Santa Justa Lift Lisbon

Santa Justa Lift Lisbon: Tickets, Hours and the Free Alternative

Fábio Mendes - Founder and CEO at Yellow Cab TT Tours - author
Author: Fábio Mendes · Founder & Director, Yellow Cab TT Tours
23 June 2026 · 8 min read

Most people who visit the Santa Justa Lift queue to ride it up. The smarter move is to walk up from Chiado and use it to ride down — or skip it entirely and get the same view for free. I’ve been taking clients past this structure for twenty years, and the queue on Rua do Ouro is almost always longer than it needs to be, because most people don’t know the upper platform is accessible from the street.

That said, the lift itself is worth understanding before you decide what to do with it. Opened on 10 July 1902, it is a 45-metre iron tower that runs on a counterbalance system first designed around steam and water rather than motors. The ride takes 30 seconds. On its first day of operation, it sold 3,000 tickets. The cabins held 24 people.

I’ve pointed at this lift from the street below more times than I can count. The clients who arrive from Largo do Carmo first — walking down from Chiado — are usually more impressed than the ones who paid €5.30 to ride up. The view is the same. The direction of surprise is different.

In this article: what the lift actually is, how it works, what happened to the Eiffel connection that every guide repeats, the current status of the observation deck renovation, and the exact walking route from Chiado that lets you skip the queue altogether.

Table of Contents

Why Lisbon built a vertical elevator instead of another funicular

By 1892, Lisbon had three funiculars — Lavra (1884), Glória (1885), Bica (1892). All three worked on the same principle: a car on rails at an angle, pulled by a cable, fixed to the hillside. They solved the problem of connecting the lower city to the upper city where the hillside was broad enough to lay track diagonally.

The Santa Justa problem was different. The site was in the middle of Baixa, Lisbon’s flat downtown grid, with no hillside to lean against. The only option was a vertical shaft tall enough to reach the level of Rua do Carmo, 30 metres above. You cannot build a funicular in the middle of a city block. You build a tower.

The solution was a freestanding iron structure, 45 metres high — roughly fifteen storeys — standing on the street between Rua do Ouro and Rua de Santa Justa. The engineering constraint was stability: a tower that height, in an exposed urban setting, with two moving cabins inside, needs to resist wind load and remain plumb as the counterbalance shifts weight continuously. The Neo-Gothic iron cladding is not ornament for its own sake — it is also structural casing.

Construction started in 1900. King Carlos I inaugurated the bridge and upper awning on 31 August 1901. The cabins started running on 10 July 1902. In 2002, exactly one hundred years later, it was designated a National Monument — in the same batch as the three funiculars it was designed to complement.

Santa Justa Lift Lisbon

How it actually moved: the steam-and-water counterbalance

For its first five years, the lift ran on steam. The way it moved is less obvious than it sounds.

The steam engine did not push or pull the cabins directly. It pumped water into tanks mounted below each of the two cabins. The cabins were connected by a single steel cable over a pulley at the top of the tower. When water filled the tank below the upper cabin, that cabin became heavier, descended, and pulled the empty lower cabin up. Speed was controlled by mechanical brakes, not by varying engine output. The system was a counterbalance on variable ballast — the water was the variable.

In 1907, British company R. Waygood converted the lift to electric power. The counterbalance principle remained; the steam boiler and water tanks did not. The cabins were rated for 24 passengers at opening, later updated to 29. The interiors — wood panelling, mirrors, large windows — have not changed since.

Every time a client asks me why the ride is only 30 seconds, I explain that you are covering seven storeys of vertical height in a counterbalance that has been doing this since 1902. There is no reason to go faster, and no mechanism designed to do so.

The designer, and the Eiffel myth that won’t die

Every guide in Lisbon, every tourist website, and at least half the plaques near the lift describe Raoul Mesnier du Ponsard as “a student of Gustave Eiffel.” Some say “apprentice.” Some say “disciple.”

His Wikipedia biography — sourced from Portuguese engineering archives — contains no mention of Gustave Eiffel at any point. None. The two men were contemporaries: Eiffel’s tower opened in Paris in 1889, thirteen years before the Santa Justa Lift. The visual resemblance in ironwork is genuine and obvious. The professional relationship has not been documented anywhere I have been able to find, and I have been asked about it enough times to have looked.

Mesnier du Ponsard (2 April 1848 – 26 May 1914) was born in Porto to French parents. He studied mathematics at the University of Coimbra and completed engineering apprenticeships in France, Germany, and Switzerland. His actual record in Portugal is substantial enough without the Eiffel attribution: he designed the Santa Justa Lift, the Ascensor da Glória, the Ascensor da Bica, the Ascensor do Lavra, and directed construction of the Bom Jesus do Monte Funicular in Braga — the oldest operating funicular on the Iberian Peninsula.

He died in Inhambane, Mozambique, in May 1914, working on colonial port infrastructure. The Eiffel story is a better ending. It is also not documented.

The free route: Largo do Carmo from above

The lift connects Rua do Ouro in Baixa to a walkway at the top that leads directly to Largo do Carmo in Chiado. That walkway — and the terrace beside the roofless shell of the Carmo Convent — is accessible from the Chiado side on foot, at no cost.

The route: exit Baixa-Chiado metro, walk up Rua Garrett about 150 metres, turn left onto Rua Ivens, continue to Largo do Carmo. You arrive on the same terrace the lift deposits you on. The view over Baixa and the Tagus is the same view. The ticket requirement is not.

The Carmo Convent ruins behind you are worth ten minutes: the roof collapsed in the 1755 earthquake and was never rebuilt, which gives the nave an outdoor quality that no other building in Lisbon has. The Museu Arqueológico do Carmo inside is small and rarely crowded.

The observation deck at the very top of the iron tower — a separate circular platform one level above the walkway — has been closed since 2025 for renovation. When it reopens, access requires a separate €1.50 ticket. The closure does not affect the walkway, the lift, or the Largo do Carmo terrace.

If you specifically want the experience of riding the lift — the 30-second vertical ascent through the iron shaft — the €5.30 round trip is the ticket. If you want the view, walk up from Chiado.

Santa Justa Lift at night

2026 Status: What’s Open, What’s Closed, What It Costs

ItemStatus
LiftOperational ✅
Observation deck (Miradouro)Closed for renovation since 2025 ⚠️ — check visitlisboa.com before your visit for reopening updates
Walkway and Largo do Carmo terraceAccessible from street at no cost ✅

Tickets

TicketPrice
Lift ticket (round trip)€5.30 — purchased at the ground-floor office on Rua do Ouro
Observation deck ticket€1.50 — currently unavailable
Lisboa CardIncludes lift access

Opening Hours

PeriodHours
May to October07:00 – 23:00
November to April07:00 – 22:00

The lift opens at 07:00 because it is part of Carris’s public transport network — Lisbon residents use it to commute between Baixa and Chiado, not just to queue with tourists. That is also why the early morning window is genuinely uncrowded: the people on it at 07:30 are going to work.

Walking to Santa Justa Lift in Lisbon

When to go and how long the queue actually takes

The queue on Rua do Ouro looks worse than it is. Both cabins run continuously, each carries 29 people, and the ride is 30 seconds each way. In July and August at peak hours, the wait is typically 15–25 minutes. In spring and autumn it is usually under ten.

The genuinely quiet windows: 07:00–09:00 (commuters, not tourists) and after 18:00 (tourist traffic drops sharply after dinner hour). Midweek mornings in May, June, September, and October are the most reliable for short waits without sacrificing weather.

My standard advice when a queue is visible: walk up to Largo do Carmo first. Look at the convent ruins, have a coffee, see the view. Walk back down. The queue will be shorter, and you will have done something with the 20 minutes instead of standing on a pavement watching it.

Explore Lisbon with a Private Guide

The Santa Justa Lift sits at the junction between Baixa and Chiado — two of the three areas I cover on every Lisbon city tour. On a guided day, we plan the route so the lift, the Carmo Convent terrace, and the Alfama viewpoints connect without backtracking. The sequence matters more than the individual sites.

Private Lisbon City Tour — Baixa, Chiado, Alfama and the viewpoints in one planned route. Departs from your accommodation.

Sintra and Cascais Full Day — If you have Lisbon planned and want a full-day excursion from the capital.

FAQ

A round-trip ticket costs €5.30, purchased at the lift entrance on Rua do Ouro. The observation deck at the top has a separate ticket of €1.50, but that platform is closed for renovation as of 2025. The lift itself is included with the Lisboa Card.
No. The rooftop observation deck has been closed since 2025 for renovation work. The lift continues to operate normally, and the walkway connecting to Largo do Carmo remains accessible.
Yes. Walk up from Chiado to Largo do Carmo — the upper terrace and walkway that the lift exits onto are accessible from the street at no cost. You get effectively the same view over Baixa without buying a ticket.
May to October: 07:00 to 23:00. November to April: 07:00 to 22:00. The lift operates seven days a week including public holidays.
Raoul Mesnier du Ponsard (1848–1914), a Porto-born engineer of French descent. He also designed three of Lisbon’s funiculars — Glória, Bica, and Lavra — and directed construction of the Bom Jesus do Monte Funicular in Braga, the oldest operating funicular on the Iberian Peninsula.
This claim appears on almost every tourist website and at least half the plaques near the lift. Mesnier du Ponsard’s documented biography contains no mention of Eiffel. The visual similarity in ironwork is real; the professional connection has not been sourced anywhere.
The ride itself is approximately 30 seconds. With queuing included, allow 15–25 minutes in peak summer, under ten minutes in shoulder season.
The ground floor entrance is on Rua do Ouro (Rua Áurea) in Baixa. The top exits onto a walkway leading to Largo do Carmo in Chiado — beside the ruins of the Carmo Convent.
Construction began in 1900. The bridge and upper awning were inaugurated on 31 August 1901 by King Carlos I. The lift began carrying passengers on 10 July 1902.
Yes. It was designated a National Monument of Portugal on 19 February 2002, in its centenary year, in the same batch as Lisbon’s three surviving funiculars.
Fábio Mendes - Founder and CEO at Yellow Cab TT Tours - author
Written by Fábio Mendes
Founder & Director of Yellow Cab TT Tours. Guiding in Portugal for 20+ years.
Founded Yellow Cab TT Tours in 2013. 3,372 five-star reviews on Tripadvisor.
 
I have been guiding in Lisbon since 2003. The Santa Justa Lift is one of those structures I walk past hundreds of times a year and still look at. The counterbalance system from 1902 is still doing exactly what it was designed to do. That is not common for anything built in that era.