National Gallery of Art tickets & tours | Price comparison

National Gallery of Art

TicketLens lets you:
Search multiple websites at onceand find the best offers.
Find tickets, last minuteon many sites, with one search.
Book at the lowest price!Save time & money by comparing rates.
National Gallery of Art, often shortened to NGA, anchors the north edge of the National Mall with the grand West Building, I. M. Pei's bold East Building, and a sculpture garden that softens the whole campus. In one stop, you can move from the only Leonardo da Vinci painting in the Americas to modern art in the heart of Washington, DC.

Start with a small-group highlights tour if you want expert context, a cleaner route through the campus, and less choice overload in a museum this large.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Guided tours

Choose this format if you want expert storytelling inside the gallery, a smaller-group pace, or a broader Washington museum day wrapped into one guided booking.
DC National Gallery of Art Guided Tour with 8ppl Max
5.0(16)
 
getyourguide.com
Go to offer
Smithsonian Natural History + Museum of American History 8pp
5.0(5)
 
getyourguide.com
Go to offer
Smithsonian Natural History + American History - Exclusive Tour
4.9(24)
 
viator.com
Go to offer
Smithsonian Natural History + Museum of American History 8ppl Max
5.0(34)
 
viator.com
Go to offer
See all Guided tours

Current exhibitions

In the Tower: Chakaia Booker

Treading New Ground

Three monumental sculptures and a six-part photogravure series show how Chakaia Booker transforms discarded tires into powerful abstractions tied to environmental pressure and cultural history.

Apr 5, 2025 – Aug 2, 2026, East Building, Tower Level

In the Library: Photobooks and American Energy

This library presentation looks at how contemporary photobooks frame the American energy industry and its impact on landscapes and communities.

May 25, 2026 – Aug 21, 2026, East Building, Library Atrium

Beneath the Surface

Mining and American Photography

Some 150 photographs explore 185 years of American resource extraction, showing how artists and documentarians have pictured mines, drilling, labor, and environmental impact.

May 23, 2026 – Aug 23, 2026, West Building, Gallery 73

Mary Cassatt

An American in Paris

This intimate presentation marks the centenary of Mary Cassatt's death with around 40 paintings, drawings, and prints that trace how the American impressionist balanced tradition with a modern outlook in Paris.

Feb 14, 2026 – Aug 30, 2026, West Building, Gallery 86

Dear America

Artists Explore the American Experience

More than 100 works on paper examine how artists have pictured the American experience over 250 years, from landscape and freedom to portraits of everyday life and political change.

Apr 11, 2026 – Sep 20, 2026, West Building, Gallery G23

Niagara Falls

Mist and Majesty

Around 20 works trace how artists have reimagined Niagara Falls from the early 19th century to the present, following the site's changing symbolism and public image.

May 2, 2026 – Sep 20, 2026, West Building, Gallery 72

Clifford Ross

Digital Waves

A monumental LED installation turns the Rotunda into a shifting digital seascape, translating Ross's long study of ocean movement into an immersive display of light.

Jan 21, 2026 – Oct 18, 2026, West Building, Rotunda

Sky Hopinka

Kicking the Clouds

Photographs, poems, and film connect family memory, language, and landscape in a focused exhibition on contemporary Indigenous experience.

Apr 11, 2026 – Dec 6, 2026, West Building, Gallery G22

Back and Forth

Rozeal., Titian, Cezanne

Four paintings spanning six centuries place Rozeal., Titian, and Cezanne in direct conversation, highlighting how artists revisit pose, gaze, and pictorial conventions across time.

Apr 26, 2025 – Jan 3, 2027, West Building, Gallery 11

American Icon

The US Flag in Art

More than 30 works from the late 19th century to today examine how artists have used the US flag as a motif for pride, protest, memory, and shifting civic identity.

Jun 6, 2026 – Dec 6, 2026, East Building, Concourse Gallery Lobby

Broken

The Power of the Fragment in Sculpture

About 75 sculptures and fragments from 2500 BCE to today examine damage, survival, restitution, and the creative power of works seen in broken form.

Mar 13, 2027 – Jun 27, 2027, West Building, Main Floor

6 tips for visiting the National Gallery of Art

1
Check the free tours first
If you want structure without paying, look at the museum's own free daily guided tours before you book anything else. Move to a paid small-group or private format only if your priority is deeper context, a fixed time, or a more personal pace. That way you spend money on clarity, not on something the museum already gives you for free.
2
Start with one building
If your heart is set on old masters, start in the West Building; if you want modern and contemporary art, start in the East Building. Trying to do both from the first minute usually turns into museum zigzagging. One strong starting point keeps your energy for the art, not the map.
3
Use the moving walkway as a reset
The underground moving walkway between the two buildings is not just a connector. Mid-visit, especially with children or after a long National Mall morning, it works like a built-in reset button. Use it on purpose, so the second building still feels fresh instead of like homework.
4
Check bulky bags right away
If you arrive with a large backpack, coat, or umbrella on a wet day, head to the free checkroom before you settle into the galleries. Items over 43 x 66 cm (17 x 26 in) need to be checked anyway, and carrying less makes the security line and the rooms feel easier. This is a small fix that removes a surprising amount of friction.
5
Use the Sculpture Garden as your breather
If the weather plays along, save the Sculpture Garden for the point when indoor galleries start to blur together. The open air, fountain, and large-scale works change the pace fast, especially in the afternoon. That way you reset your eyes instead of museum-fatiguing yourself into a flat ending.
6
Pair only one nearby stop
For a realistic day, add only one nearby follow-up after National Gallery of Art: US National Archives for founding-document history, National Museum of Natural History for another blockbuster museum, or National Air and Space Museum if you want the day to pivot toward flight and space. One extra stop is usually enough. That way the gallery remains the main memory instead of becoming just one more room in a marathon.

How to plan a National Gallery of Art stop on a National Mall day

The gallery is free, but the campus is large enough to waste time if you improvise. One early choice about route and tour style keeps the whole day calmer.

Choose between free house tours and paid guided formats

If you want structure without paying, start with the museum's free daily guided tours. Choose a paid small-group or private format when your priority is deeper art history, a tighter route, or a fixed time on a busy weekend. Matching format to your patience level is the smartest first decision. Book now.

Pick West or East before you enter

Start in the West Building if Leonardo da Vinci, Vermeer, Degas, and the big marble-museum mood are why you came. Start in the East Building if modern and contemporary art, sharp geometry, and the Roof Terrace matter more. One clear choice beats a tired zigzag every time.

Use the underground link to control pace

The moving walkway between the buildings is more than a connector. It gives you a built-in reset when your feet start arguing with your itinerary, especially with children or after a long Mall morning. Use it deliberately, so the second building still feels fresh.

Families and repeat visitors need different routes

Families usually do best with one headline room, one garden break, and only then a second building if energy remains. Repeat visitors can go narrower and deeper, using the East Building or one temporary exhibition as the whole point of the stop. Trying to visit like everyone else is the fastest way to flatten the experience.

Add just one nearby follow-up

After National Gallery of Art, choose one nearby follow-up: US National Archives for founding-document history, National Museum of Natural History for another giant family-friendly museum, or National Air and Space Museum if you want the day to pivot into flight and space. One extra stop is usually enough. That way the art stays memorable instead of blurring into a civic marathon.

Ways to experience the National Gallery of Art

Mapped products here lean strongly toward guided formats, but they do not all solve the same problem. The right one depends on whether you want orientation, depth, privacy, or a broader Washington museum day.

Small-group highlights tours

Best for first-time visitors who want the signature works without trying to swallow the whole campus at once. These tours usually move through the strongest headline rooms with just enough context to make the art stick. You get orientation fast and keep a social but manageable pace. Book now.

Semi-private and private tours

Choose these if your priority is asking questions, lingering in front of one work, or adapting the pace to your own curiosity. They suit couples, repeat museum visitors, and travelers who would rather go deep than cover ground. You pay more, but the rhythm becomes yours. Book now.

Sculpture Garden tours

Great when the weather is kind and you want a lighter, more open-air version of the gallery story. The garden works especially well as a first stop for jet-lagged travelers or as a late-day reset after indoor rooms. It is the easiest way to keep museum energy from turning heavy. Book now.

Broader Washington museum combos

Some products fold the gallery into a wider Washington museum day rather than a pure art stop. Choose these only if your real goal is variety and you are comfortable trading depth for momentum. They work best for first-timers who want one booking to do the thinking. Book now.

West Building, East Building, and Sculpture Garden

The campus works because each zone gives you a different mood. Knowing that in advance helps you decide where your energy should go first.

1936 to 1941: Andrew Mellon's museum becomes real

The story starts with Andrew W. Mellon's 1936 gift offer, Congress's 1937 acceptance, and the dedication of the West Building in 1941. That origin still shapes the visit: this place was built as a national art museum from the start, not improvised into one later.

Why the West Building still feels grand

This is where many visitors find the emotional core of the museum: old masters, American painting, domed spaces, and the only Leonardo da Vinci work in the Americas. If you want the classic marble-staircase museum moment, this is it.

1978: the East Building changes the mood

When the East Building by I. M. Pei opened in 1978, the gallery stopped feeling like a single-era institution. Modern and contemporary works, sharp geometry, and the Roof Terrace make this the better choice when architecture matters almost as much as the art.

1999: the Sculpture Garden slows everything down

Dedicated in 1999, the Sculpture Garden adds open air, fountains, and major modern sculpture to a day that might otherwise stay indoors too long. In winter the fountain becomes an ice rink; in warmer months it is one of the easiest places on the Mall to reset between galleries.

Use selection, not completion, as your goal

With nearly 160,000 works across about 10 ha (25 acres) of public campus, National Gallery of Art rewards editing. Pick two or three non-negotiable anchors, then stop while you still want one more room. That is the museum trick that keeps the visit energizing instead of numbing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is admission to the National Gallery of Art really free?

Yes. General admission, special exhibitions, and the museum's own daily guided tours are free at National Gallery of Art.
Read more.

Do I need a timed-entry pass or reservation?

No timed passes are required for standard entry. Some special events can use separate registration, so check the day's details if you are aiming for a specific program.
Read more.

How much time should I plan for a first visit?

For a strong first visit, many travelers do best with 2 to 3 hours. That is usually enough for one building plus either a guided tour or the Sculpture Garden. If you try both buildings in depth, half a day goes very quickly.
Read more.

Should I start in the West Building or the East Building?

Start in the West Building if old masters, marble grandeur, and the only Leonardo da Vinci in the Americas are your main draw. Start in the East Building if modern and contemporary art, bold architecture, and a looser visual rhythm matter more to you.
Read more.

Are guided tours available every day?

Yes. The museum runs free daily guided tours, and TicketLens also compares paid small-group and private formats. If you want depth without extra cost, check the museum tour first; if you want a fixed pace or private attention, the paid formats can work better.
Read more.

Is the museum wheelchair accessible?

Yes. National Gallery of Art provides accessible entrances, elevators, courtesy wheelchairs, and an underground moving walkway between the West Building and East Building. Limited disability parking is also available on the East Building plaza.
Read more.

What bags can I bring inside?

A small day bag is easiest. Larger items over 43 x 66 cm (17 x 26 in) need to go to the free checkroom, and valuables cannot be checked. If you arrive light, everything from screening to gallery movement feels simpler.
Read more.

Can I take photos inside the gallery?

Usually yes. Personal photography is generally allowed, including flash, unless a gallery or loan condition says otherwise. Tripods, monopods, and selfie sticks are not allowed indoors.
Read more.

Is the Sculpture Garden included with admission?

Yes. The Sculpture Garden is part of the same free campus and keeps the same daily 10 am to 5 pm hours. In winter, the fountain becomes an ice rink, which changes the mood completely.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

The West Building, East Building, and Sculpture Garden are open daily from 10 am to 5 pm. The campus is closed on December 25 and January 1.

tickets

Admission, special exhibitions, and the museum's own guided tours are free. You do not need timed passes for regular entry. Some special events can use separate registration, so check same-day details if you are going for a specific program.

address

National Gallery of Art
West Building: 6th Street and Constitution Avenue NW
East Building: 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW
Sculpture Garden: 7th Street and Constitution Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20565
United States

how to get there

The easiest Metro anchor is Archives-Navy Memorial-Penn Quarter, about a 6-minute walk from the West Building. Metrobuses also stop along Constitution Avenue NW. There is no public parking garage on campus, so public transport is usually the easiest option; only limited disability parking is available on the East Building plaza.

website

Official site: https://www.nga.gov/

accessibility

Barrier-free entry is available at the 6th Street entrance of the West Building and the 4th Street entrance of the East Building. Ramps, elevators, courtesy wheelchairs, and the underground moving walkway help make the campus easier to manage. Limited disability parking is also available on the East Building plaza.

security

All visitors pass through security screening. Backpacks need to be worn on one shoulder, and food or drinks stay out of the galleries; water bottles should remain concealed. Arriving with a small day bag makes entry noticeably smoother.

cloakroom

Free checkrooms are available at each entrance. Items larger than 43 x 66 cm (17 x 26 in) need to be checked, and umbrellas can either go into the checkroom or stay tucked inside your bag. Valuables such as laptops, cameras, and phones cannot be checked.

photography and filming

Personal photography is generally allowed, including flash, unless signage says otherwise. Tripods, monopods, and selfie sticks are not permitted indoors. If a loan or special display has tighter rules, the gallery signage will tell you quickly.
How useful was this page?
Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0.
Compare prices for more top sights in Washington, D.C.:
Mount Vernon39 tickets & guided tours
Arlington National Cemetery32 tickets & guided tours
National Museum of American History12 tickets & guided tours
US National Archives14 tickets & guided tours
Washington Monument11 tickets & guided tours
National Mall22 tickets & guided tours
White House2 tickets & guided tours
Dupont Circle2 tickets & guided tours
Language
English
Currency
© 2020-2026 TicketLens GmbH. All rights reserved. Made with love in Vienna.