Ten euros, thirty minutes, no crowds elbowing you aside for a selfie. You sit in a Baroque church that normally shuts at 7pm, the doors close, the lights drop, and the 18th-century ceiling you were staring at a minute ago starts to breathe in colour and sound. That is the Spiritus Multimedia Show in Porto, and it is the cheapest way I’ve found to make a Portuguese evening feel genuinely strange in the best sense.

Booking it is easy, but there are a few things the ticket pages don’t tell you. Where to sit. Which time slot actually works if you want to walk out into the Ribeira for dinner after. Whether to pay the extra couple of euros for the tower combo. That is what this guide is for.


- In a Hurry? Here Are the Picks
- What Spiritus Actually Is
- How Booking Actually Works
- My Picks: Three Ways to Book Spiritus
- 1. Porto: Spiritus Multimedia Show Entry Ticket —
- 2. Spiritus: Videomapping Immersive Show at Clerigos Church —
- 3. Torre dos Clérigos Entrance Ticket (for the combo) —
- Which Time Slot to Pick
- Where to Sit
- Who Should Skip This
- Getting There
- What Else to Do in the Same Evening
- The Poem It’s Built Around
- A Few Caveats
- Is Spiritus Worth It?
- More Porto Booking Guides
In a Hurry? Here Are the Picks
Cheapest entry: Porto: Spiritus Multimedia Show Entry Ticket — about $11. The GetYourGuide version with free cancellation up to 24 hours before. Good if you’re still deciding.
Viator alternative: Spiritus: Videomapping Immersive Show at Clerigos Church — about $12. Same show, Viator listing, usually handy if you already have a Viator account loaded.
Combo it: Torre dos Clérigos Entrance Ticket — about $11. Climb the 75-metre tower in daylight, see Spiritus in the church below the same evening. Two tickets, one building, different experiences.
What Spiritus Actually Is
Spiritus is a videomapping show inside Clérigos Church — one of Porto’s most recognisable Baroque buildings, designed by the Italian architect Nicolau Nasoni and finished in 1749. The show is 30 minutes long. It projects animation, light, and orchestral music onto the church’s interior in full 360 degrees, so the gilded altar, the walls, and the barrel vault all move at once.

The whole thing is built around a poem. Álvaro de Campos — one of Fernando Pessoa’s famous heteronyms — wrote a piece that opens with “after all, the best way to travel is to feel.” Spiritus uses that line as its thesis. You get a voiceover in Portuguese, then English, then 30 minutes of images and orchestral music built around that idea.

It is not a son-et-lumière from the nineties. The animation is done by OCUBO, a Lisbon studio that does major projection mapping across Europe. The show has had several editions since launch, so if you went in 2023 or 2024 the content you’ll see now is not identical — they rework it.
How Booking Actually Works
You have three sensible routes. Walk-up at the Clérigos Tower ticket office, buy online through the official Spiritus site, or book via GetYourGuide or Viator. All of them get you into the same show. The differences are mostly about flexibility and whether you want it on your phone next to your other tour bookings.
Online booking is the safest move in July, August, and on any rainy afternoon — the church seats fill up, especially the 18:00 and 19:30 slots. Outside peak season, walking up to the ticket office 20 minutes before a show and buying on the spot usually works. I’ve done both.


Price benchmark: around 10 euros for the basic ticket if you buy in person, a euro or two more through online marketplaces because of their booking fee. If you want the tower climb included, there is a combined ticket sold at the same office for a few euros more than the two separately. Worth it if you are going to do both anyway.
One thing worth flagging early: the show runs sessions on a rolling schedule from about 18:00 to 21:45, with 45-minute gaps between them. Sundays finish earlier, usually around 19:30. The winter schedule thins out. Always check the times for your specific date before turning up — the site publishes the live timetable.
My Picks: Three Ways to Book Spiritus
1. Porto: Spiritus Multimedia Show Entry Ticket — $11

This is the GetYourGuide version of the standard ticket. Free cancellation up to 24 hours before, mobile ticket, fixed start time. I’d pick this one if you’re booking last-minute from your hotel and want the phone confirmation to match your other activities — our full review goes through what happens at the door and how the booking flow works. Priced at about 10-11 euros depending on the day.
2. Spiritus: Videomapping Immersive Show at Clerigos Church — $12

Functionally identical to the GetYourGuide version — same doors, same seats, same 30 minutes. The reason to pick this listing is Viator’s own app, or because you’re cross-redeeming credit card travel points. Our review of the Viator-branded version spells out the small ticketing differences.
3. Torre dos Clérigos Entrance Ticket (for the combo) — $11

Technically not a Spiritus ticket — this is the tower climb in the same building. I’m including it because the smart move is to do both on the same afternoon: tower at 16:00 for daylight photos, Spiritus at 18:00 or 19:30. If you think you might do both, buy the combined ticket at the physical office on arrival — it’s cheaper than buying them as separate online bookings. Our dedicated Clérigos Tower guide covers the climb in detail.
Which Time Slot to Pick
The first sessions of the day (usually 18:00, sometimes 18:30 depending on the month) start while there is still daylight outside. The windows of the church are blacked out, so it does not matter for the show itself — the interior is already dark enough. But it matters for what you do after.

If you want to do Spiritus and then catch sunset over the Douro from the Ribeira, go to the 18:00 session. The show finishes around 18:30, you’re on the river by 18:50, drink in hand for the light drop. This is the move for a first-day-in-Porto itinerary.
If you want Spiritus as the main event of the evening and then dinner, the 19:30 or 20:15 sessions are better. You come out into proper dusk, the tower is lit, the square is quieter than the afternoon. Walk ten minutes downhill to Rua das Flores or into the Cedofeita district and eat there.
The late sessions — 21:00 onwards, where they exist — are the thinnest for crowds but put you out late. That is fine if you’re staying nearby. It’s less fun if you have a long Uber back to a suburban hotel.
Where to Sit
This is the single best piece of advice I can give you, and it comes from the staff who check tickets at the door: sit towards the back, not the front.

Spiritus is a 360-degree projection. The whole point is that you see the altar, the side walls, and the ceiling move at once. If you sit in the front pews you can only physically see half of it. From the back rows — roughly the last third of the nave — the full canvas is in your field of view. That is why the staff tell people to go to the back.
There is no assigned seating. First come, first served. Arriving 15 minutes before the show gives you a legitimate choice of the best seats. Arriving two minutes before gets you the front pew, which is not what you want here.
Who Should Skip This
Spiritus is genuinely good, but it is not for everyone. Three groups should think twice before booking.
Very small children. The sound level is loud — orchestral, not deafening, but loud enough that a toddler will either scream or be overwhelmed. The lights also flash and strobe at points. I sat through one session where a four-year-old cried for 20 minutes straight, and nobody in the room enjoyed that. If you have kids under six, skip this one or hand them off to the other parent for half an hour.
Anyone with epilepsy or photosensitivity issues. There are strobe-like passages. The site warns about it, but it’s worth repeating.

People who wanted a church visit, not a light show. This is the one most tourists trip over. Spiritus is an audiovisual experience held inside a working Baroque church. It is not a history tour. If you came to Clérigos wanting to see the altar in its normal state, study the carvings, read about Nasoni — do that in the morning for free, or buy the separate tower-and-church daytime ticket. Spiritus is for the animation, not the architecture.
Getting There
Clérigos Church sits in the middle of Porto’s historic centre. The entrance is on Rua de São Filipe de Nery, a small street off Praça de Lisboa. From São Bento train station it’s about a 6-minute walk uphill. From Ribeira it’s 12 minutes uphill. From Avenida dos Aliados it’s 5 minutes.

The nearest metro station is São Bento on line D, or Aliados on the same line. Both are under 10 minutes on foot. If you’re driving — don’t. Parking in this part of Porto is miserable and expensive. Use the Trindade underground garage if you really must, or park at the Palácio de Cristal and walk down.

If you are coming from Vila Nova de Gaia (where most of the port wine lodges are), allow 15 minutes for the walk across the Dom Luís I bridge and uphill. Factor in time for stopping on the bridge to take the photo you’ll want to take.
What Else to Do in the Same Evening
The Clérigos area is walkable to half of Porto’s best evening stops. Livraria Lello is two minutes away, though it needs pre-booking and the queues are longer than Spiritus — our Livraria Lello guide covers the timed-entry system. The Majestic Café on Rua Santa Catarina is 12 minutes on foot. The port wine cellars across the river need a daytime slot, not evening — here’s how to book those.

For a full Porto evening built around Spiritus, the sequence I’d run is: tuk-tuk around the viewpoints at golden hour (how to book a Porto tuk-tuk), then Spiritus at 19:30, then a river cruise — the six-bridges cruise does a last evening slot (details here). Three experiences, one night, and you finish on the water.
If you’re into live music as part of the same evening, swap the river cruise for a Fado show after Spiritus. Porto Fado is darker and more melancholic than Lisbon Fado, which fits the mood Spiritus leaves you in. Both end around the same time, and the Fado venues in Ribeira are a 10-minute downhill walk from Clérigos.

The Poem It’s Built Around
This bit might matter to you or it might not. The show’s core is a fragment of a poem by Álvaro de Campos — one of Fernando Pessoa’s invented authorial personalities, and probably the most emotionally vivid of them. The line, roughly translated, is “after all, the best way to travel is to feel.” The original Portuguese is read out at the start.

If you speak no Portuguese at all, you will still catch the sense. If you speak some, the phrasing is worth tuning into — Pessoa-Campos’ Portuguese is surprisingly plain, very little ornamentation, short sentences. You don’t need literary context to enjoy Spiritus, but knowing what the show is “about” changes what you look at during the projection. It’s not pure visual wallpaper. There’s a specific idea being worked through.
A Few Caveats
Not everything about Spiritus is perfect. A few things worth knowing before you book, because the marketplace pages don’t mention any of it.
The 30 minutes can feel long in the middle section. The show builds, then has a quieter contemplative middle, then builds again. That middle stretch is where less patient viewers lose focus. If your 10-year-old is going to start fidgeting, it’ll happen at minute 14.
The seats are church pews. They are hard. They are wooden. They are not designed for 30 straight minutes of sitting still. Bring a hoodie or a jacket you can fold up and sit on if you have hip or lower-back issues.
Food and drinks are not allowed. Finish your coffee or beer on the square before you go in — they’ll stop you at the door.
And finally: it is still a working church space. The ushers are friendly but they will ask you to take hats off and keep voices down. Phones allowed, photos mostly tolerated in the bright opening moments, but put it away once the show starts. You’ll enjoy it more anyway.

Is Spiritus Worth It?
For around 10 euros and 30 minutes, yes — with one asterisk. It is worth it if you treat it as what it is: an audiovisual short film experienced inside a gorgeous 18th-century Baroque church. It is not worth it if you were expecting a Sagrada Familia light show or a laser spectacular in the son-et-lumière mould.

The magic here is the fit between the projection and the building. You can’t fake what happens when the altar’s gold leaf catches projected colour. You can’t simulate the acoustic of the orchestral track hitting those particular walls. That’s why people walk out of this quietly impressed rather than Instagram-frenzied — it’s a quieter pleasure than it looks on paper.
If your Porto trip is the usual three or four days, book a slot somewhere in the middle of your visit. Don’t make it the last thing you do, because you’ll want to walk out into Porto afterwards with the Pessoa lines in your head and process the whole thing over a glass of port. That’s where the ten euros really pay off.
More Porto Booking Guides
Planning more than just Spiritus? The obvious pairing is the Clérigos Tower climb in daylight before the show — our Clérigos Tower guide walks through the 240 steps and whether the combined ticket saves you anything. For the rest of the Porto evening, booking a Porto tuk-tuk gets you the viewpoint tour before Spiritus, a six-bridges river cruise is the classic after-show wind-down, and a Porto Fado show is the alternative if you want live music instead of a boat ride. For daytime, the port wine cellars and a walking tour of the old town both round out a two or three-day stay. If you’re heading south after Porto, Slide & Splash in the Algarve and a Benagil cave kayak trip are the two Algarve bookings I’d prioritise when you’re down there.
Prices and schedules are current as of our latest check. Spiritus session times shift by season — always confirm the live schedule on the booking page before locking in your day. Affiliate links earn us a small commission if you book, at no cost to you.
