Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum tickets & tours | Price comparison

Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum

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In the elegant Palacio de Villahermosa on Paseo del Prado, the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum (officially Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza) gives you a vivid walk through major European painting styles in one stop.

For your first visit, start with a timed skip-the-line ticket to lock your slot and reduce queue stress, especially on weekends.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Skip-the-line tickets

Enter Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza with timed entry and spend your energy in the galleries, not in the queue.
Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza: Temporary Exhibition + Permanent Collection
4.6(7527)
 
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Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza skip-the-line tickets with audio guide
4.5(65)
 
musement.com
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Guided museum tours

Choose a guided format when you want clearer context, a curated route, and less decision fatigue at Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza.
Madrid Private Walking Tour of Thyssen and Reina Sofia Museums
5.0(1)
 
viator.com
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Prado, Thyssen-Bornemisza or Reina Sofia Museum Private Tour
5.0(4)
 
viator.com
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Private Tour: Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum with Skip-the-Line Access
5.0(2)
 
viator.com
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Thyssen Bornemisza Museum Private Guided Tour
5.0(6)
 
viator.com
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See all Guided museum tours

Art Walk and city passes

Use multi-museum products when you plan to combine Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza with the nearby Madrid art heavyweights.
Art Walk Pass: Museo del Prado + Thyssen Bornemisza + Reina Sofia Entry Tickets
4.5(5369)
 
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Private Combo Tour Prado Museum and Reina Sofia
 
viator.com
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Current exhibitions

Rauschenberg: Express. On the Move

This special display centers on Express (1963) from the Thyssen collection and reexamines Robert Rauschenberg's experimental approach across painting, performance, visual art and science. It also connects the work to the 1964 Venice Biennale, where the artist's Grand Prix helped cement his international reputation.

Feb 3, 2026 – May 24, 2026

Hammershøi

The Eye that Listens

This first retrospective in Spain devoted to Vilhelm Hammershøi brings together around 100 works and surveys the artist's quiet interiors, portraits and landscapes. It also explores themes of silence, music and Ida Ilsted's role in his creative world.

Feb 17, 2026 – May 31, 2026

Roman Khimei and Yarema Malashchuk. Pedagogies of War

This exhibition by the Ukrainian duo uses audiovisual installations to examine how war reshapes perception, daily routines and collective life before it can even be fully named. It brings together recent works and a new commission for the museum around the political, emotional and territorial ecologies of conflict.

Mar 3, 2026 – Jun 21, 2026

Ewa Juszkiewicz

This first solo museum presentation of Ewa Juszkiewicz brings together more than 20 paintings that rethink historical female portraiture. Faces disappear behind fabric, hair, fruit or vegetation, turning familiar conventions into more open and unsettling images.

May 26, 2026 – Sep 6, 2026

Carmen Laffón. Variations

This major survey follows more than six decades of Carmen Laffón's figurative work across painting, pastel, charcoal and sculpture. Organized around recurring motifs such as figures, still lifes, landscapes, baskets and salt flats, it shows how she returned to subjects through variation and serial form.

Jun 23, 2026 – Sep 27, 2026

Kenny Scharf

This exhibition presents Kenny Scharf as a key East Village artist and a pioneer of contemporary urban art alongside figures such as Basquiat, Haring and Warhol. It highlights his pop-surreal imagery, vivid color and cross-disciplinary practice in painting, sculpture, installations, murals, performance and fashion.

Sep 29, 2026 – Jan 17, 2027

Seba Calfuqueo. Cautín

This first solo exhibition in Europe by Mapuche trans artist Seba Calfuqueo centers on new commissions shaped by the Cautín River and its history of colonization, resistance and defense of Mapuche territory. The show invites visitors to imagine more reciprocal relationships between waters, humans, more-than-humans and mythic beings.

Oct 6, 2026 – Jan 17, 2027

The Freudian Universe of Dalí

This exhibition reexamines Dalí's career through his long engagement with Freud, from his early reading of psychoanalysis to the pair's 1938 meeting in London. Organized in seven sections, it follows how Freudian ideas shaped his surrealist language and later work.

Oct 20, 2026 – Jan 24, 2027

6 tips for visiting the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum

1
Book a calm morning slot
If this is your first visit to Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, pick a Tuesday-Friday slot close to 10 am. You usually move through key rooms before the late-morning wave reaches Paseo del Prado, so you can focus on the art instead of crowd management.
2
Use Monday as a free sampler
If your priority is budget, Monday 12 noon-4 pm is free for all visitors. The tradeoff is denser rooms, so use that window as a first orientation, then return on a quieter paid slot if you want a deeper second round. That way you save money and still keep quality viewing time.
3
Use Saturday night for temporary shows
On Saturdays, selected temporary exhibitions run until 11 pm, with a free access window from 9 pm-11 pm. If you prefer a later city rhythm after dinner in central Madrid, this slot can work well, but arrive early in that window to avoid a last-minute bottleneck.
4
Pick the right ticket format for your goal
If you want flexibility, choose a standard timed ticket with optional audio guide. If your priority is context, take a guided tour. If you are building a multi-museum plan, compare the Paseo del Arte option with single tickets for Prado Museum and Museo Reina Sofía, so you pay for the pace you really want.
5
Plan your energy for a 2.5-hour route
The museum's own estimate for the collection is about 2 hours 30 minutes. If you are doing a same-day combo, pick your must-see rooms first and keep the rest as optional. This avoids gallery fatigue and helps you leave with clear highlights instead of blur.
6
Set up accessibility support before arrival
If you need mobility support, call ahead and align your route before your visit. Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza provides accessible toilets, wheelchairs, induction loops, and adapted access points, and pre-planning helps you move smoothly from entrance to galleries without unnecessary detours.

How to plan a Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum stop on Paseo del Prado

This museum works best when you make a clear time and energy plan before entering.

Choose the time slot that fits your day

If you want lower pressure, target Tuesday-Friday morning slots around 10 am. If your priority is savings, Monday 12 noon-4 pm is free, but rooms are usually denser and your pace will be slower. Choosing this tradeoff in advance helps you avoid frustration once you are inside.

Build a realistic 2.5-hour route

The museum's own estimate for the collection is about 2 hours 30 minutes, which is a useful baseline for first-time visitors. If your day includes another museum, lock your must-see rooms first and keep the rest optional. This keeps your attention sharp and prevents end-of-visit overload.

Pair your stop with nearby art and park breaks

The location on Paseo del Prado makes practical pairings easy: Prado Museum and Museo Reina Sofía for a museum-heavy day, or Buen Retiro park when you need a reset between galleries. If you travel as a family, that park break often improves the rest of your schedule. You keep the day lighter without giving up major highlights.

Ticket types at Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum

Use ticket format as a planning tool, not just a price choice.

Standard and skip-the-line entry

Best for independent visitors who want control over timing. You enter Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza on your selected slot and keep freedom to move at your own pace, with optional audio-guide upgrade when you want extra context. This format is usually the cleanest choice for first-time planning. Book now.

Guided tours for deeper context

Choose this if your priority is interpretation, not just entry. Guided formats around Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza often include thematic highlights and can reduce decision fatigue, especially for first-time visitors, repeat visitors focusing on one era, and families who benefit from structured pacing. Book now.

Art Walk pass for the museum trio

Great when you plan a broader art stay in Madrid. The pass bundles Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza with Prado Museum and Museo Reina Sofía, and the one-year validity can lower schedule pressure if your itinerary is flexible. It is a practical value choice when you know you will visit all three. Book now.

History and setting of the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum

The museum experience is stronger when you connect the collection to the building and city context.

From palace history to modern museum

The current museum sits in the historic Palacio de Villahermosa, with documented roots on this site from the 1700s. A major transformation between 1989 and 1992, led by Rafael Moneo, adapted the former financial building into today's museum layout, and a further expansion followed in 2004. That layered history is one reason the visit feels both classical and contemporary.

How the Thyssen collection reached Madrid

The museum's core story is tied to the collecting path of Hans Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza. Key milestones include the 1947 inheritance phase, a major expansion drive beginning in 1961, and the 1988 loan of 775 works to the Spanish state, followed by a sale agreement five years later. Understanding this timeline helps you read the galleries as one coherent collecting vision rather than isolated rooms.

What to focus on during your first walk

If this is your first pass, do not try to absorb everything at once. Use one theme lens per stop, for example color, portrait style, or landscape mood, then switch lens in the next block of rooms. This simple method keeps your attention fresh and turns a long museum route into a sequence you can actually remember.

Frequently Asked Questions

When is the best time to avoid crowds?

For most visitors, Tuesday-Friday mornings are the easiest windows. Monday 12 noon-4 pm is free and can be busier, and Saturday evening free windows for temporary shows can also create short pressure peaks.
Read more.

How long should I plan for the visit?

A solid first visit is about 2 hours 30 minutes, which matches the museum's own collection estimate. If you are combining with Prado Museum or Museo Reina Sofía, many visitors cap this stop at about 90-120 minutes and focus on highlights.
Read more.

Is Monday entry really free?

Yes. The collection has a free Monday window from 12 noon-4 pm. In addition, selected temporary exhibitions have a free Saturday evening window from 9 pm-11 pm.
Read more.

What does a standard ticket include?

A standard ticket includes the Permanent Collection, the Carmen Thyssen Collection, and temporary exhibitions available during your visit. General admission costs €14, reduced admission €10, and the audio-guide option adds €5; groups of 7 or more pay €12 per person. The ground-floor temporary exhibition may require a timed slot and is subject to availability.
Read more.

Is the Art Walk pass worth it?

It usually makes sense if you plan to visit Prado Museum, Museo Reina Sofía, and Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza within one trip cycle. The pass costs €32.80 and allows one visit to each museum within one year.
Read more.

Can I buy tickets at the museum on the same day?

Yes, same-day purchase is available, but ticketed access is subject to availability and last admission is 30 minutes before closing. During the free Monday and Saturday windows, no ticket is required for the listed free-access areas.
Read more.

Is the museum wheelchair accessible?

Yes. The museum provides accessible access points, accessible toilets on exhibition floors, wheelchairs, and induction loops at key service points. If you need a specific route setup, contact the visitor team before arrival to save time on site.
Read more.

Is this museum a good stop with kids?

Yes, especially if you keep the route short and intentional. Visitors under 18 can enter for free, and a 60-90 minute highlights plan often works better for families than trying to cover every room in one go.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Winter schedule (September 1-June 30): Monday 12 noon-4 pm; Tuesday-Friday and Sunday 10 am-7 pm; Saturday 10 am-11 pm.
Summer schedule (July 1-August 31): Monday 12 noon-4 pm; Tuesday-Friday 10 am-9 pm; Saturday 10 am-11 pm; Sunday 10 am-7 pm. The Permanent Collection and Carmen Thyssen Collection keep 10 am-7 pm hours in summer.
Free windows: Monday 12 noon-4 pm for the Permanent Collection and level -1; Saturday 9 pm-11 pm for temporary exhibitions on the ground floor and level -1.
Last admission is 30 minutes before closing. December 24 and 31 run 10 am-3 pm; closed January 1, May 1, and December 25.

address

Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza
Paseo del Prado, 8
28014 Madrid
Spain

how to get there

Metro: line 2 to Banco de España.
Train: nearest stations are Atocha and Recoletos.
Bus: lines 1, 2, 5, 9, 10, 14, 15, 20, 27, 34, 37, 41, 51, 52, 53, 74, 146, and 150.
Bike and car: nearest BiciMAD station is no. 29 on Calle del Marqués de Cubas, and the closest parking is Parking de Las Cortes.

website

tickets

Standard admission costs €14, with reduced admission at €10 and a group rate of €12 per person for groups of 7 or more.
Add-ons and passes: audio guide +€5; ticket + café menu +€24.50; Paseo del Arte pass €32.80 for one visit within one year each to Prado Museum, Museo Reina Sofía, and Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza.
The standard ticket covers the Permanent Collection, the Carmen Thyssen Collection, and temporary exhibitions available during your visit; the ground-floor temporary exhibition may require a timed slot and is subject to availability.
Free admission applies to visitors under 18, Friends of the Museum, unemployed visitors, visitors with qualifying disabilities, and selected accredited groups; Monday 12 noon-4 pm and Saturday 9 pm-11 pm also have free-entry windows.

accessibility

Before your visit, you can request support at +34 917 911 370.
The museum provides automatic-door hall access, accessible toilets on exhibition floors, wheelchairs, induction loops at key service points, and adapted access in major public areas.
Only assistance dogs and emotional-support pets with medical documentation are admitted.
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