Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection tickets & tours | Price comparison

Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection

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Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection, the Sammlung Scharf-Gerstenberg beside Charlottenburg Palace in western Berlin, is one of the city's moodiest museum stops: Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Francisco de Goya, Max Ernst, and René Magritte turn fantasy, nightmares, and surreal wit into a focused art journey. The Stüler twin building adds real architectural drama.

Start with the official day ticket online, because it keeps entry flexible, reduces counter waiting, and fits neatly into a half-day pairing with Museum Berggruen across the road.
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6 tips for visiting the Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection

1
Book the day ticket online
If your date is fixed, buy the official day ticket online before you go. It stays valid any time during opening hours on the ticket date, but you skip counter friction and start more smoothly, especially on weekend afternoons. That way you can focus on the art, not the line at the desk.
2
Pair it with Berggruen
If you want the cleanest nearby add-on, cross straight to Museum Berggruen rather than stacking three west-Berlin museums in one rush. The contrast between the modern masters there and the dreamlike mood here works especially well, and the walk is basically just one road crossing. So the day feels intentional, not overpacked.
3
Go early or go late
If calmer rooms matter more than squeezing in another stop, aim for opening on Wednesday-Friday or the last 90 minutes of the day. Weekend middays are more likely to absorb spillover from the Charlottenburg museum cluster. This usually gives you better wall time with Max Ernst and René Magritte.
4
Travel light for the lockers
Small bags are fine, but larger items over 30 x 20 x 10 cm (11.8 x 7.9 x 3.9 in) must go to the cloakroom, and luggage is not accepted. Bring only what you need, especially if you are continuing to Charlottenburg Palace afterward. This avoids last-minute locker reshuffling at the entrance.
5
Use Café Kunstpause as a reset
If the imagery starts feeling intense, take a short break at Café Kunstpause before you keep going or cross to Museum Berggruen. It sits at the same address and helps break up a dense art afternoon. So you come back sharper for the last rooms instead of visually flattened.
6
Check the current show first
This museum often works as both collection stop and temporary-show stop. Glance at the current exhibition before you go, because it can shift how long you want to stay and whether this should be your main west-Berlin museum or the calmer second act. That way you do not rush the rooms that matter most.

How to plan a Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection stop in west Berlin

This is one of the easiest museum stops to fold into a west-Berlin day, but it works best when you decide upfront whether you want a quick atmospheric visit or a longer art pairing.

Use the online day ticket for a clean start

The practical default here is simple: if your date is fixed, buy the day ticket online and keep the counter as a backup only. The current format is a day ticket rather than a tight entry slot, so you still keep flexibility within opening hours. That gives you a smoother start without overplanning. Book now.

Treat it as a focused museum, not an all-day marathon

This collection rewards concentration more than endurance. Most visitors do better with one careful circuit through the rooms and then one nearby add-on, not three major museums back-to-back. If you are a first-time visitor to this part of Berlin, pair it with Museum Berggruen; if you want architecture and gardens instead, shift to Charlottenburg Palace.

Choose the calmer viewing window

Because the museum sits in the Charlottenburg cluster, the middle of a weekend day can feel busier than the room count suggests. If you want the prints and surreal rooms to land properly, opening time or the last part of the afternoon is usually the smarter window. You spend more time looking and less time sidestepping.

Keep the stop comfortable

Bring a compact bag, use the lockers when needed, and do not underestimate the value of a short break at Café Kunstpause. For couples and solo travelers, this keeps the mood of the visit intact; for families, it stops the museum from becoming one room too many. A tiny pause here is often the difference between intense and overloaded.

Why the collection feels so distinctive

Many art museums widen their net. This one narrows it, and that focus is exactly why the visit stays memorable.

From fantasy to Surrealism

The collection traces the art of the fantastic across centuries, starting with Giovanni Battista Piranesi and Francisco de Goya and running toward 20th-century Surrealism. Instead of offering a general survey of modern art, it follows obsessions: dream states, strange architecture, masks, monsters, and psychological unease. That tighter thread makes the rooms feel coherent rather than encyclopedic.

Why Max Ernst and René Magritte matter here

Names like Max Ernst and René Magritte are not here as isolated trophies. They complete the museum's central idea by showing how the uncanny moved from visionary prints and dark imagination into modern painting. Even if you already know their work, the surrounding context changes how it reads.

A better fit for slow looking

This is not the kind of museum where you race from one blockbuster to the next. The mood is quieter, darker, and more internal, which makes it especially strong for repeat Berlin visitors, solo travelers, and anyone who prefers depth over checklist culture. If you only skim, you miss the point; if you slow down, the collection opens up.

Why it pairs so well with Berggruen

Across the road, Museum Berggruen leans toward luminous modern masters and a different emotional register. Seen together, the two museums make a sharper pair than either does alone: one bright and canonical, the other dreamlike and slightly unsettling. It is one of the best art contrasts you can build in west Berlin without losing time in transit.

The building story behind the museum

Part of the visit begins before the first artwork. The building carries its own Berlin story, and it gives the collection more presence than a neutral gallery shell ever could.

A Stüler twin from 1859

The building was commissioned under King Friedrich Wilhelm IV, designed by Friedrich August Stüler, and completed in 1859. Together with the matching building across the road, it frames the entrance to Schloßstraße opposite Charlottenburg Palace. The Neoclassical symmetry and cupola already set a ceremonial tone before you step inside.

From barracks to police and Egyptian displays

The structure did not start as an art museum. It originally served the Gardes du Corps, later housed the police, and from 1967 even held the Egyptian Museum. That layered reuse explains why the site feels more lived-in and historical than a purpose-built white-cube gallery.

Why 2005 to 2008 mattered

After the Egyptian Museum returned to Museum Island in 2005, the building was converted again. The renovation exposed historic brickwork and added a glass entrance hall, and the Sammlung Scharf-Gerstenberg opened here in summer 2008. What you visit today is therefore both a collection display and a careful reuse project.

The 2018 extension that kept the museum here

The museum first opened around a long-term group loan planned for ten years. In 2018, that loan was extended for another ten years, which helped secure the collection's place in the west-Berlin museum landscape. It is a useful reminder that this venue exists because architecture, collecting, and institutional timing all aligned.

Frequently Asked Questions

What kind of museum is the Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection?

It follows the art of the fantastic from Giovanni Battista Piranesi and Francisco de Goya to Max Ernst and René Magritte. If you like dream logic, the uncanny, and moodier modern art, this is one of the most distinctive museum stops in Berlin.
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How much time should I plan?

For most visitors, 60 to 90 minutes works well for the collection itself. Give it closer to 90 to 120 minutes if you also want the temporary exhibition, a café break, or a paired stop across the road.
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Do I need a timeslot?

Not for the current day-ticket format. The official ticket page describes day tickets as valid any time during opening hours on the date printed on the ticket, so you can choose your arrival rhythm more freely.
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Is the museum wheelchair accessible?

Yes. The visitor entrance on Schloßstraße is listed as wheelchair accessible. If you need a loan wheelchair or another mobility aid, it is smart to confirm availability before your visit.
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Are there concessions or free admission options?

Yes. Visitors up to age 18 enter free, and reduced admission is generally 50% of the regular price for groups such as schoolchildren, students, certain jobseekers, and visitors with severe disability status. Bring the relevant proof with you.
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Are lockers available for bags?

Yes. Lockers and a cloakroom are available for coats, jackets, and bags. Small bags may come inside, but anything over 30 x 20 x 10 cm (11.8 x 7.9 x 3.9 in) must be checked, and luggage is not accepted.
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Is photography allowed?

Generally, yes. Commercial photography needs permission, and specific exhibitions can set stricter rules. If a temporary show is central to your visit, recheck it before you arrive.
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Which nearby stop pairs best with this museum?

The simplest pairing is Museum Berggruen directly across the road. If you want a broader west-Berlin half day, add Charlottenburg Palace; if you still want more art later, Museum für Fotografie is a stronger add-on than rushing back to the city center.
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Is there anywhere to take a break on-site?

Yes. Café Kunstpause runs Wednesday-Sunday from 10 am to 6 pm, and the Walther König bookshop runs Wednesday-Sunday from 11 am to 6 pm. That makes it easy to pause without leaving the museum cluster.
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General information

opening hours

Regular opening hours are Wednesday-Sunday from 11 am to 6 pm; Monday and Tuesday are closed. Public holidays usually follow Sunday hours, but exceptions are published separately, and the current holiday schedule lists Christmas Eve plus New Year's Eve as closed.

tickets

Current official example checked on 2026-03-31: the day ticket for the collection plus the current temporary exhibition is listed at €12, concessions at €6, and annual passes start at €25. Day tickets are valid any time during opening hours on the booked date, can be bought online or at the counter, and online sales open up to four weeks ahead.

address

Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection
Schloßstraße 70
14059 Berlin
Germany

how to get there

The easiest public-transport options are U-Bahn to Sophie-Charlotte-Platz or Richard-Wagner-Platz, S-Bahn to Westend, or buses to Schloss Charlottenburg or Luisenplatz / Schloss Charlottenburg. If you are already at Charlottenburg Palace or Museum Berggruen, you can simply walk.

accessibility

The visitor entrance on Schloßstraße is listed as wheelchair accessible. If you need a loan wheelchair or another mobility aid, check availability before you go, because support items are not guaranteed at every museum.

lockers

Lockers and a cloakroom are available for coats, jackets, and bags. Small bags may go inside, but larger items over 30 x 20 x 10 cm (11.8 x 7.9 x 3.9 in) must be checked, and luggage cannot be accepted.

photography and filming

Photography is generally permitted. Commercial photography requires permission, and individual exhibitions can apply tighter rules, so it is worth rechecking the current show before you raise the camera.
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