Private Herculaneum for Families: Kids Archaeology Adventure

4.8
(8 reviews)
Naples (IT), Italy

2 to 4 hours (approximately)
Pickup offered
Offered in: English and 4 more

Herculaneum becomes a time-travel playground on this private walking tour designed especially for families with curious kids ages 6–11. Together you’ll explore the ancient Roman town buried by Vesuvius, visiting houses, shops, bathhouses, and the boat pavilion just like on our adult tour—but with an engaging twist. Kids get their own special map, complete with stickers, riddles, and games that turn archaeology into an adventure as they spot frescoes, mosaics, and everyday objects left behind nearly 2,000 years ago. The pace is relaxed and interactive, with plenty of moments for questions, discoveries, and “aha!” reactions. At the end, children receive a fun activity booklet to continue the experience at home. Choose between the tour with skip-the-line entrance tickets, or upgrade to the option including round-trip pick-up for an even smoother day.

What's Included

Herculaneum4Kids kit
Skip-the-line tickets
Blue Badge private guide
Herculaenum for kids acitivites and Special map
Transport included only in the Premium Option

Meeting and pickup

Pickup points
You can choose a pickup location at checkout (multiple pickup locations are available).
Pickup details:

Flexible, please let us know where do you wish us to meet. Please note that pick up is included in the premium option of this tour

OR
Meeting point

Herculaneum site - Your guide will be waiting for you at the tickets office holding a sign with your name written on.

End point
This activity ends back at the meeting point.

Itinerary

Duration: 2 to 4 hours (approximately)
  • 1
    Parco Acheologico di Ercolano

    Exploring Herculaneum feels like stepping into a Roman neighborhood frozen in time. Unlike Pompeii, the town was buried under a deep, protective blanket of volcanic material from the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD, which preserved wooden doors, furniture, colorful frescoes, mosaics, and even food. Families often love how compact the site is: the streets are easy to walk, and the buildings sit close together, making it simple to imagine people shopping, cooking, and greeting neighbors two thousand years ago. Children quickly spot details adults might miss—like ancient fast-food counters, bathhouse lockers, or decorative mythological figures on the walls. The contrast between the modern city above and the ancient one below also offers a striking sense of discovery the moment you arrive.

    2 hours Admission ticket included
  • Parco Nazionale Del Vesuvio (Pass by)

    On the way to Herculaneum, families often enjoy views of the Parco Nazionale del Vesuvio, the protected landscape surrounding the volcano that shaped the region’s history. Even from a distance, the crater’s distinctive profile makes an impression—especially on younger travelers who quickly connect the mountain they’re seeing to the ancient city they’re about to explore. Once inside the archaeological site, the volcano is still dramatically visible in the background, creating a striking contrast between modern nature and the ruins below. Paired with insights from your private family guide, these views help visitors grasp the scale of the eruption and understand how deeply Vesuvius continues to define the geography and identity of the area today.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    The Antiquarium offers families a thoughtful introduction to daily life in ancient Herculaneum through objects that feel surprisingly familiar—jewelry, coins, writing tools, household items, and even children’s belongings. One of the most striking features here is the survival of charred wood, from furniture to architectural fragments, preserved when the intense heat of the eruption carbonized organic materials instead of burning them to ash. Kids are often fascinated to learn that these blackened pieces are still real wood, nearly two thousand years old. With the help of your official family-friendly guide, the displays become more than just artifacts; they become clues that help young explorers piece together how Roman families lived, worked, and decorated their homes.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    The Boat Pavilion is often one of the most surprising stops for families. Inside, you’ll find a remarkably preserved Roman boat that once sailed along the Bay of Naples, along with tools and equipment used by sailors nearly 2,000 years ago. Kids are instantly drawn to the wooden hull—darkened by time but still intact—while adults appreciate how the eruption protected the vessel under layers of volcanic debris. The space also helps everyone imagine Herculaneum as a seaside community connected to trade and travel. With your dedicated family-friendly guide adding context, the exhibit becomes more than just an artifact—it becomes a story of daily life suddenly interrupted.

    Admission ticket free
  • Casa dei Cervi (Pass by)

    The Casa dei Cervi is one of Herculaneum’s most elegant residences, known for its spacious courtyard and graceful marble statues of stags attacked by hunting dogs—details that often captivate both kids and adults. Walking through its rooms, families get a sense of how wealthy Romans lived, entertained guests, and decorated their homes with art that expressed status and taste. Frescoes, mosaics, and marble thresholds hint at refinement, while the layout helps young visitors imagine family routines in a world without electricity or modern conveniences. With your knowledgeable private guide offering context, it becomes clear why this house remains a highlight of the ancient town.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    The Palestra, or ancient gymnasium, gives families a glimpse into how young Romans trained their bodies and socialized long before organized school sports existed. The large open courtyard once hosted running, wrestling, and ball games, while porticoes offered shaded areas for rest and discussion. Kids often enjoy imagining the noise and energy of teenagers exercising here nearly two thousand years ago, and parents appreciate how physical fitness, education, and civic life were closely linked in the Roman world. With insights from your dedicated family-friendly guide, this space becomes a lively reminder that ancient youth had routines and passions not so different from today’s.

    Admission ticket free
  • Casa di Nettuno e Anfitrite (Pass by)

    The Casa di Nettuno e Anfitrite is celebrated for its vibrant mosaic of Neptune and Amphitrite, two figures from Roman mythology who presided over the sea. Families often pause here to admire the intricate glass tesserae that form the image, still brilliant after two millennia. The house’s layout and decorative choices offer clues about the owners’ wealth, interests, and sense of style—details that your private family guide helps bring to life. Children are frequently struck by how colorful the ancient world really was, while adults appreciate the craftsmanship and storytelling embedded in the artwork. It’s a house that rewards close looking and sparks imagination.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    The Women’s Baths reveal how Romans combined cleanliness, relaxation, and social life in beautifully designed spaces. Families move through the sequence of changing rooms, warm rooms, and hot rooms, noticing mosaic floors, marble benches, and cleverly engineered heating systems hidden beneath the floors. Kids are often intrigued to learn that the baths worked almost like a modern spa, and that Roman women met here to talk, unwind, and take care of themselves. With explanations from your official family-friendly guide, the architectural details turn into real examples of ancient engineering, and the baths become one of the clearest windows into everyday life in Herculaneum.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    One charming surprise for families is the “Ad Cucumas” wine advertisement painted directly onto a shop façade. It’s easy to imagine Roman passersby noticing the jars and symbols that indicated what was being sold inside—long before printed signs or digital menus. Kids enjoy spotting the images and guessing their meaning, while adults appreciate how effortlessly commerce blended with art in daily Roman life. Your private family guide uses this stop to show how marketing, shopping, and social habits were already familiar concepts two thousand years ago, making the ancient city feel unexpectedly modern.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    The Casa del Bicentenario is one of Herculaneum’s most impressive residential buildings, offering families a look at refined Roman urban living. Multiple rooms arranged around a central courtyard suggest both family life and social entertaining, while fragments of colorful frescoes hint at the aesthetic tastes of the owners. One particularly intriguing aspect for visitors is the survival of charred wooden elements—carbonized doors, window frames, and even interior partitions—preserved by the intense heat of the eruption. Parents often find the legal history fascinating: here archaeologists discovered wooden writing tablets containing court records, a reminder that paperwork and bureaucracy were very much part of Roman life. With the help of your dedicated family-friendly guide, these details transform the house from a ruin into a lived-in home with stories of its own.

    Admission ticket free
  • Sacello degli Augustali (Pass by)

    The Sacello Augustali offers families a glimpse into the religious life of Herculaneum and the way Romans honored the emperor as a symbol of unity and prosperity. Inside, visitors can admire statues and finely decorated panels that once formed the backdrop for rituals connected to the imperial cult. Kids often enjoy identifying mythological figures or trying to imagine ceremonies taking place here, while adults appreciate the political dimensions that temples like this represented in Roman society. With thoughtful context from your private family guide, the space reveals how religion, civic identity, and everyday life were closely intertwined in the ancient world.

    Admission ticket free
  • Partem Domus lignea - Casa del Tramezzo di Legno (Pass by)

    At the Casa del Tramezzo di Legno, families can admire one of Herculaneum’s most impressive surviving wooden features: a large folding screen that once separated different areas of the house. Carbonized by the eruption, the wood retains its shape and decorative details, offering rare insight into Roman interior design. Kids are often startled to learn that the dark, almost sculptural partition is still real wood from nearly two thousand years ago, preserved by volcanic heat. Meanwhile, adults appreciate how the home’s layout—complete with reception spaces and private quarters—reveals both domestic comfort and social etiquette. With interpretation from your dedicated family guide, this house makes ancient architecture feel unexpectedly familiar.

    Admission ticket free
  • Casa dello Scheletro (Pass by)

    The Casa dello Scheletro takes its name from a skeleton found here during early excavations, a discovery that captured public attention and added a touch of mystery to the house. Today, families explore its rooms to discover elegant wall paintings, decorative niches, and architectural features that hint at the tastes and routines of its former residents. Kids are often intrigued by the story behind the name, while adults appreciate how such finds—combined with archaeological research—help reconstruct the everyday lives of the people who once called Herculaneum home. With guidance from your private family-focused expert, the house becomes another piece of the puzzle that brings the ancient city back to life.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    The Thermopolium is one of the easiest places for families to imagine daily life in ancient Herculaneum. This was a kind of Roman “street-food counter,” where residents could grab hot meals served from large terracotta jars set into a decorated countertop. Kids love recognizing the idea instantly—similar to a modern takeaway spot—while parents enjoy how this simple shop reveals the rhythms of urban living in a world without home refrigerators or fast food chains. The preserved jars, painted signs, and traces of ingredients make the stop remarkably vivid, and with context from your dedicated family guide, the Thermopolium becomes a lively reminder that ancient towns were filled with smells, tastes, and social chatter.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Reaching the ancient shoreline is often one of the most memorable moments of the tour. Here, families can look into the vaulted chambers where hundreds of skeletons were discovered—evidence of people seeking shelter from the eruption as superheated gases swept over the town. It’s a powerful place that encourages thoughtful questions, and your dedicated family guide knows how to present it with sensitivity for younger visitors while still honoring the archaeological truth. Parents appreciate how this stop connects real human stories to the ruins, and children often recognize that history isn’t just about buildings and objects, but about the people who once walked these streets and faced an extraordinary event.

    Admission ticket free

Additional info

  • Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
  • Service animals allowed
  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Not recommended for travelers with spinal injuries
  • Not recommended for pregnant travelers
  • Not recommended for travelers with poor cardiovascular health
Supplied by Leisure Italy

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Tags

Bus Tours
Private and Luxury
Private Sightseeing Tours
Historical Tours
Walking Tours
Ports of Call Tours
Archaeology Tours
Shore Excursions
Port Pickup
Short term availability

Cancellation Policy

For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.

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Rating

4.8 Based on 8 8 reviews
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