VATICAN CITY, Holy See – The 2025 Catholic Jubilee year has drawn over 33 million pilgrims to Rome, the Vatican announced on Monday, as the final faithful passed through the “Holy Door” of St Peter’s Basilica before its closure.
Pope Leo XIV will close the basilica’s ornate bronze doors in a ceremony on Tuesday, just over 12 months after they were opened by his predecessor Pope Francis, who died in April.
Record pilgrim numbers
“The entire world came to Rome. Pilgrims arrived from 185 countries” for 35 major events, including a festival for young Catholics and the canonisation of the first millennial saint, said Archbishop Rino Fisichella.
The numbers showed the centuries-old institution was still “a dynamic church”, he told a press conference.

Some 60 per cent of pilgrims who attended came from Europe, and 16 per cent from North America, the Vatican said. There was a sharp rise in arrivals following the election in May of Leo, the Church’s first US pope.
Rare two-pope jubilee
The celebration will be remembered as a rare two-pope Jubilee. The last time a pope died during a “Holy Year” was in 1700.
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Despite torrential rain outside, thousands of pilgrims streamed through the Holy Door at St Peter’s on Monday, many pausing to make the sign of the cross.
By tradition, going through it allows them to benefit from a “plenary indulgence”, a type of forgiveness for their sins.
Final pilgrims
“It’s really a grace. And I feel great,” said Josie Aguirre, 67, from the Philippines. “It was emotional, the feeling was really great. The jubilee door is a way to renew people’s faith, it brings people together,” she told AFP.
The last pilgrim passed through the huge door – which is normally bricked up – at 17:30 (18:30 SAST) on Monday.
Organised by the Church every 25 years, the Jubilee is a period of reflection and penance for the world’s over 1.4 billion Catholics.
Impact on Rome
Significant areas of Rome were spruced up for the Jubilee, including monuments such as the Trevi Fountain. Critics had warned the Eternal City could struggle to cope with millions more visitors, when it already suffered from over-tourism, and public transport is patchy at best.
But Rome’s Mayor Roberto Gualtieri told journalists the Italian capital had risen admirably to the occasion in what was a “boom year” for tourists too.
The Jubilee’s “main legacy” was a renewed “confidence in the possibility of improving and transforming the city”, after “a very long period of stagnation or even decline”, he said.
Looking ahead
Pilgrim John Yun, 61, a physician from Vancouver, Canada, made it through the Holy Door with his 21-year-old son and both were looking forward to seeing Pope Leo at the general audience on Wednesday.
“I hope he speaks some English. I love hearing English spoken by the Holy Father,” Yun told AFP. “He seems like he could be my parish priest – he has a very humble face, and he’s ordinary. He looks a little awkward. I love it.”
The conclusion of the Jubilee is expected to serve as a watershed, allowing Leo to begin making the papacy fully his own, experts say. Since his election, the Chicago-born pontiff has published documents readied by Francis before his death and honoured commitments made by the Argentine.
“This period has been a ‘middle world’ in which the old and new pontificates overlapped,” the Catholic News Agency’s Vatican expert Andrea Gagliarducci wrote on Monday. “The conclusion of the Jubilee” will allow Leo to “finally assert his leadership beyond the legacy of Pope Francis”.
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