National Museum of Natural History tickets & tours | Price comparison

National Museum of Natural History

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National Museum of Natural History, often called the Smithsonian Natural History Museum or NMNH, anchors the National Mall with dinosaur fossils, the Hope Diamond, and one of the world’s largest natural-history collections in the heart of Washington, DC.

Start with a small-group guided tour, or choose a Natural History plus American History combo if you want expert context, smoother routing, and less decision fatigue on a busy Mall day.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Museum combo guided tours

Choose this format if you want Natural History highlights plus a second Smithsonian museum in one guided route, usually with stronger pacing and fewer planning decisions.
Smithsonian Natural History Museum Tour Semi-Private 8ppl
4.8(34)
 
getyourguide.com
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Smithsonian Natural History + Museum of American History 8pp
5.0(5)
 
getyourguide.com
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Smithsonian Natural History + American History - Exclusive Tour
4.9(23)
 
viator.com
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Smithsonian Natural History + Museum of American History 8ppl Max
5.0(34)
 
viator.com
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Natural history guided tours

Pick these tours if your priority is a focused visit to the museum’s flagship halls with expert storytelling and a compact on-site route.
Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History Guided Tour
4.0(155)
 
getyourguide.com
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Smithsonian Museum of Natural History Guided Tour
3.4(28)
 
viator.com
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Washington DC Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History tickets and guided tour
4.0(2)
 
musement.com
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6 tips for visiting the National Museum of Natural History

1
Book guided slots for peak days
If your date is fixed, reserve your guided format early, especially for weekends and school-break periods around the National Mall. You get better start-time choice and avoid last-minute compromises. That way your day begins with a clear plan, not a scramble.
2
Set your first-hall route in advance
Before you enter, pick your first two anchors: many visitors start with the Rotunda and Henry, then move to Hall of Fossils - Deep Time or Gems and Minerals. If you decide this in advance, you avoid zig-zag walking in the first busy hour. Your energy goes into exhibits, not navigation.
3
Use quieter weekday windows
If your schedule is flexible, target Monday to Wednesday mornings, when queue pressure is usually lower than weekend late mornings. On weeks with listed Friday evening extension, that later window can also feel calmer. This simple timing choice reduces waiting and keeps your pace steady.
4
Match the tour to your intent
If you want depth in one place, pick a museum-only guided tour at National Museum of Natural History. If your priority is variety in one booking, choose a combo route that also covers the nearby National Museum of American History. Picking by intent saves decision fatigue once you are on site.
5
Pair one nearby anchor only
For a realistic day, add just one nearby TicketLens stop: National Air and Space Museum for flight-and-space highlights, National Museum of African American History and Culture for social-history depth, or Lincoln Memorial for open-air monument views. One add-on is usually enough. You avoid rushed transfers and keep the day enjoyable.
6
Plan one reset break
Large galleries can quietly drain focus, especially with kids or after long travel mornings. Plan one short reset after your second major hall, then continue with one final highlight block. This micro-hack keeps mood high and prevents the classic museum crash late in the visit.

How to plan a National Museum of Natural History stop on a National Mall day

A smooth visit starts with one decision: choose your tour format first, then build the rest of the day around that anchor.

Choose between a focused or combo tour

If you want a tight museum-only experience, choose a guided format centered on National Museum of Natural History. If your priority is variety, pick a combo that also includes the nearby National Museum of American History in one guided flow. You spend less time deciding on site and more time with standout collections. Book now.

Time your arrival for shorter queues

Weekday mornings, especially Monday to Wednesday, are usually less compressed than weekend late mornings. When Friday evening extension is listed, that later window can also be a smart choice. Pick one clear entry target and pass screening once, so your rhythm inside the halls stays calm.

Build one practical nearby pairing

After natural history, add one nearby stop that matches your interest: National Air and Space Museum for aviation and space, National Museum of African American History and Culture for social-history context, or Lincoln Memorial for monument views in late light. One add-on is usually enough for a full Mall day. This keeps walking realistic and avoids route fatigue.

Use a two-zone plan with children

If you are visiting with children, run two key halls before lunch, then reset. A practical pattern is Rotunda plus Hall of Fossils - Deep Time, then Ocean Hall later. This avoids trying to do every floor at once, so the day feels exciting instead of exhausting.

Inside the museum: must-see anchors and flow

The building is large, so a strong first-visit flow matters more than trying to see everything in one pass.

Start in the Rotunda with Henry

Begin in the Rotunda to orient yourself under Henry, the African bush elephant that has stood here since 1959. It is the museum’s signature welcome moment and a quick way to set direction before crowds thicken in deeper halls.

Prioritize fossils while focus is high

Move early to Hall of Fossils - Deep Time, which reopened on June 8, 2019 after a long renovation that began with closure in 2014. The narrative is dense and rewards fresh focus, so it works best before museum fatigue starts.

Use the Hope Diamond as your mid-visit anchor

After fossils, the Hope Diamond in Gems and Minerals gives you a high-impact midpoint without adding extra walking distance across the entire building. If your energy dips, this is the easiest place to reset motivation and continue smoothly.

Finish with a living-world hall

Close with one living-systems hall such as Ocean Hall so your final stretch feels immersive instead of purely informational. This order gives your visit an emotional finish and makes the day easier to remember.

History of the National Museum of Natural History

The museum you see today is the result of more than a century of growth, expansion, and major gallery reinvestment.

1846 to 1910: from Smithsonian roots to opening day

The collection roots trace back to early Smithsonian development after 1846, and the dedicated natural-history building opened to the public in 1910. That long build-up explains why the museum combines scientific depth with broad public storytelling from the start.

1911 to 1963: completion and expansion

Construction completion came in 1911, and the museum later expanded with major funding approved in 1960 and west-wing opening in 1963. In practice, that phased growth is why today’s footprint supports both blockbuster halls and quieter specialist galleries.

2014 to 2019: fossil hall renewal

The fossil hall closed in 2014 for a full rethink and reopened on June 8, 2019 as Hall of Fossils - Deep Time. This is not just a cosmetic refresh: it reframed evolution, extinction, and climate context for modern visitors.

Why collection scale matters for your route

With a collection exceeding 148 million objects, this museum rewards selection, not completion. If you frame your visit around two or three non-negotiable halls, you leave with stronger memories and less fatigue. That is the key to enjoying a giant institution in one day.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the museum free, and do I need a timed-entry pass?

General admission to National Museum of Natural History is free, and current guidance indicates that an entry pass is not required for standard museum access. Some special experiences can run on separate ticketing, so check same-day details before arrival.
Read more.

When is the best time to visit with fewer lines?

For most visitors, Monday to Wednesday mornings are the calmest windows. Weekend late mornings are usually busier. If Friday extended evening hours are listed, that later slot can also reduce pressure at entry.
Read more.

How long should I plan for the visit?

Plan 2 hours for a highlights run, or 3 to 4 hours for a fuller museum visit. Guided combo formats that also include National Museum of American History can stretch to about 5 to 6 hours.
Read more.

What should first-time visitors prioritize?

A strong first route is Rotunda with Henry, then Hall of Fossils - Deep Time, then Gems and Minerals for the Hope Diamond. If you still have energy, finish with Ocean Hall. This sequence gives you iconic moments without excessive backtracking.
Read more.

Is the museum wheelchair and stroller friendly?

Yes. Accessible entrances and elevators are available, and free manual wheelchairs are offered first-come, first-served. If standing in long lines is difficult, plan your arrival window carefully so entry is smoother.
Read more.

Can I take photos and videos inside?

Personal photo and video use is generally allowed unless a gallery posts a specific restriction. Use handheld devices only: tripods, monopods, and selfie sticks are not permitted.
Read more.

Which Metro stops are most practical?

The most practical rail anchors are Federal Triangle, Archives-Navy Memorial-Penn Quarter, and Metro Center. If you want the shortest walk, Federal Triangle is often the easiest starting point.
Read more.

Which nearby TicketLens POIs pair best with this visit?

For a science-focused pairing, combine with National Air and Space Museum. For social-history depth, pair with National Museum of African American History and Culture. If you want a monument finale after museum interiors, close with Lincoln Memorial.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

National Museum of Natural History is generally open daily from 10 am to 5:30 pm, and the current listing also shows extended Friday hours to 7:30 pm. The museum is closed on December 25. Check same-day hours before you go, because special events can change access.

tickets

General admission is free, and current guidance indicates that passes are not required for standard museum entry. TicketLens options here are mainly paid guided formats, including museum-only and combo tours. If your date is fixed, booking in advance improves start-time choice.

address

National Museum of Natural History
10th St. & Constitution Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20560
United States

how to get there

The easiest Metro anchors are Federal Triangle, Archives-Navy Memorial-Penn Quarter, and Metro Center. From Federal Triangle, plan about 0.5 km (0.3 mi) on foot; from Metro Center, about 1.1 km (0.7 mi). For rideshare, use a Constitution Avenue drop-off to shorten your walk to screening.

website

accessibility

Accessible entrances and elevators are available across visitor areas, and free manual wheelchairs are offered first-come, first-served. Service animals and personal mobility devices are generally permitted. If standing for long periods is difficult, use quieter entry windows and ask staff for the smoothest route.

security

All visitors pass through security screening. Leave knives, aerosol sprays, glass containers, tripods, monopods, and selfie sticks outside to avoid delays at entry. Smoking and e-cigarettes are not allowed in museum spaces.

photography and filming

Personal photography and filming are generally allowed unless a specific gallery posts a restriction. Handheld use is the safe default, while tripods, monopods, and selfie sticks are not permitted. Commercial filming should be arranged separately in advance.

wifi

Free public Wi-Fi is available in many Smithsonian spaces via the SI-Visitor network. Signal quality can vary by hall, so keep tickets and maps available offline before you start your route.

luggage

There is no broad luggage-storage service for large travel bags, so bring only a compact day bag. Keeping gear light speeds up screening and makes movement between halls much easier.
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