Belvedere 21: Museum of Contemporary Art tickets & tours | Price comparison

Belvedere 21: Museum of Contemporary Art

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Belvedere 21, officially Belvedere 21: Museum of Contemporary Art and once known as 21er Haus, brings contemporary Austrian and international art into a glass-and-steel pavilion on Arsenalstraße near Quartier Belvedere. The building itself is part of the visit: a 1958 World's Fair pavilion turned into one of Vienna's most distinctive modern-art stops.

If Belvedere 21 is your main goal, start with the regular day ticket; switch to the 3 in 1 combo only if you also want Belvedere on the same day. That gives you better value without overbuying. Book now.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Entry tickets

Best for most visitors: prebook the regular museum ticket, keep your arrival flexible, and focus on the current exhibitions, the pavilion itself, and the sculpture garden at your own pace.
Belvedere 21: Museum of Contemporary Art
3.8(17)
 
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Combo tickets

Choose a combo if you want Belvedere 21 as part of a same-day route with Belvedere, because the 3 in 1 ticket keeps the Belvedere sites in one booking.
Belvedere 21: Museum of Contemporary Art Direct Entry Tickets
4.5(48)
 
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Current exhibitions

Miao Ying

Come, Sit, Stay

In her first solo exhibition in Europe, Miao Ying draws an unusual analogy between artificial intelligence and the animal kingdom. Installations, painting, and video examine digital control, media culture, and the human desire to master new technology.

Jul 10, 2026 – Oct 4, 2026

Stellprobe

Collection acquisitions from the last decade, in a display by Heimo Zobernig

This large-scale summer exhibition brings together works acquired for the Belvedere collection over the last ten years across the ground and upper floors. A display by Heimo Zobernig stages encounters between art from different periods.

Jul 10, 2026 – Oct 4, 2026

Inclusive Sign-Language Tour: From the Collection to the Exhibition

This inclusive tour traces how recent acquisitions entered the Belvedere collection and how they are now presented in Stellprobe. An Austrian Sign Language interpreter accompanies the visit.

Jul 17, 2026 – Jul 17, 2026

With Baby at the Museum: Stellprobe

This relaxed short tour for adults with babies introduces selected works from Stellprobe in an easy-going atmosphere. The format keeps the visit compact while opening a first look at the museum's recent acquisitions.

Jul 22, 2026 – Sep 30, 2026

With Baby at the Museum: Miao Ying

This relaxed short tour for adults with babies explores selected installations, paintings, and video works from Miao Ying's exhibition. The visit offers an accessible introduction to her reflections on AI, surveillance, and digital image cultures.

Jul 30, 2026 – Sep 24, 2026

Feminist Futures Forever

Feminist Futures Forever links feminist demands, social impact, and different temporalities by bringing international, intersectional, and intergenerational positions into dialogue. Everyday-inspired rooms turn the works into intuitive models for possible futures.

Nov 5, 2026 – Mar 7, 2027

Civa - Contemporary Immersive Virtual Art

postacceleration

The sixth edition of Civa explores speed and simultaneity across digital, physical, and hybrid spaces. Alongside the exhibition, the Belvedere 21 project points to talks, screenings, and live performances shaped around contemporary immersive art.

Nov 13, 2026 – Mar 7, 2027

6 tips for visiting the Belvedere 21: Museum of Contemporary Art

1
Choose the regular ticket first
If Belvedere 21 is the only place you really want today, the standard day ticket is the smarter buy. You choose the visit day, not a fixed admission time, so the stop stays flexible and cheaper than a combo. Save the 3 in 1 ticket for a true Belvedere day.
2
Use Thursday late opening
If you want more breathing room, Thursday is the easiest lever. Belvedere 21 stays open until 9 pm, while the wider Belvedere flags 11 am to 2 pm as its busiest window. An evening visit feels looser and fits well after a palace stop or a train arrival.
3
Arrive via Quartier Belvedere
The cleanest approach is train or S-Bahn to Quartier Belvedere, then a short walk along Arsenalstraße. Tram D, 18, and O also land you there without drama. That route is much easier than drifting through the palace grounds first, especially if your energy is not infinite.
4
Pack light and use lockers
Backpacks, umbrellas, travel bags, and other bulky items need to go to the cloakroom or lockers, and large luggage cannot be stored. If you travel light from the start, entry feels quicker and the galleries stay calmer. That way you are looking at art, not managing straps.
5
Keep the Belvedere pairing to two stops
The strongest pairing is Belvedere 21 plus Belvedere, full stop. Add a third major museum and the day starts to feel like corridor mileage. Two well-chosen stops let the baroque and contemporary sides of Vienna actually register.
6
Check the free extras
The sculpture garden is free, and Blickle Kino also has free admission when there is a program on. If the timing works, you get one more contemporary-art layer without buying another ticket. It is the kind of side move that feels satisfyingly local.

Ticket types at Belvedere 21

The key decision here is simple: do you want only the contemporary venue, or are you building a bigger Belvedere day? Make that choice first, and the rest of the route becomes much easier.

Direct day ticket for a standalone stop

Choose the regular ticket when Belvedere 21 is the main reason you are here. It gives you the cleanest price and still keeps arrival easy, because you select only the day, not a fixed hour. This works especially well if you want a compact museum stop before or after the train. Book now.

3 in 1 ticket for a full Belvedere day

Choose the combo only if you truly want Belvedere, the Upper Belvedere, and the Lower Belvedere on the same date together with Belvedere 21. That format is better value than separate tickets, but it deserves a real museum day, not a rushed side quest squeezed between lunch and checkout. Book now.

Who should pick which

First-time visitors with a classic Vienna checklist often get the most from the combo, because it connects Gustav Klimt, Baroque rooms, and the modern pavilion in one sweep. Families also benefit from under-19 free entry. Repeat visitors, architecture fans, and anyone short on time are usually happier with the single-site ticket. One honest choice beats ambitious museum overbooking every time.

How to plan a Belvedere 21 visit near Quartier Belvedere

This museum works best when you treat it as a precise city stop, not an all-day endurance test. Use the transport, late opening, and nearby pairing logic to keep the route sharp.

Use Thursday for the calmest feel

Thursday is the one day when Belvedere 21 runs until 9 pm. That gives you a softer entry after the office rhythm has thinned, and it helps you avoid building your visit around the busier 11 am to 2 pm window flagged by the wider Belvedere. If your schedule is flexible, this is the elegant move.

Approach from Quartier Belvedere

The smartest arrival is usually through Quartier Belvedere via train, S-Bahn, or trams D, 18, and O, then a short walk along Arsenalstraße. It feels cleaner than circling through the palace area first, and it turns the museum into an easy add-on before check-in, after check-out, or between rail connections.

Pair it with one contrasting stop

For a balanced half-day, combine Belvedere 21 with exactly one nearby contrast: Belvedere if you want old-master Vienna, St. Charles's Church if you want a Baroque church near Karlsplatz, or Third Man Museum if you prefer something quirkier and more local. That keeps the day textured instead of museum-heavy.

Why Belvedere 21 matters in Vienna

This is not just a container for temporary shows. The building itself carries postwar architectural history, and the extra spaces around the galleries make the stop feel unusually alive.

A 1958 World's Fair pavilion in the city

What you see today began as the Austrian pavilion for the 1958 World's Fair in Brussels, designed by Karl Schwanzer. Its steel skeleton, glass walls, and clarity of form still feel fresh, which is why the building reads as more than a backdrop for art.

From 20er Haus to Belvedere 21

The structure reopened in 1962 as the Museum of the Twentieth Century, later passed to the Belvedere, and was renovated by Adolf Krischanitz before reopening in 2011 as 21er Haus. Since 2018, it has carried the name Belvedere 21. That layered identity is part of the charm, not an administrative footnote.

Contemporary Austria, not palace nostalgia

Belvedere 21 is where the institution pushes into Austrian art of the 20th and 21st centuries while bringing in international positions, performance, music, film, and talks. If you want Vienna to feel current rather than purely imperial, this is the place where the city changes tone.

The extras are better than they need to be

The free sculpture garden gives the museum air and daylight, while Blickle Kino adds film without another ticket. Finish at Lucy Bar if you want to decompress before moving on. It is a small trio of extras, but it makes the stop feel curated rather than merely efficient.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much time should I plan for Belvedere 21?

For most visitors, 60 to 90 minutes works well. Stay longer if a temporary exhibition really hooks you, or if you add the free sculpture garden and a program at Blickle Kino.
Read more.

Do I need a timeslot for Belvedere 21?

No. You choose the day of your visit, but Belvedere 21 does not use a fixed admission time. Only combo tickets tie you to an Upper Belvedere slot, and the other sites can be visited before or after it on the same day.
Read more.

What is the difference between Belvedere 21 and the main Belvedere?

The difference is mostly era and atmosphere. Belvedere 21 focuses on contemporary Austrian and international art in a postwar modernist pavilion, while Belvedere is the Baroque palace complex best known for historic collections and Gustav Klimt.
Read more.

What are the current opening hours?

Belvedere 21 is open Tuesday to Sunday from 11 am to 6 pm, and on Thursday until 9 pm. It also opens on public-holiday Mondays.
Read more.

How much do tickets cost right now?

The standard online ticket is €12, seniors 65+ and students under 26 pay €8, visitors under 19 enter free, and the 3 in 1 Day Ticket starts at €34 for adults.
Read more.

Is Belvedere 21 wheelchair accessible?

Yes. There is step-free entry, elevator access to all areas, accessible restrooms, wheelchairs at the venue, and one designated parking space for visitors with disabilities. The sculpture garden is also barrier-free.
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Can I take photos inside?

Yes, for private non-commercial use. You need to skip flash, tripods, and selfie-sticks, and any room or work marked as no-photo stays excluded.
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Is there anything free on site besides the main museum ticket?

Yes. The sculpture garden is free to access, and Blickle Kino also has free admission when there is a program scheduled. That makes Belvedere 21 better value than many visitors expect.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Belvedere 21 is open Tuesday to Sunday from 11 am to 6 pm, with Thursday late opening until 9 pm. It also opens on public-holiday Mondays. Day-specific exceptions can happen, so a quick check of the official calendar is worth it before you go.

tickets

Online prices: standard admission €12, seniors 65+ €8, students under 26 €8, visitors under 19 free, Vienna City Card holders €10.50, visitors with a Disability Card €5, and an eligible companion free.

If you want all three Belvedere sites on the same date, the 3 in 1 Day Ticket starts at €34 for adults and €27 for seniors/students. For Belvedere 21, you choose the day of your visit, not a fixed admission time.

address

Belvedere 21
Arsenalstraße 1
1030 Vienna
Austria

website

how to get there

The simplest published approach is train or S-Bahn to Quartier Belvedere, then a short walk along Arsenalstraße. Tram D, 18, and O also stop at Quartier Belvedere, and bus 69A stops at Arsenal. If you are coming straight from Belvedere, this works best as a second stop rather than as part of a rushed three-museum chain.

accessibility

Step-free entry is through automatic double swing doors, the sculpture garden is barrier-free, all areas are reachable by elevator, and accessible restrooms are available. There is one designated parking space for visitors with disabilities via Arsenalstraße 1, wheelchairs are available at the ticket office/cloakrooms, and certified service dogs listed in the Disability Card are allowed.

cloakroom

Outerwear, umbrellas, backpacks, travel bags, and larger bags should be deposited at the cloakroom or in the free lockers. Large luggage cannot be stored. If you are arriving straight from Wien Hauptbahnhof, that detail matters more than it sounds.

photography and filming

Photography and filming are allowed for private, non-commercial use without flash, tripods, or selfie-sticks, as long as the works are protected. Rooms or exhibits marked as no-photo remain off limits for the camera.
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