Stonehenge: Fast Track Entry Ticket + Audio Guide

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Fast track entry to Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain, including the Visitor Centre and a free audio guide covering the site's 5,000-year construction history.

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About Stonehenge: Fast Track Entry Ticket + Audio Guide

Stonehenge is a prehistoric stone circle on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire, roughly 130 kilometres south-west of London, and one of the most studied ancient monuments in the world. Construction began around 3000 BC and continued in phases over the following fifteen centuries, leaving behind a structure whose purpose, whether ceremonial, astronomical, or funerary, remains a subject of serious archaeological debate. The outer sarsen stones stand approximately four metres tall, weigh up to 25 tonnes each, and were transported from Marlborough Downs, around 25 kilometres away, while the smaller bluestones originated from the Preseli Hills in Wales, over 200 kilometres distant.

The scale of the undertaking is what stops visitors in their tracks. No written record explains how Neolithic and Bronze Age communities moved and raised these stones without wheeled vehicles or metal tools, and that absence of explanation is precisely what gives the site its lasting hold on the imagination.

What to expect

Fast track entry means you bypass the standard queue and proceed directly to the monument. Admission covers access to the stone circle path, where you walk the perimeter at close range, and entry to the Stonehenge Visitor Centre, which holds original excavated finds including cremated human remains, tools, and personal ornaments recovered from the site. The free audio guide, available in multiple languages, provides commentary on the construction phases, the solstice alignments, and the broader ritual landscape, including the nearby Avebury complex and Durrington Walls. Tickets include both the visitor centre and the monument; a shuttle bus runs between the two. The site is fully wheelchair accessible.

Stonehenge and getting there

The monument sits within a UNESCO World Heritage Site designated in 1986, managed by English Heritage. The nearest town is Amesbury, approximately three kilometres away, and the starting point for this ticket. Most visitors travelling from London take the train to Salisbury and connect by bus or taxi, or join a coach transfer. For a broader look at what the region and capital offer, the Stonehenge schedule lists available dates and entry options to help you plan your visit.

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