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Palazzo Falson

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Palazzo Falson, also known as The Norman House, is one of the most intimate ways to step inside Mdina's past: a 13th-century house on Villegaignon Street layered with armor, silver, paintings, manuscripts, and the private world of Olof Gollcher. It feels less like a formal museum and more like a noble home that never fully gave up its secrets.

For a first booking, choose a direct entry ticket, because that is the clearest fit for the current live offers and lets you fold this house-museum stop neatly into a wider Mdina and Rabat half-day.
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Direct entry tickets

Best if you want a self-paced visit inside Palazzo Falson: these products keep the focus on admission itself and make it easy to add the house to a wider Mdina or Rabat route without overplanning.
Palazzo Falson Historic House Museum entrance ticket
4.7(22)
 
getyourguide.com
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Palazzo Falson Historic House Museum entrance ticket
 
viator.com
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7 tips for visiting the Palazzo Falson

1
Make it your Mdina museum stop
If you are already exploring Mdina, make Palazzo Falson your one deeper indoor stop instead of stacking several interiors. The house adds rooms, objects, and context right in the middle of Villegaignon Street, without turning the day into a museum crawl. That way Mdina feels layered, not overloaded.
2
Go earlier, not at the last minute
If you want to enjoy the house without watching the clock, go earlier rather than drifting in at the end of the day. Palazzo Falson takes last entry at 4 pm, and an earlier slot still leaves you time for the bastions, Howard Gardens, or a walk into Rabat. So you can keep the visit relaxed from the start.
3
Travel light before entry
You will need a small-bag plan. Free lockers are available at reception, but bags should stay within 40 cm by 25 cm (15.7 by 9.8 in), and the museum cannot take large luggage or strollers. This avoids an awkward stop at the desk and keeps entry smooth.
4
Keep the rooftop perk in mind
Your museum ticket currently comes with a 10% discount at Gustav Café on the roof. If you want one slow pause after the rooms, use it there instead of immediately hunting for another stop in Mdina. That way the visit ends with a view, not another decision.
5
Check access before arrival
If full-house access matters to you, confirm the ground-floor-only setup before you go. Wheelchair access is via the side ramp in Triq is-Salvatur, but there is no lift to the upper floors or Gustav Café. Knowing that in advance keeps expectations realistic.
6
Pair it with Rabat
After Palazzo Falson, either keep drifting through Mdina or cross into Rabat for St. Paul's Catacombs. If you still want one more headline stop by car, Rotunda of Mosta is a cleaner extension than trying to cram half of central Malta into one afternoon. One measured follow-up keeps the route calm.
7
Know the child rule
If you are traveling with very young kids, check this before you walk over from Mdina Gate: children under 6 are not admitted, and children aged 6 to 12 need an adult with them. That saves you the wrong expectation at the door.

How to plan a Palazzo Falson stop in Mdina

Palazzo Falson works best as the deeper cultural stop inside Mdina, not as a separate full-day mission. Secure admission first, then decide whether the rest of your time stays within Mdina or continues into Rabat.

Choose direct entry first

Best for most visitors: start with a direct entry ticket and keep the visit self-paced. The live offer mix for this POI is currently simple, and the museum's own format already includes the audio guide, so you do not need a complicated decision tree here. If you want the cleanest route from booking to the door on Villegaignon Street, start with admission only. Book now.

Use it as the indoor counterpoint to Mdina

Use Palazzo Falson as the indoor counterpoint to the bastions and lanes of Mdina. After Mdina Gate and the cathedral quarter, the house gives you rooms, objects, and human scale instead of another full lap on stone streets. That contrast keeps the half-day varied without making it feel overplanned.

Arrive light and use the right access point

Arrive with only what you really need. Palazzo Falson has free lockers for small bags, but no cloakroom, no room for large luggage, and no easy workaround once you are at reception. Wheelchair users should also plan for the side-ramp entry in Triq is-Salvatur and the ground-floor-only accessible route.

Keep Rabat as the only follow-up

When you leave the house, choose just one next move: keep drifting through Mdina, or cross into Rabat for St. Paul's Catacombs. If you are driving and still want one more inland headline stop, Rotunda of Mosta is the cleaner extension than trying to stitch half of central Malta together. One measured follow-up keeps the day elegant instead of fragmented.

What makes Palazzo Falson feel like a lived-in house

Palazzo Falson stays memorable because it still feels like somebody's world, not a museum emptied of personality. The building, the rooms, and Olof Gollcher's collection all pull in the same direction: intimate, layered, and slightly unexpected inside Mdina's formal stone shell.

Built over older Mdina layers

The house you see today began in the early 13th century on the site of La Rocca, part of Mdina's defenses in the Arab period from 870 to 1091 AD, with earlier Roman occupation before 870 AD. Later changes after Michele de Falsone's 1524 inheritance added the second storey and the distinctive twin-light windows. That is why Palazzo Falson reads less like one frozen style and more like a compact history of the city.

The world Olof Gollcher left behind

When Olof Gollcher and his mother bought the palazzo in 1927, he gradually turned it into The Norman House and lived with his collections here until 1962. He wanted the house and objects kept together, and that wish ultimately led to the restoration that started in 2002 and the museum opening in May 2007. What you visit now is not just a building rescued from decay, but a collector's final idea carried into public life.

Look for the library and the Armoury

This is the kind of house where the library alone holds more than 4,000 books and manuscripts, while the broader collection runs across furniture, arms, armor, jewelry, rugs, silver, coins, paintings, and documents from the 15th to the 20th centuries. Instead of racing room by room, slow down in the library, the Armoury, and the more domestic spaces like the kitchen or studio. Those contrasts are what make Palazzo Falson feel inhabited rather than staged.

Who should choose this museum

History-focused visitors and repeat Malta travelers usually get the deepest payoff here, because Palazzo Falson rewards attention more than checklist tourism. Couples often like the quieter pace and the roof afterward, while families with very young children should note that under-sixes are not admitted. If you want spectacle first, start with Mdina; if you want texture and intimacy, come inside here.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I plan for Palazzo Falson?

Give it about 60 to 90 minutes if you want the rooms and the audio guide without rushing. Add a little longer only if you want a rooftop pause at Gustav Café afterward.
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Does the ticket include an audio guide?

Yes. The standard museum ticket includes an audio guide in Maltese, English, Italian, French, German, and Spanish.
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Is Palazzo Falson worth adding to a Mdina walk?

Yes, especially if you want one interior that feels personal rather than monumental. Mdina gives you walls and lanes; Palazzo Falson gives you rooms, collections, and the sense of how a private house inside the city evolved.
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Is Palazzo Falson suitable for young children?

Only partly. Children under 6 are not admitted, and children aged 6 to 12 must be accompanied by an adult.
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Is Palazzo Falson wheelchair accessible?

Partly. Entry is via the side ramp in Triq is-Salvatur, but accessible coverage is limited to the ground floor and there is no lift to the upper museum floors or Gustav Café.
Read more.

Can I take photos inside Palazzo Falson?

Yes, for personal and non-commercial use. Just leave flash, selfie sticks, tripods, and camera supports out of the plan.
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What bags can I bring into Palazzo Falson?

Think small. Free lockers are available for bags up to 40 cm by 25 cm (15.7 by 9.8 in), but there is no cloakroom and the museum cannot accommodate large luggage or strollers.
Read more.

Can I pair Palazzo Falson with Rabat on the same day?

Absolutely. The most natural pairing is a walk through Mdina plus St. Paul's Catacombs in Rabat. If you do that, keep the rest of the day light instead of turning central Malta into a checklist.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

The current published museum hours, checked on April 17, 2026, are Tuesday to Sunday from 10 am to 4 pm, with last entry at 4 pm. Palazzo Falson is closed on Good Friday, Easter Sunday, Christmas Day, and New Year's Day. After-hours visits can also be arranged for special events.

tickets

Current published museum prices, checked on April 17, 2026, are €12.50 for adults, €6 for students with valid ID, €6 for seniors, and €6 for ISIC and ICOM holders. Children aged 6 to 12 enter free with an adult, children under 6 are not admitted, and EYCA cardholders currently receive 10% off. The museum ticket includes the audio guide.

address

Palazzo Falson Historic House Museum
Villegaignon Street
Mdina MDN 1191
Malta

accessibility

Wheelchair access is via the side-door ramp in Triq is-Salvatur. Step-free access currently covers only the ground-floor spaces, including the Courtyard, Refectory, Armoury, Kitchen, and Studio, and there is no lift to the upper floors or Gustav Café. A wheelchair-accessible restroom is available on the ground floor.

website

how to get there

Palazzo Falson sits on Villegaignon Street inside Mdina. By bus, the current official advice is to get off in Rabat, walk through Howard Gardens, and enter from Mdina Gate; listed routes to Rabat include 51, 52, 53, and 56 from Valletta, 214 and Airport 1 Direct from the airport, 202 from Sliema, 186 from Buġibba, and 181 and 182 from University/Mater Dei. If you drive, park outside Mdina's gates or near the Roman Domus; parking inside the city is prohibited.

cloakroom

There is no cloakroom at Palazzo Falson. If you arrive with anything bulkier than a small day bag, sort storage before you reach Villegaignon Street.

lockers

Free lockers are available at reception for smaller personal bags. The published size limit is 40 cm by 25 cm (15.7 by 9.8 in).

luggage

Large bags, suitcases, strollers, bicycles, scooters, roller blades, and skateboards are not accommodated inside the museum or Gustav Café. This is one of the most important rules to plan around before you walk up from Rabat.

photography and filming

Personal, non-commercial photography is allowed in the museum and at Gustav Café. Flash, selfie sticks, tripods, and camera supports are not permitted.
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