Home Free museum days in Europe
Europe · 2026

Free museum days in Europe: where it is actually free, and the catch

Half the "free museum days in Europe" lists you will find are out of date or quietly wrong, and the mistakes cost you real money. Some "free Sundays" are now for residents only, so you turn up and pay full price anyway. At least one big city scrapped its free day entirely. And a couple of cities are free every single day, if you know which doors to walk through.

Here is the honest, city-by-city picture for 2026, with the specific days, whether you actually need to book, and the catch in each place. Every city links to its official source.

bridge during night time
CityWhen it is freeWho
London England Every day, all year Free every day
Dublin Ireland Every day, all year Free every day
Rome Italy First Sunday of the month Free on set days
Florence Italy First Sunday of the month Free on set days
Venice Italy First Sunday of the month (state museums only) Free on set days
Paris France First Sunday of the month (and the Louvre on the first Friday evening) Free on set days
Madrid Spain Free evening and Sunday hours, year-round Free on set days
Barcelona Spain Sunday afternoons and first Sundays Free on set days
Athens Greece Winter Sundays plus fixed free days Free on set days
Budapest Hungary Three national holidays Free on set days
Prague Czech Republic First Monday and public holidays Free on set days
Lisbon Portugal Residents only (citizen/resident card + NIF) Residents only, visitors pay
Porto Portugal Residents only (citizen/resident card + NIF) Residents only, visitors pay
Amsterdam Netherlands Almost nothing free for the big museums Little free for visitors
Berlin Germany No more free first Sunday (scheme ended) Little free for visitors
Vienna Austria Mostly paid (under-19s free year-round) Little free for visitors
Milan Italy State and Milan's civic museums are free on the first Sunday of the month. Little free for visitors
Naples Italy State museums and archaeological sites are free on the first Sunday of each month. Free on set days
Dubrovnik Croatia No broad tourist free day. Dubrovnik Museums list free entry mainly for local residents and specific eligible groups. Residents only, visitors pay
Nice France The clearest recurring free day is the Musée National Marc Chagall on the first Sunday of each month. Little free for visitors
Reykjavik Iceland Museum Night (a Friday each February) and Culture Night (late August) are the dependable free-entry moments. Do not count on a weekly free museum day. Little free for visitors
Split Croatia There is no broad citywide free museum day, but the official SplitCard gives qualifying overnight visitors selected free museum entries for 72 hours. Little free for visitors
Hamburg Germany Hamburg has limited free-entry schemes, not a weekly citywide free museum day. Little free for visitors
Edinburgh Scotland Major national museums and galleries in Edinburgh are generally free every day, not limited to set free days. Free every day
Krakow Poland Some museums have recurring free-entry days, but the day depends on the museum and branch. Little free for visitors
Munich Germany Sunday is the main low-cost museum day: several Munich museums charge €1, while some venues have separate free-entry rules. Little free for visitors

Free every day no day to plan · Free on set days open to visitors · Residents only you pay as a visitor · Little free budget for it

aerial photography of London skyline during daytime

London England Free every day

Every day, all year

London is the best deal in Europe. The permanent collections of the national museums are free every day, with no first-Sunday lottery to plan around.

That covers the British Museum, the National Gallery and National Portrait Gallery, Tate Modern and Tate Britain, the V&A, the Natural History Museum, the Science Museum, the Imperial War Museum and the Wallace Collection, among others.

The catch: The blockbuster temporary exhibitions inside these museums are ticketed separately, usually around £15 to £25, and the British Museum recommends booking a free timed ticket in advance year-round, with walk-up entry depending on space.

Source: British Museum (plan your visit)

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Dublin Ireland Free every day

Every day, all year

Like London, Dublin keeps its national collections free all year.

That covers the National Museum of Ireland (Archaeology on Kildare Street and Decorative Arts and History at Collins Barracks; its Natural History "Dead Zoo" on Merrion Street is closed for refurbishment, with some of it shown at Collins Barracks), the National Gallery of Ireland, the Chester Beatty at Dublin Castle, and IMMA at Kilmainham.

The catch: Dublin's most-hyped paid attractions are a different thing: the Guinness Storehouse, the Book of Kells at Trinity College and Kilmainham Gaol all charge, and none of them are "museums" in the free sense.

Source: National Museum of Ireland

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Rome Italy Free on set days

First Sunday of the month

Italy's "Domenica al Museo" makes state-run museums and archaeological parks free for everyone, tourists included, on the first Sunday of every month. In 2026 that falls on 4 Jan, 1 Feb, 1 Mar, 5 Apr, 3 May, 7 Jun, 5 Jul, 2 Aug, 6 Sep, 4 Oct, 1 Nov and 6 Dec.

In Rome it includes the Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine, Castel Sant'Angelo, the Galleria Borghese and the Pantheon. Separately, the Vatican Museums run their own free morning on the last Sunday of the month (9:00 to 12:30), which is not part of the state scheme.

The catch: Most of the big sites cannot be pre-booked on free days, so you trade the entry fee for long queues; arrive early. The Pantheon is the exception and asks you to reserve a free slot online. The Vatican's last-Sunday morning draws enormous lines.

Source: Italian Ministry of Culture (Domenica al Museo)

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white and brown concrete dome building during daytime

Florence Italy Free on set days

First Sunday of the month

Florence runs on the same first-Sunday state scheme, with the same 2026 dates as Rome.

It covers the heavy hitters: the Uffizi, the Accademia with Michelangelo's David, the Pitti Palace and Boboli Gardens, the Bargello and the Medici Chapels.

The catch: On free Sundays you cannot pre-book or skip the line at the Uffizi or the Accademia, so expect long queues at the big two; arrive at opening, or pick a less obvious state museum and walk straight in.

Source: Uffizi Galleries (free first Sunday)

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Venice Grand Canal, Italy

Venice Italy Free on set days

First Sunday of the month (state museums only)

Venice's state museums, such as the Gallerie dell'Accademia and Ca' d'Oro, join the first-Sunday free scheme for everyone.

The catch: The sights most people come for are not state-run, so they are not included: St Mark's Basilica, the Doge's Palace and the Correr are managed separately and charge as normal. The first-Sunday freebie is for the galleries, not the Piazza San Marco headliners.

Source: Gallerie dell'Accademia di Venezia

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bridge during night time

Paris France Free on set days

First Sunday of the month (and the Louvre on the first Friday evening)

On the first Sunday of the month many of Paris's national museums are free for everyone, with a free timed ticket booked online: the Musée d'Orsay, the Musée Rodin, the Musée Picasso and the Quai Branly among them.

The Orsay does this all year; a few of the others limit their free Sunday to the off-season, roughly November to March, so check the museum you want. The Centre Pompidou is shut for a multi-year renovation until around 2030, so it is off the list for now.

The catch: The Louvre is the one everyone gets wrong: it is not part of the free first Sunday at all. Its only free slot is the first Friday of the month from 6pm, and even that pauses in July and August. For the museums that do open free on the first Sunday, such as the Orsay, book the free timed ticket ahead, because they go quickly.

Source: Paris je t'aime (free museums and monuments)

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Madrid Spain Free on set days

Free evening and Sunday hours, year-round

Madrid's big three give everyone free hours, no resident card needed.

The Prado is free Monday to Saturday from 18:00 to 20:00 and on Sundays and holidays from 17:00 to 19:00. The Reina Sofía, home of Guernica, is free on Monday and Wednesday to Saturday evenings, 19:00 to 21:00 (it closes on Tuesdays), and on Sunday afternoon. The Thyssen-Bornemisza is free on Mondays.

The catch: These are short windows, and the free evening and Sunday slots are the busiest hours of the week. Arrive at the start of the slot and expect a queue.

Source: esMadrid (free days and hours)

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aerial view of city buildings during daytime

Barcelona Spain Free on set days

Sunday afternoons and first Sundays

Barcelona is generous, and it is open to everyone. The city's municipal museums are free every Sunday from 15:00, and free all day on the first Sunday of the month: the Picasso Museum, the city history museum MUHBA, the Design Museum, and the Ethnology and Music museums.

The MNAC national art museum runs to a slightly different schedule, free on Saturdays from 15:00 and on the first Sunday of the month. The Picasso also opens free on winter Thursdays (16:00 to 19:00, roughly late September to late March). Book the free slots online, as the Picasso releases them four days ahead.

The catch: The icons are not municipal museums, so they never have a free day for visitors: the Sagrada Família, the monumental zone of Park Güell and Casa Batlló all charge year-round.

Source: Museu Picasso Barcelona (plan your visit)

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acropolis of athens at golden hour

Athens Greece Free on set days

Winter Sundays plus fixed free days

Greece's state sites and museums are free for everyone on the first and third Sunday of each month from 1 November to 31 March.

There are also fixed free days through the year: 6 March, 18 April, 18 May (International Museum Day), the last weekend of September and 28 October. On free days you collect a paper ticket at the gate, because the online system is switched off.

The catch: This is mainly a winter perk. From April to October you pay. The excellent Acropolis Museum is run separately, so it is not part of the Sunday scheme, but it has its own free days on 6 March, 25 March, 18 May and 28 October.

Source: Hellenic Ministry of Culture (free days)

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Budapest Hungary Free on set days

Three national holidays

Budapest has the simplest rule in the region.

On Hungary's three national holidays, 15 March, 20 August and 23 October, the state museums are free for everyone, including the Museum of Fine Arts and the Hungarian National Gallery, usually from 10:00 to 17:00 on a first-come basis.

The catch: Outside those three days you pay. And the thermal baths, which are the real Budapest must-do, are never free.

Source: Museum of Fine Arts Budapest

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Prague Czech Republic Free on set days

First Monday and public holidays

The National Museum is free on the first Monday of every month (it gets crowded). City-run museums tend to open free on Czech public holidays.

Once a year the Open House Prague weekend, around 23 to 24 May in 2026, opens scores of normally-closed buildings for free.

The catch: The famous paid sights stay paid: the interiors of Prague Castle and the Jewish Museum are not part of these free days.

Source: National Museum, Prague

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Lisbon Portugal Residents only, visitors pay

Residents only (citizen/resident card + NIF)

This is the big one to get right, because almost every old guide is now wrong.

Portugal's free days at its national museums and monuments, including the Jerónimos Monastery and the Belém Tower, are reserved for people who live in Portugal, both Portuguese and foreign residents, who show a citizen or resident card and their NIF tax number. The scheme runs 52 days a year across 37 sites, but it is not a visitor freebie.

The catch: As a tourist you pay full price at the headline monuments. What is genuinely free to everyone in Lisbon is a smaller set of municipal and foundation spaces, plus the always-free churches, miradouros and streets. Do not plan a free Sunday at Jerónimos as a visitor.

Source: Museus e Monumentos de Portugal (tickets)

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boats docked near seaside promenade]

Porto Portugal Residents only, visitors pay

Residents only (citizen/resident card + NIF)

Porto follows the same national rule: the free days are for people who live in Portugal (with a resident card and NIF), not visitors.

Only two Porto sites are even in the national free-days programme, the Soares dos Reis National Museum and the Casa-Museu Fernando de Castro.

The catch: Tourists pay at the main sights. Lean on the things Porto gives everyone for free instead: the riverside, the churches, the São Bento station tile hall and the views.

Source: Museus e Monumentos de Portugal

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body of water under white sky

Amsterdam Netherlands Little free for visitors

Almost nothing free for the big museums

Amsterdam is the stingiest of the major art cities. The Rijksmuseum and the Van Gogh Museum have no free days for visitors.

A few smaller places help: the Amsterdam Museum of city history, and some galleries such as FOAM, run a free evening or first Sunday.

The catch: Budget for the headline museums here. Spend the saved time on what Amsterdam does give you for free: the canals, the Begijnhof courtyard and the markets.

Source: I amsterdam (free museums)

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city buildings near body of water during daytime

Berlin Germany Little free for visitors

No more free first Sunday (scheme ended)

Read this before you trust an older list. Berlin's "Museum Sunday", which made the state museums free on the first Sunday of the month, ended in December 2024 after culture-budget cuts. So in 2026 Museum Island is not free on the first Sunday.

What survives is small: the KINDL contemporary-art centre is free on the first Sunday, and the Neue Nationalgalerie is free on the first Thursday evening, 16:00 to 20:00, thanks to a sponsor.

The catch: Any article still promising free Berlin state museums on the first Sunday is running on old information. Budget for Museum Island.

Source: Berlin.de (Museum Sunday status)

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Vienna Austria Little free for visitors

Mostly paid (under-19s free year-round)

Vienna mostly charges, but there is one structural freebie worth knowing: anyone under 19 gets into the federal museums free all year, which covers the Kunsthistorisches, the Belvedere and the Albertina.

Among the big museums, the Wien Museum at Karlsplatz is the rare one with a free permanent collection.

The catch: For adults there is no monthly free day at the marquee museums, so plan to pay.

Source: Vienna tourist board (museums)

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Milan Italy Little free for visitors

State and Milan's civic museums are free on the first Sunday of the month.

On the first Sunday of each month, Italy's state museums are free, and Milan's civic museums (such as those in the Castello Sforzesco) take part too. Milan's civic museums are also free on the second Tuesday of the month for under-26s.

The big private draws (the Last Supper, the Duomo rooftop) are not part of the free scheme and still need paid, often pre-booked, tickets.

The catch: Free Sundays cover state and civic museums, but not the Last Supper or the Duomo rooftop; check each museum's own policy.

Source: YesMilano (official tourism)

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Naples Italy Free on set days

State museums and archaeological sites are free on the first Sunday of each month.

Italy's Domenica al Museo scheme covers state-run museums and archaeological parks. In Naples, that can include places such as MANN, while nearby state sites such as Pompeii usually follow the same national free-entry pattern.

Free entry is not the same as easy entry. Expect queues, capacity rules, closed-off rooms at some sites, and booking rules that vary by venue. Private museums, church sites, and foundations make their own rules, so check the exact place before you build the day around it.

The catch: Good for saving money. Bad if you want a quiet museum day.

Source: Ministero della Cultura: Domenica al Museo

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Dubrovnik Croatia Residents only, visitors pay

No broad tourist free day. Dubrovnik Museums list free entry mainly for local residents and specific eligible groups.

Dubrovnik does not have a useful free-museum Sunday for ordinary visitors. The official Dubrovnik Museums rules give free entry to Dubrovnik-Neretva County residents, children under 7, ICOM and HMD members, and Dubrovnik, RIT Croatia, and Libertas students during the academic year period listed by the museums.

For most visitors, the practical comparison is a single museum ticket versus the Dubrovnik Pass, especially if the City Walls are already on your list. One-off free-entry events can happen, but I would not plan a short trip around them.

The catch: Free entry is mostly local or eligibility-based, not a standing tourist perk.

Source: Dubrovnik Museums: entrance tickets

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Nice France Little free for visitors

The clearest recurring free day is the Musée National Marc Chagall on the first Sunday of each month.

Nice does not have one easy citywide free-museum day for every visitor across every museum. The Chagall museum, a national museum, lists free entry for everyone on the first Sunday of the month.

Municipal museums follow their own rules. Under-18s enter Nice city museums free, residents of Nice can get local free-access arrangements, and short-stay visitors usually look at the multi-museum pass instead. Treat free admission as museum-by-museum, not a blanket Nice rule.

The catch: First Sunday is useful for saving money, but it is a poor bet if you want a calm Chagall visit.

Source: Musée National Marc Chagall: practical information

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Reykjavik Iceland Little free for visitors

Museum Night (a Friday each February) and Culture Night (late August) are the dependable free-entry moments. Do not count on a weekly free museum day.

Reykjavik does not run a broad weekly free-museum scheme for visitors. The clean calendar bets are Museum Night during the Winter Lights Festival in February, when many museums across the capital area open in the evening with free admission, and Culture Night in late August, when much of the city center, including museums and galleries, is free and busy with events.

The practical paid workaround is the Reykjavik City Card. It covers a set list of museums, Strætó city buses within the capital area (but not the bus 55 airport run to Keflavík), swimming pools, and the Viðey ferry for 24, 48, or 72 hours. It only makes sense if you plan to stack several included places close together.

The catch: Do not assume Sunday is free. Check the current Museum Night program and the museum's own page before building a day around it.

Source: Visit Reykjavik: Winter Lights Festival

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Split Croatia Little free for visitors

There is no broad citywide free museum day, but the official SplitCard gives qualifying overnight visitors selected free museum entries for 72 hours.

Split's useful free-culture angle is the SplitCard, not a first-Sunday museum routine. The city tourist board says visitors can pick up a free card at tourist information centres if they meet the minimum-stay rule.

The rule changes by season: 5 nights or more from April through October, and 2 nights or more from November through March. The current free-entry list includes the Emanuel Vidovic Gallery, Ethnographic Museum and Natural History Museum, but I would still check the partner list before planning a museum-heavy day around it.

The catch: Free means conditional here: no qualifying stay, no card.

Source: Visit Split: SplitCard

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Hamburg Germany Little free for visitors

Hamburg has limited free-entry schemes, not a weekly citywide free museum day.

The clearest recurring offer is Hamburger Kunsthalle's free entry on the first Thursday evening of the month, currently listed for 6 to 9 pm. That is useful, but it is one museum and one short window.

Hamburg also has broader museum-access events in some years, including formats around Reformation Day or Long Night of Museums. Treat those as date-specific bonuses, not the basis of a museum plan.

The catch: Free evenings can be busy, and special exhibitions, guided formats, or event rules may change the practical experience.

Source: Hamburger Kunsthalle: The first Thursday is on us

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Calton Hill, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Edinburgh Scotland Free every day

Major national museums and galleries in Edinburgh are generally free every day, not limited to set free days.

The National Museum of Scotland lists free entry, with charges for some special exhibitions, and normally opens daily from 10:00 to 17:00. The main National Galleries of Scotland sites are also generally free to enter, although some exhibitions or events may need a paid ticket or booking.

This is one of Edinburgh's best budget advantages. Treat the free museums as your bad-weather plan, but check holiday closures, timed exhibitions and special events before building the day around them.

The catch: Free entry does not mean every exhibition is free, and Christmas and New Year hours can change the usual pattern.

Source: National Museum of Scotland: visitor information

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Krakow Poland Little free for visitors

Some museums have recurring free-entry days, but the day depends on the museum and branch.

Schindler's Factory lists Monday as its free-admission day, with no advance booking for regular visitors and limited tickets. National Museum in Krakow branches commonly use Tuesday for permanent exhibitions, while Wawel has its own limited free-ticket rules for selected exhibitions.

Treat free days as a backup plan if you are flexible. Popular sites cap numbers, shorten the free-day visit, or require you to collect a timed ticket, so paying for a timed slot can still be the better move on a short trip.

The catch: Free does not mean walk straight in. Check the exact branch before you build the day around it.

Source: Museum of Krakow: Oskar Schindler's Enamel Factory

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Munich Germany Little free for visitors

Sunday is the main low-cost museum day: several Munich museums charge €1, while some venues have separate free-entry rules.

Munich does not have a broad citywide free-museum day covering every major collection. The recurring pattern visitors can actually use is Sunday €1 admission at a set of mostly state-run museums: the Alte Pinakothek, the Pinakothek der Moderne, Museum Brandhorst, the Glyptothek and the Antikensammlungen, the Bavarian National Museum, and Museum Fünf Kontinente are the usual names. Special exhibitions are charged separately, and some big collections opt out (the Lenbachhaus, for one), so check the current list before building a day around it.

Use Sunday for the Pinakothek area if you are flexible, but do not expect every museum to join in. Special exhibitions, private museums, and timed events can follow different rules, and a few museums use their own free-evening or age-based free-entry policies instead.

The catch: It is often cheap rather than free, and Sunday afternoons can be noticeably busier.

Source: muenchen.de: free and discounted museums in Munich

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Free museums in Europe: quick answers

Not anymore, at the national museums and monuments. Since the rules changed, Portugal's free days are reserved for people who live in Portugal, both Portuguese and foreign residents, who show a resident card and a NIF tax number. As a visitor you pay full price at sights like the Jerónimos Monastery. A smaller set of municipal spaces, and the churches and viewpoints, stay free for everyone.

Yes, but not on the first Sunday of the month, which is the common mistake. The Louvre is free on the first Friday of the month from 6pm, and that offer pauses in July and August. The first-Sunday free museums in Paris are others, such as the Musée d'Orsay.

No. Berlin's Museum Sunday scheme ended in December 2024, so the state museums on Museum Island are no longer free on the first Sunday in 2026. Only a couple of smaller venues keep a free slot.

London, comfortably. Its national museums are free every day of the year with no booking lottery, from the British Museum to the Tates and the V&A. Dublin is the closest runner-up, with its national museums and galleries free year-round.

Often, yes. Italy, France and Barcelona ask for a free timed ticket online for the popular sites, and those sell out, so the price you save you pay back in planning. Greece is the opposite: on free days the online system is off and you collect a paper ticket at the gate.

We web-researched and fact-checked every city against its official tourism board, culture ministry or museum, each linked under its city above. These schemes change every year, so always confirm on the official site before you travel. Last updated June 12, 2026.

Photo credits

Photos: Léonard Cotte, Benjamin Davies, Gregory DALLEAU, David Köhler, Jonathan Körner, Dan Novac, Jorge Fernández Salas, Logan Armstrong, Constantinos Kollias, Ervin Lukacs, Ouael Ben Salah, Aayush Gupta, Nick Karvounis, Adrien Olichon, Florian Wehde, Jacek Dylag, Danilo D'Agostino, Spencer Davis, Constantin, Einar H. Reynis, Matthias Mullie, Alexander Bagno, Adam Wilson, Kevin Perez Camacho, ian kelsall on Unsplash.