Schokoladen-Kontor & Schokoladenmuseum tickets & tours | Price comparison

Schokoladen-Kontor & Schokoladenmuseum

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CAMONDAS Schokoladenmuseum Dresden, also known as the Schokoladen-Kontor & Schokoladenmuseum, sits opposite Dresden Castle on Schloßstraße and turns Dresden's sweet past into something you can actually taste. Courtly drinking chocolate, the molds of Anton Reiche, and a small tasting card give this compact stop much more personality than its size suggests.

Start with the guided Old Town combo if you want the strongest first visit, because the walk gives the Baroque backdrop first and makes the museum tasting feel like a well-earned payoff.
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Guided Old Town combos with museum tasting

Best for first-time visitors who want more than a sugar stop: the current bookable products pair a guided walk through Dresden Old Town with museum entry and tasting, so you get city context and chocolate history in one clean block.
Dresden: Guided Walking Tour and Chocolate Museum Ticket
4.5(521)
 
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7 tips for visiting the Schokoladen-Kontor & Schokoladenmuseum

1
Choose museum-only or combo first
If you mainly want the tasting and the chocolate story, go straight for the museum. If you want the sweeter version of a first walk through Dresden, take the guided city combo instead. Making that choice early keeps you from booking too much walking or too little context.
2
Do not leave it too late
The museum closes at 6:00 pm and last entry is 5:15 pm, so this is not the stop to squeeze in after a long Baroque marathon. In late afternoon, especially if you still want to taste slowly or browse the shop, you will feel the clock. Arriving earlier keeps the visit sweet instead of rushed.
3
Check the live calendar first
Regular visits do not need a reservation, but scheduled tastings and private events can close museum access for parts of the day. If you are planning a spontaneous stop between Zwinger and Dresden Frauenkirche, do a quick calendar check first. That saves you the most annoying kind of Old Town detour.
4
Save room for the tasting
A tasting sample is part of the museum visit, and the lesson only really lands if you do not sprint through it. If you already had cake or a heavy lunch nearby, give yourself a short pause before you go in. Your palate will notice the difference, and the visit makes more sense.
5
Use museum-only for younger kids
Families with younger children usually do better with the museum on its own, because the kids' quiz and chocolate reward give them a clear indoor mission. The guided city-walk combo works better once children are happy with a longer pace through the center. Matching the format to attention span keeps everyone in a decent mood.
6
Mind the one small step
Published accessibility notes describe easy movement once inside, but the route into the museum goes through the shop and includes one small step. If limited mobility matters for your visit, check ahead instead of assuming fully step-free entry. That way the entrance does not become the only thing you remember.
7
Pair it with one heavyweight sight
This works best as one flavorful layer inside the Old Town, not as a six-stop sprint. Add Dresden Castle or New Green Vault if you want royal context, or finish near Dresden Frauenkirche if you want a softer skyline moment afterward. One clear pairing keeps the day vivid, not blurry.

How to fit the CAMONDAS chocolate museum into a Dresden Old Town day

CAMONDAS Schokoladenmuseum Dresden works best as a concentrated Old Town layer between heavier Baroque sights. Pick the format first, watch the closing window, and pair it with just one nearby heavyweight.

Choose standalone museum or city combo

Best for first-time visitors who want orientation: the guided Old Town combo is the strongest paid format on this page, because it gives you Dresden's streets, stories, and chocolate tasting in one move. Choose the museum on its own if your priority is a compact indoor stop opposite Dresden Castle; choose the combo if you want the city explained before the sweets. It is the cleaner choice on a short first trip. Book now.

Do not save it for the very end

Great when you want a calmer visit: go before the late-afternoon crunch instead of gambling on the 5:15 pm last-entry line. The museum is compact, but the tasting, the shelves, and the easy drift into the nearby Kakaostube make this a place that benefits from unhurried time. Earlier in the day, you notice the story; later, you mostly notice the clock.

Build one smart pairing around it

If you are a first-timer, pair it with Dresden Castle or Zwinger for a royal and museum-heavy block. If you want a lighter emotional finish, drift east toward Dresden Frauenkirche after the tasting instead. One nearby add-on is enough, and that restraint keeps the stop from dissolving into generic center hopping.

Use it as a palate reset

After galleries, church interiors, or long stone courtyards, this stop lands differently because it is sensory rather than monumental. The tasting card, the smell of cocoa, and the option to continue into the nearby Kakaostube give couples, repeat visitors, and anyone museum-tired a softer rhythm. That small shift is exactly why the stop feels memorable.

Why Dresden and chocolate belong together

The museum is small, but the backstory is not. In a few rooms on Schloßstraße, it ties court fashion, industrial invention, tin molds, and tasting into a surprisingly local Dresden story.

From court drink to city obsession

Chocolate reached Dresden in the 18th century, when August the Strong brought drinking chocolate back from France. That courtly beginning matters because it explains why the museum feels at home opposite the old royal complex instead of tucked away in an industrial suburb. You are tasting a story that started as luxury, not candy.

The 1839 milk chocolate twist

One of the sharpest local claims is that the company Jordan & Timaeus created the first milk chocolate in Dresden in 1839. It is a slightly odd, very memorable detail, and exactly the kind of fact that makes the city feel less like a generic Baroque backdrop. For history-focused visitors, this is the sentence that makes the stop click.

Anton Reiche's molds steal the show

The strongest visual anchor inside is the mold collection of Anton Reiche, which turns chocolate history into something physical and strangely playful. Tiny chicks, shoes, dogs, and larger seasonal figures keep the room from feeling like a text-panel exercise. Families notice the whimsy first, while repeat visitors usually notice the industrial skill behind it.

Tasting is part of the argument

This is not a museum where the food theme stays theoretical. A tasting sample is built into the visit, and the goal is to train your senses to notice texture, aroma, and ingredient quality instead of thinking only in terms of sweetness. That practical ending is why the stop feels finished rather than decorative.

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly is CAMONDAS Schokoladenmuseum Dresden?

It is not a giant standalone institution. Opposite Dresden Castle, it combines a compact museum, a chocolate trading-post shop, and the nearby Kakaostube, so the stop feels more like a small chocolate world in Dresden than a single room of display cases.
Read more.

What is included in a regular museum ticket?

A regular ticket covers the self-guided museum visit and a tasting sample. Public tastings and other guided formats are separate, while the current TicketLens products on this page combine the museum with a guided Old Town walk.
Read more.

Do I need to book in advance?

Not for a standard museum visit, because regular daily entry is available without advance booking. Still, it is smart to check the live calendar first, since scheduled tastings and private events can temporarily block access. For the guided Old Town combo, booking ahead is the cleaner move.
Read more.

How much time should I plan?

The current city-walk combo runs about 90 minutes. For a museum-only visit, treat it as a compact Old Town stop with enough margin for tasting and browsing instead of as a one-minute pop-in, especially if you do not want to arrive close to the 5:15 pm last-entry cutoff.
Read more.

Is it good for children?

Yes. The museum advertises a kids' quiz with a chocolate reward, which gives younger visitors something concrete to do indoors. For many families, the museum on its own works better than the longer city-walk combo, because the pacing is easier to manage.
Read more.

Is it wheelchair accessible?

Partly, but do not assume fully step-free entry. The most detailed published access notes say the museum route goes through the shop and includes one small step, even though movement once inside is usually described as easy. If access details matter for your day, confirm the current setup before you go.
Read more.

What is the best paid format on this page?

Right now, the clearest paid option is the guided Old Town combo with museum entry and tasting. It makes the most sense for first-time visitors who want chocolate history without isolating it from the surrounding story of Dresden.
Read more.

What should I combine with it nearby?

For a royal-history block, pair it with Dresden Castle or New Green Vault. If you want a more open-air second act, continue toward Zwinger or finish near Dresden Frauenkirche. One nearby heavyweight is enough.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

CAMONDAS Schokoladenmuseum Dresden is open daily from 11:00 am to 6:00 pm, with last entry at 5:15 pm.
Regular museum visits do not need advance booking, but scheduled tastings and private events can block public entry for parts of the day.
Check the live calendar shortly before you go, especially if you are planning a late-afternoon stop.

tickets

Standalone museum entry costs €6.50 for adults, €5.50 reduced, and €5.50 for children ages 7 to 14; children up to age 6 enter free.
Family tickets are €18 for 2 adults plus up to 3 children, or €14 for 1 adult plus up to 3 children.
The mapped bookable products on this page are broader guided Old Town combos with museum tasting rather than plain entry-only tickets.

address

CAMONDAS Schokoladenmuseum Dresden
Schloßstraße 22
01067 Dresden
Germany

website

how to get there

The museum sits on Schloßstraße, directly opposite Dresden Castle in the pedestrian core of Dresden Old Town.
If you are already visiting Zwinger, New Green Vault, Semperoper, or Dresden Frauenkirche, you are close enough to treat it as an easy walk-on stop.
The simplest transport strategy is to get into the center first and finish the last stretch on foot.

accessibility

The most detailed published accessibility notes describe easy movement once inside, but the route into the museum goes through the shop and includes one small step.
That means the setup is not fully step-free, even though the visit itself is usually manageable once you are in.
If limited mobility is important for your day, confirm the current entrance setup before you go.
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