Objective of the study: Proposing a Thematic Tourist Route of Roman Law, designed to complement the teaching in the course of Roman Law in a study trip. Methodology: The method was based on bibliographic research on cultural tourism products, Roman Law and attractions from the Roman era, followed by the association of attractions and themes in a script, and thematic, didactic and commercial evaluation of their viability. Originality/Relevance: the study is part of a theoretical gap, in which the relevance of studying thematic tourism highlights, as issues such as this impact the sector and provide economic, social perspectives and governmental projects. Main Result: the Roman Law thematic tourist itinerary includes places where Roman Law was applied and developed, such as Rome, Pompeii, Ostia, Verona, several cities in Roman Gaul (present-day France), and Ephesus, Pergamum and Istanbul (ancient Constantinople). One can infer that the script presents thematic, didactic and commercial validation. Theoretical/methodological contribution: the research proposes a thematic script, a theme that has a relative scarcity of articles, and thus opens the possibility of planned scripts within the theme of Roman Law to leverage future research focusing on each right line. Social/management contributions: proposing a thematic itinerary of Roman Law with researched attractions presents ample potential for exploration as a cultural tourist product, especially for Law studies, offering the expressive benefit of a memorable experience in loco.