Sigmund Freud Museum tickets & tours | Price comparison

Sigmund Freud Museum

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Sigmund Freud Museum at Berggasse 19 is one of Vienna's most intellectually charged addresses: Sigmund Freud lived and worked here for 47 years, the original room structure still survives, and even the missing couch has become part of the experience. It feels intimate, serious, and very different from a grand boulevard museum.

For most first visits, start with a standard entry ticket, because it lets you move through the rooms at your own pace and costs less than a guided add-on.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Entry tickets

Choose this if Sigmund Freud Museum itself is the point of the stop and you want flexible pacing through Freud's rooms, the practice spaces, and the house history.
Entry Tickets to Sigmund Freud Museum
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Sigmund Freud Museum: Entry Ticket
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Admission to the Sigmund Freud Museum
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Skip-the-line entrance tickets Sigmund Freud museum Vienna
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Guided museum tours

Choose this if you want Berggasse 19 explained as a connected story and prefer expert context over reading every panel on your own.
Sigmund Freud Museum Guided Tour on Sundays with Skip-the-Line Entry
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Sigmund Freud Museum Guided Tour
 
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Guided tour Sigmund Freud Museum Vienna
 
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Sigmund Freud Museum private Tour
 
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6 tips for visiting the Sigmund Freud Museum

1
Arrive close to opening
If you want the rooms to feel calmer, go close to opening instead of drifting in around early afternoon. Weekend guided tours and later arrivals can compress the route inside a relatively intimate historic building, especially around narrower passages. An earlier start gives you more breathing room, so the house feels reflective instead of crowded.
2
Choose self-guided or guided first
If you already know the Freud basics, a normal entry ticket is usually enough and lets you slow down where the rooms hit hardest. If psychoanalysis is new to you, or you want the house history threaded together without extra effort, the guided format earns its price more clearly. Decide before you arrive, and the museum will feel focused from the first room.
3
Charge your phone before Berggasse 19
A charged phone is genuinely useful here. Exhibition texts can be opened by QR code in several languages, including Italian, and the on-site AR installation digitally brings Freud's missing couch back into the room. That small prep step gives you more context with almost no extra effort.
4
Give the museum at least an hour
The official recommendation starts at 60 minutes, and that is a realistic minimum rather than an ambitious upper limit. If you enjoy biography, architecture, or slower reading, 90 minutes feels much better in practice. Giving the stop enough time keeps the emotional and historical weight from turning into a rushed checklist.
5
Travel light for the cloakroom
Backpacks and large bags should go to the cloakroom during the visit, and full luggage needs separate nearby storage. If you are moving through Vienna between hotel check-out and your train, solve that before you ring the bell at Berggasse 19. It keeps entry smoother and your museum time calmer.
6
Build a smart nearby continuation
If you want Ringstrasse scale after the intimacy of Freud's rooms, continue to Rathaus. If you want the memory-and-history thread to stay sharper, pair the museum with Judenplatz Holocaust Memorial and then Jewish Museum Vienna; for a larger imperial-center finish, roll onward to Hofburg Palace. That way the day feels curated instead of random.

Ticket types at Sigmund Freud Museum

Current mapped offers split cleanly between straightforward entry tickets and guided visits. The better choice depends on whether you want flexible pacing in Berggasse 19 or someone to thread Freud, the rooms, and the wider Vienna context together for you.

Entry tickets for Berggasse 19

Best for flexibility and value: straightforward entry tickets let you move quietly through Freud's rooms, the practice spaces, and the house-history material at your own pace. Choose this if you already know the basics, want time for the QR-based multilingual texts, or simply prefer a slower museum rhythm in Alsergrund. It is the cleanest first-buy option for most visitors. Book now.

Guided tours when context matters

Best for first-time visitors or anyone who wants context fast: guided tours turn the visit into a more connected story about Sigmund Freud, his family, psychoanalysis, and the house itself. Current mapped supply includes guided formats, and the museum's public English schedule shows regular weekend tours, so this works especially well when you want interpretation without doing all the reading yourself. Pay more, get more framing, and book now.

Which Sigmund Freud Museum format fits your day

Best when the museum is one chapter of a larger central-Vienna route: a regular entry ticket pairs neatly with Rathaus on the Ring or a memory-and-history sequence via Judenplatz Holocaust Memorial and Jewish Museum Vienna. If Sigmund Freud Museum is the emotional anchor of the day, the guided format usually earns its price more clearly; if it is a smart 60 to 90 minute stop, standard entry keeps the route lighter. Match the format to the day, then book now.

Why Berggasse 19 matters

What makes this museum strong is not spectacle but physical truth. In Berggasse 19, the address, the rooms, and the absences all carry part of the story.

The address where psychoanalysis took shape

In Alsergrund, this is the apartment building where Sigmund Freud lived and worked from 1891 to 1938, wrote key texts, and hosted the Wednesday Psychological Society in his waiting room. That matters because you are not walking through a symbolic tribute but through the actual rooms where modern psychoanalysis gained a public address. Ideas rarely keep their original walls; here, they still do.

What you see after the 2020 relaunch

The 2020 reopening nearly doubled the exhibition area to about 550 m² (5,920 ft²) and, for the first time since the museum's 1971 founding, opened all of the family's private rooms to visitors. You also move through the practices of Sigmund and Anna Freud, house-history material, and conceptual-art presentations, so the route feels layered rather than shrine-like. It is especially rewarding if you like museums that explain context as much as objects.

The missing couch, and why it still matters

The famous couch is not in Vienna because Freud took it to London when he fled in 1938, but that absence becomes part of the visit rather than a disappointment. An AR installation lets you call the couch back into the room digitally, while the museum also confronts what happened in Berggasse 19 under Nazi persecution and after Freud's forced departure. The result is more honest, and often more affecting, than a room full of replicas.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much time should I plan for the visit?

The museum itself recommends at least 60 minutes, and for most visitors 60 to 90 minutes is the practical sweet spot. Add more time if you book a guided format or linger with the house-history sections.
Read more.

Is the original couch still in Vienna?

No. Sigmund Freud took the famous couch to London when he fled in 1938. The museum turns that absence into part of the story, and an AR installation lets you bring the couch back digitally on site.
Read more.

Do I need a guided tour?

Not necessarily. A standard ticket works well if you like moving at your own pace, while guided tours make more sense when you want Freud, the rooms, and the Vienna context stitched together quickly. Current public English tours are listed on the museum schedule, usually on weekends.
Read more.

Can I follow the exhibition in Italian or other languages without a guide?

Yes. Exhibition texts can be opened on your smartphone by QR code, and the museum currently lists Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Turkish, and Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian alongside the regular core languages. A charged phone makes a real difference here.
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Is the museum accessible for wheelchair users?

Mostly yes. The main route is wheelchair-accessible, there is a step-free entrance via the café/shop, an elevator, and an accessible toilet. The new staircase and gallery are the main areas that remain inaccessible.
Read more.

Can I bring large bags or suitcases inside?

Large bags should go to the cloakroom, and full luggage needs separate nearby storage. If you are between hotel checkout and your train, handle that before entry so the visit starts smoothly.
Read more.

What nearby places pair well with this visit?

For Ringstrasse architecture, continue to Rathaus. For a sharper memory-and-history line, pair the museum with Judenplatz Holocaust Memorial and Jewish Museum Vienna. If you want a larger imperial-center continuation, Hofburg Palace fits naturally.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Current official hours checked on April 8, 2026:
- April 1-13, 2026: daily 10 am to 6 pm
- From April 15, 2026: Wednesday-Monday 10 am to 6 pm, Tuesday closed

Last admission is 30 minutes before closing, and the museum recommends at least 60 minutes for the visit.

tickets

Current published prices checked on April 8, 2026:
- Regular: EUR 16
- Discounted: EUR 12
- Students under 27: EUR 10
- Pupils under 18: EUR 5.50
- Children under 12: free
- Combined admission with Leopold Museum: EUR 30

Online tickets are date-based, and prices can change.

website

address

Sigmund Freud Museum
Berggasse 19
1090 Vienna
Austria

how to get there

For most visitors, U2 to Schottentor is the cleanest default; U4 to Roßauer Lände also works well if you are coming along the canal. Tram D stops at Schlickgasse, trams 37/38/40/41/42 at Schwarzspanierstraße, and bus 40A at Berggasse.

accessibility

The main museum route is wheelchair-accessible, with a step-free alternative entrance via the café/shop, an elevator, and an accessible toilet. Guide dogs are allowed, and tours in sign language or for visitors with visual impairments can be arranged on request. The new staircase and gallery are the main exceptions.

cloakroom

Backpacks and large bags should go to the cloakroom during the visit. If you need full luggage storage, the museum lists a discounted nearby partner service. Solving that before entry makes the small historic rooms much easier to enjoy.
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