuinely curious
Local-life seekers
Depends
—
Not for
Families with kids
Worth it for travellers on a budget, if you've only got a day and couples; not for families with kids.
Why we say this
Insider secrets & local vibes
Strong logistics value: ~€14 covers ~16 churches (vs ~€3.50 each) including the Frari, San Sebastiano and Santa Maria dei Miracoli, so it pays off after about three and is the cheapest way to see Venice's church art — but it's a ticket bundle, not an experience.
Not independently verified — estimated
Only worth buying if you'll genuinely do three-plus churches, and member churches keep limited hours and shut to tourists on Sunday mornings, so it needs planning around opening times.
Not independently verified — estimated
What it feels like
Reading the room, traveller by traveller
As a couple
Excellent value for an art-and-architecture trip; plan a self-guided church route around it.
Solo
The cheapest way to see serious Venetian art if churches are your focus.
Good to know
Before you go
Cost
~€14 (single ~€3.50 each)
Time
Spread over a trip
Last verified
2026-06-17
Best time
Spread visits over the trip; avoid Sunday mornings when many close to tourists.
Booking
Buy at any member church or online; it pays off after roughly three visits.
The Chorus association pass covers around 16 churches including the Frari, Santa Maria dei Miracoli and San Sebastiano, and pays off after roughly three visits.
Member churches keep limited visiting hours and generally exclude tourist visits during Sunday Mass.
🛡️ Independent — no pay-to-rank🔎 Graded for who you are✓ Verified 2026-06-17How we grade →