Arsenal Football Club Museum tickets & tours | Price comparison

Arsenal Football Club Museum

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Arsenal Football Club Museum, usually called Arsenal Museum, turns a stop at Emirates Stadium into a compact walk through the club's Woolwich, Highbury, and modern north-London eras, with Invincibles memorabilia, famous match-day relics, and video highlights that carry real weight for football fans.

For a first visit, choose a self-guided Emirates Stadium tour ticket with audio guide and museum entry, because it gives you the full club story in one booking and is usually the best value.
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Stadium tour tickets with audio guide

Best for first-time visitors: book a self-guided Emirates Stadium tour with audio guide, then continue into Arsenal Museum for the club's key objects, shirts, and milestone moments.
London: Emirates Stadium Entry Ticket and Audio Guide
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6 tips for visiting the Arsenal Football Club Museum

1
Arrive early at the Armoury
If you booked a time-specific tour, be at the ticket desk inside the Armoury Store 15 minutes before your slot. That small buffer matters more than it sounds, because late arrivals can lose their place before the route even begins.
2
Pick dated or flexi on purpose
If your day is fixed, a dated ticket is the cleaner choice; if your north-London plans may move, a flexi ticket keeps the visit usable for three months. Picking the right format upfront lowers decision stress and makes the museum easier to fit around the rest of your day.
3
Do the museum early on matchdays
If you are coming on a home-match day, go through Arsenal Museum early instead of saving it for later. The museum runs from 10 am until 30 minutes before kickoff, so an early loop avoids the last-minute squeeze.
4
Pack for a stadium, not a suitcase
There is no luggage storage for big bags, and suitcase-sized items are refused. Pack like you are heading into a football venue, not an airport transfer, so you do not lose time solving bag problems at the door.
5
Go straight to the hero objects
If you only have 20 to 30 minutes, make a beeline for Jens Lehmann's gloves from the 2003/4 Invincibles season, Michael Thomas' boots from Anfield '89, and Charlie George's 1971 FA Cup Final shirt. Those three displays give you the fastest emotional read on why this museum matters.
6
Keep your second stop nearby
If you want one easy second stop, continue to Camden Market for food and people-watching, or head up to Primrose Hill for a slower skyline finish. If you are traveling with children, London Zoo fits this north-London arc without turning the day into a cross-city sprint.

How to plan an Arsenal Museum visit at Emirates Stadium

This is an easy football stop to overcomplicate. The smooth version is simple: pick the right ticket format, start in the right place, and keep the rest of the day on the same north-London rhythm.

Choose the full stadium tour first

For most first-time visitors, the combined self-guided stadium tour and museum ticket is the right starting point. You get the walk through Emirates Stadium, the audio guide, and the museum in one booking, so the trophies and relics have more emotional weight by the time you reach them. Choose museum-only entry only if you are very short on time or already know the stadium well. Book now.

Your route begins in the Armoury Store

The practical start point is the Stadium Tour desk inside the Armoury Store, not the museum door. If your booking carries a fixed time, treat the 15-minute early-arrival buffer as real rather than optional. That short cushion keeps the visit calm and stops a good plan from unraveling before the route even starts.

Matchdays need a slightly earlier rhythm

On home-match days, the museum still works well, but it rewards an earlier visit. It opens from 10 am and closes 30 minutes before kickoff, while stadium events can also change tour routes. In practice, an early visit is the safer way to keep the day flexible.

Keep the rest of the day in north London

This stop pairs best with nearby places that do not force a cross-city reset. Camden Market works if you want food and energy after the stadium, while Primrose Hill gives you a slower scenic finish. Families can stretch the day with London Zoo without losing the neighborhood logic.

History of Arsenal Museum and the club it remembers

The museum lands because Arsenal is not a one-stadium story. In a relatively small space, it carries south-London origins, the Highbury decades, and the modern Emirates Stadium era at the same time.

1886: a south-of-the-river beginning

The club began in 1886 south of the Thames, first as Dial Square. That matters when you step into the museum, because the story on display is larger than modern matchday branding: it starts in Woolwich, long before north London became the club's permanent identity.

1913: Highbury changes everything

The final game at the Manor Ground came on April 26, 1913, and the first at Highbury followed on September 6, 1913, with a 2-1 win over Leicester Fosse. Those dates are the hinge of the whole collection, because they explain why Highbury nostalgia still carries so much weight in Arsenal culture.

2006: Emirates Stadium becomes the new home

In May 2006, Arsenal moved from Highbury to Emirates Stadium. The museum makes that transition feel continuous rather than abrupt, connecting the modern arena to older shirts, boots, photographs, and title memories that supporters still read as the club's true spine.

Three home eras in one compact visit

One of the museum's strengths is scale: you can move from Woolwich roots to Highbury mythology and then into the Emirates Stadium era in about 30 minutes. That compact structure works especially well for first-time visitors who want the narrative without giving up half a day.

What to look for inside Arsenal Museum

This is not a giant football museum, which is exactly why it works. The strongest objects are easy to find, the video rooms help bridge the eras, and you can come away with a real sense of the club even on a tight schedule.

Start with the Invincibles relics

If one season defines modern Arsenal mythology, it is 2003/4. Jens Lehmann's gloves from the Invincibles run give the museum an immediate emotional charge, especially if you want one object that anchors the club's modern peak.

Do not skip Anfield '89 or 1971

Two other signature objects hit fast: Michael Thomas' boots from Anfield '89 and Charlie George's shirt from the 1971 FA Cup Final. Together they pull the visit away from generic club history and into very specific, replay-in-your-head football moments.

Use the video theaters to connect the decades

The two video theaters divide the story into 1886 to 1949 and 1950 to the present day. If you are visiting with someone who knows the badge but not the timeline, those short films are the quickest way to stitch the rooms together.

A good stop for first-timers, kids, and repeat fans

First-time visitors get the club story without a long learning curve, children benefit from the short dwell time, and repeat supporters can zero in on favorite eras instead of reading every label. That flexibility is why the museum works better than its size suggests.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to book a date and time for Arsenal Museum?

You have two main options. A dated self-guided ticket is valid any time on the day you choose, while a flexi ticket stays valid for three months and does not need a prebooked date. If your travel plan is still moving, flexi is easier to live with.
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Can I visit only the museum?

Yes. Museum-only tickets are sold at the entrance. Published July 2025 prices are £10 for adults, £8 for concessions, and £7 for children.
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How much time should I plan for the visit?

The average stadium tour lasts about 1 hour, and the museum adds about 30 minutes. Once you leave the stadium or museum, re-entry is not available.
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Where does the stadium tour start?

Start at the Stadium Tour ticket desk inside the Armoury Store. If your booking has a specific time, arrive 15 minutes early so the visit starts smoothly.
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Is Arsenal Museum accessible, and can I bring a stroller?

Yes. All levels are reachable by elevator, and pushchairs/buggies are allowed on the route. Keep the buggy with you throughout the visit, because it cannot be left unattended.
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Can I bring luggage or professional camera gear?

Large bags and suitcases are not accepted, and there is no luggage storage. Professional cameras and recording equipment are also not allowed, so travel light.
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Is the museum worth it without the stadium tour?

If you already know Arsenal well or only have a short time window, the museum-only option can work. For most first-time visitors, the better pick is the combined stadium tour and museum ticket, because the objects land harder once you have walked through the ground.
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What can I pair with Arsenal Museum nearby?

For a relaxed north-London half day, pair the museum with Camden Market or Primrose Hill. If you are traveling with children, London Zoo is the stronger follow-up, and if you are routing through King's Cross, Platform Nine and Three Quarters is an easy extra stop before or after.
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General information

opening hours

Stadium tours run daily year-round, except Christmas Day. The usual public timetable is Monday to Friday 9:30 am to 5 pm (last entry 4 pm), Saturday 9:30 am to 6 pm (last entry 5 pm), and Sunday 10 am to 4 pm (last entry 3 pm). Matchdays and other stadium events can change the route or access, and the museum also opens on matchdays from 10 am until 30 minutes before kickoff.

tickets

The main choice is between dated self-guided stadium-tour tickets and flexi tickets. Dated tickets are valid any time on the selected day, while flexi tickets stay usable for three months if your plans may shift. Museum-only tickets are sold at the entrance and, as of July 2025, cost £10 for adults, £8 for concessions, and £7 for children; museum entry is already included in stadium-tour tickets.

address

Arsenal Museum
Emirates Stadium
Opposite Turnstile E, next to Ken Friar Bridge
Hornsey Road
London N7 7AJ
United Kingdom

how to get there

The easiest Tube stops are Arsenal and Holloway Road on the Piccadilly line, both within a short walk of Emirates Stadium. Finsbury Park is also practical if you are connecting from National Rail. General parking is not available, so public transport is the simplest way to keep this stop low-stress.

accessibility

All levels on the route are reachable by elevator. Visitors with a registered disability can use concession pricing and bring one carer free of charge. If you need Blue Badge parking, it has to be prebooked at least 72 hours ahead on 020 7619 5000, option 2.

luggage

There is no facility to leave luggage or large bags. Suitcases and other oversized items are not accepted on the stadium tour route or in the museum. A small day bag is the safest choice.

photography and filming

Professional cameras and recording equipment are not allowed in the stadium or museum. Plan for a phone or small-camera visit rather than full filming gear.
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