Tomar
Portugal · Best time to visit: Apr-Oct.
Choose your pace
Take a taxi from the train station or a 20-minute uphill walk via Calçada de Sant'Iago — at 09:00 sharp the gates open and you slip inside the medieval ramparts before the Lisbon tour buses arrive. The octagonal Charola, built in 1160 as the Templars' private chapel and modeled on Jerusalem's Holy Sepulchre, is where knights heard Mass on horseback; morning light through its high windows turns the gilded interior molten. Outside, the Manueline Janela do Capítulo on the Claustro de Santa Bárbara is the most extravagant carved window in Portugal — between 09:30 and 10:30 the raking light sculpts every stone rope and seaweed.
Tip: Buy your ticket at 08:55 and walk straight to the Charola before the 10:00 tour groups arrive — you will have 20 quiet minutes alone in the round chapel. The Janela do Capítulo sits on the west wall of the Claustro de Santa Bárbara: visit it 09:30-10:30 when sunlight rakes across the carving; after noon it goes flat and the magic disappears.
Open in Google Maps →From the convent's lower gate, follow the signposted footpath descending into the Mata — within five minutes you are under the canopy of cork oaks the Templars planted in the 12th century. The 39-hectare wood cascades down the hillside back toward town; halfway down, the Charolinha, a tiny Renaissance octagonal pavilion echoing the great Charola above, sits forgotten in a clearing. Use the descent as decompression after the convent's intensity — you will arrive in the old town with appetite intact and zero uphill left on the day.
Tip: Stay on the central paved alley (Avenida da Mata); side trails braid through the forest and loop back unpredictably, costing 30 wasted minutes. Look for the blue-tile fountain Fonte das Sete Bicas halfway down — locals still fill bottles here from the same spring the Templars piped in eight centuries ago.
Open in Google Maps →Exit the Mata onto Avenida General Bernardo Faria, then a 4-minute walk east on Rua Serpa Pinto brings you to Praça da República — Café Paraíso anchors the south corner behind its 1911 Art Deco facade, one of the oldest cafés in Portugal still run by the founding family. Order a Bifana (slow-cooked pork sandwich, €2.80) and a galão (€1.50) at the counter, then one Fatia de Tomar (€2.50) — the saffron-yellow egg-yolk cake invented in this town, served on its trademark ridged tin mold. In and out in 45 minutes for under €10, with waiters who remember four generations of Tomar locals.
Tip: Skip the outdoor terrace — same prices, but a 20-minute wait for service. Order at the counter inside and take your tray to the dark-wood booths in the back room where lawyers from the courthouse next door eat; the food lands within 5 minutes, and you get the original 1911 mirrors and brass fittings as your backdrop.
Open in Google Maps →From Café Paraíso, cross the cobbled Praça da República to the Igreja de São João Baptista on its west side — the Manueline portal photographs best at 14:00 when the sun finally clears the rooftops and lights the limestone honey-gold. Then duck north up Rua Dr. Joaquim Jacinto 50 metres to the Sinagoga de Tomar — the oldest preserved synagogue in Portugal (1430s), saved through five centuries because it was repurposed as a prison, a chapel, then a hay barn. The single stone hall with four Talmudic columns is free to enter; the silence inside, and what survived to make it, are the entire experience.
Tip: The synagogue's lone custodian closes for lunch 13:00-14:00 and again at 17:00 — arriving at 14:00 sharp catches the reopening with no queue. Clap once near the center column to hear the extraordinary 600-year-old acoustic; it is why scholars chose this room to debate Talmud.
Open in Google Maps →Walk 6 minutes east via Rua Gil Avo and cross the Nabão river on the medieval Ponte Velha — pause mid-bridge for the postcard view of the convent floating above the rooftops, perfectly lit at 16:00 with the sun directly behind you. On the far bank, the Igreja de Santa Maria do Olival stands alone in a quiet square: this 13th-century Gothic church is the burial place of 22 Grand Masters of the Templar Order, including the city's founder Gualdim Pais — their tomb slabs are set into the floor where you walk. The Templar Cross window above the door was the geographic origin point from which every Templar property in Portugal was measured.
Tip: Sit in the front-left pew between 16:00 and 17:00 — the afternoon sun through the rose window projects a deep red Templar cross onto the opposite wall, the most photographed moment of the entire day in Tomar. Entry is free and the heavy oak door often looks closed even when it is open — just push.
Open in Google Maps →Walk 8 minutes back across the Ponte Velha to the medieval-walled corner of Praça da República — Taberna Antiqua occupies a 14th-century stone cellar with low vaulted ceilings, candles in iron holders, and serving staff in linen tunics. This is not a tourist gimmick: the menu is genuine Ribatejo, written on parchment and served on slate boards. Order the Cabrito Assado no Forno (roasted kid goat, €18 — the house dish, marinated 24 hours in red wine and rosemary) and the Migas de Bacalhau (cornbread-and-cod stew, €13); finish with the convent-recipe Doce de Ovos. Budget €30-40 per person with wine — the only proper sit-down on this Templar route that matches the day's gravity.
Tip: Reserve a day ahead by phone — only 22 seats inside the stone cellar, and Thursday through Sunday it books out by 18:00. Pitfall: avoid the three restaurants directly facing Praça da República that display English-language 'Tourist Menu €12' chalkboards on the pavement — they serve frozen bacalhau at three times normal Portuguese prices to day-trippers off the Lisbon train. Also resist buying Fatias de Tomar from souvenir shops near the convent: those are factory-made and dry; the genuine article comes only from Pastelaria Estrelas de Tomar on Rua Serpa Pinto.
Open in Google Maps →Plan this trip around Tomar
Turn this guide into a bookable rail itinerary with FlipEarth.
Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Tomar?
Most travelers enjoy Tomar in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Tomar?
The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Tomar?
A practical starting point is about €80 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Tomar?
A good first shortlist for Tomar includes Convent of Christ.