This University of Edinburgh short course uses the museum's decorative arts collections to examine how crafted objects reflect culture, belief, trade, technology and artistic practice.
These under-5 sessions use songs, rhymes, movement, sensory play and handling objects to introduce young children and their adults to different museum themes in a secure space.
This Friday drop-in series invites families to discover a different collection theme each week through short demonstrations, hands-on objects, stories and quick creative activities.
This immersive, family-friendly exhibition explores giant animals that lived after the dinosaurs through life-sized models, skeletons, fossils and hands-on palaeontology displays.
These relaxed sessions for people living with dementia and their supporters combine curator talks, object handling, creative activities and an informal social setting with tea and cake.
This monthly relaxed opening offers a calmer museum visit for visitors with sensory needs, neurodivergent visitors, people living with dementia and anyone who prefers reduced sound levels and staff support.
This monthly program invites children with additional support needs and their families to explore the museum through relaxed sensory play, creative activities and flexible, hands-on sessions.
This gallery-based course traces how specific colours have shaped culture, society and art, using objects from the museum's collections as case studies.
This one-day course looks at how 18th- and 19th-century Scotland was romanticised through art, literature, transport, tourism and public figures such as Queen Victoria and Walter Scott.
This drop-off club for ages 7-11 lets children explore the museum through games, activities and gallery visits inspired by the collections, with current themes ranging from kilts and clans to minerals and early people.
These reduced-capacity Curiosity Club sessions are tailored to children with additional support needs and their families, with a slower pace, a quiet space and optional gallery visits.
Paper artist Kate Colin leads this workshop inspired by Giants and the museum's fossil collections, teaching folding techniques for handcrafted sculptures based on spiral and fossil forms.
This free family day opens the 2026 Edinburgh International Children's Festival with pop-up performances and creative encounters with local artists across the museum.
This tercentenary program celebrates James Hutton with short talks, mini tours of a temporary display and hands-on geology object handling across the museum.
This after-hours tour of Giants is designed for blind and partially sighted visitors and combines audio description with tactile opportunities and extra time in the exhibition.
This members-only preview opens Scotland's First Warriors one day early, giving advance access to the exhibition's prehistoric conflict story and highlights such as the Carnoustie Hoard.
This exhibition traces the origins and impact of conflict in prehistoric Scotland through more than 250 objects, from the Neolithic to the Romans, with the Carnoustie Hoard among the key highlights.
This summer drop-in series offers family activities twice a week, with changing themes that range from Dolly the Sheep and insect week to dinosaurs, space, Egypt and birds.
This adults-only museum late brings two August nights of ceilidh dancing to the Grand Gallery, with the Jacobites Ceilidh Band, crafts, drinks, food, silent disco, karaoke and after-hours gallery access.
This Deaf-led tour of Giants explores the exhibition's giant prehistoric animals through British Sign Language, with time to continue exploring independently afterwards.
These early-morning curator tours of Scotland's First Warriors add behind-the-scenes design insight and a deeper look at the exhibition's objects and themes before regular opening hours.
This upcoming exhibition examines Scotland's relationship with the Roman world through new research, major European loans and previously unseen finds, including material from the Roman fort at Inveresk.