National Museum of American History tickets & tours | Price comparison

National Museum of American History

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National Museum of American History, often shortened to NMAH, turns one stop on the National Mall into a sweep through the US story, from the Star-Spangled Banner to Dorothy's Ruby Slippers, right in the middle of Washington, DC. It feels broader than many first-time visitors expect, with politics, pop culture, invention, and everyday life under one roof.

Start with a guided museum tour if you want the headline objects to click quickly and your Mall route to stay easy.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Guided museum tours

Choose this format if you want expert context through the museum's headline objects, with some products also pairing American History with another Smithsonian stop.
Smithsonian Museum of American History Semi-Private 8ppl Max
4.8(30)
 
getyourguide.com
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Smithsonian Natural History + Air & Space Museum Tour 8ppl
5.0(17)
 
getyourguide.com
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Smithsonian Museum of American History Exclusive Guided Tour
4.9(248)
 
viator.com
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Smithsonian Natural History + Air and Space Museum Private Tour
4.9(67)
 
viator.com
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See all Guided museum tours

Audio guides

Pick an audio guide if you want a self-paced visit focused on the museum's signature stories without matching a group schedule.
Smithsonian Museum of American History Semi-Private 8ppl Max
4.8(30)
 
getyourguide.com
Go to offer
Smithsonian Natural History + Air & Space Museum Tour 8ppl
5.0(17)
 
getyourguide.com
Go to offer
Smithsonian Museum of American History Exclusive Guided Tour
4.9(248)
 
viator.com
Go to offer
Smithsonian Natural History + Air and Space Museum Private Tour
4.9(67)
 
viator.com
Go to offer
See all Audio guides

6 tips for visiting the National Museum of American History

1
Arrive early or go later
If your schedule is flexible, aim for opening time or the last part of the afternoon. Late morning and early afternoon often feel busiest on the National Mall, especially with school groups and first-time DC visitors. This simple timing shift gives you more breathing room from the start.
2
Travel light and use lockers
Bring only what you want on the floor with you, then grab a locker early if you need one. The museum has a limited number of first-come lockers, and tripods, monopods, and selfie sticks are not allowed. That way security is faster and you are not dragging extra weight through long galleries.
3
Choose the format by your pace
If this is your first visit or you only have part of the day, a guided tour makes the Star-Spangled Banner and other headline objects click faster. If you prefer to linger, backtrack, or stop for photos, the audio-guide format is calmer. Pick the rhythm first, and the rest of the visit gets easier.
4
Start with the Star-Spangled Banner
On a short stop, go to the Star-Spangled Banner early, then build the rest of the museum around one personal theme, like politics, pop culture, or innovation. This prevents the classic mistake of wandering too broadly in the first hour. You leave with one clear memory instead of five half-finished rooms.
5
Pair only one nearby museum
For a realistic National Mall day, add just one nearby anchor: US National Archives for founding documents, National Museum of Natural History for natural-history scale, or National Museum of African American History and Culture for deeper social-history context. One add-on is usually enough after National Museum of American History. You keep the walking logic simple and the day enjoyable.
6
Check kids' spaces before you go
If you are visiting with younger children, check the current hours for Wegmans Wonderplace and Draper Spark!Lab before you build your day around them. Those family spaces can run shorter weekly schedules than the main museum hours. This avoids a flat moment when small travelers are counting on one last highlight.

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

Because National Museum of American History is free and central, many visitors drift into it without a plan. Pick your pace, your first anchor, and one nearby add-on early, and the whole National Mall day stays smoother.

Pick your pace before you walk in

Choose your format first. A guided tour works best if you want quick context on the Star-Spangled Banner, presidential objects, and other headline pieces, while an audio guide suits a slower, more personal route. Making that choice outside the doors keeps the big building from dictating your day.

Use the station that matches your entrance

For most visitors, Federal Triangle is the cleanest approach to the Constitution Avenue side, while Smithsonian feels more natural if you are already walking the National Mall. Both are easy, but matching station to route trims backtracking and keeps your energy for the galleries.

Build a two-part first visit

If this is your first time, go straight to the Star-Spangled Banner, then give yourself one more lane only: civic history, pop culture, or invention. Families and repeat visitors both do better with this two-part plan than with a full-building sweep. You finish with stronger recall and less museum fatigue.

Add only one nearby museum

A practical pairing is US National Archives for founding documents, National Museum of Natural History for science and natural-history scale, or National Museum of African American History and Culture for deeper social-history context. One add-on is enough for most visitors after National Museum of American History. That way the day feels curated instead of overstuffed.

Tour formats at the National Museum of American History

The mapped products here are simple, but the choice still matters because some formats stay inside the museum while others turn the stop into a broader Smithsonian day.

Guided museum tours

Best for first-time visitors who want the museum's headline objects to connect fast. These tours usually keep a tighter route through the biggest stories, so you spend less time deciding where to go next and more time understanding what you are seeing. Book now.

Smithsonian combo guided tours

Great when you want one booking that links National Museum of American History with another strong Washington stop, especially National Museum of Natural History or US National Archives. Choose this if your priority is a fuller civic-history or museum day with less logistical thinking. Book now.

Self-paced audio guides

Choose this if you like wandering at your own speed, pausing for labels, or circling back to galleries that catch your eye. The audio-guide format gives structure without a group clock, which can feel better for solo travelers and repeat museum visitors. Book now.

Why this museum matters in Washington, DC

With more than 1.7 million objects in its collection, National Museum of American History works less like a single-subject museum and more like a compact map of the US story.

1955 to 1964: from authorization to opening day

President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the founding legislation in 1955, and the museum opened to the public in January 1964 as the Museum of History and Technology. That origin still explains the place you see now: this was built as a national stage for invention, politics, and everyday life, not a niche specialty museum.

1980: the museum becomes American history

In 1980, the institution took the name National Museum of American History. The shift sounds administrative, but it sharpened the visitor promise: not just technology, not just politics, but the broader American story told through objects people recognize immediately.

2008: a new home for the Star-Spangled Banner

A major renovation completed in 2008 added a new Star-Spangled Banner gallery and reshaped the center core. For visitors, that matters because the museum's most famous object is not tucked away like an afterthought; it now works as one of the emotional anchors of the whole building.

2022: the story widens again

A major west-wing renewal finished at the end of 2022 and helped refresh how popular culture and public life are shown, including spaces like Entertainment Nation. That matters on site because the museum now moves more smoothly between national symbols and everyday American culture. The result feels broader, and much more contemporary.

Frequently Asked Questions

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

General admission to National Museum of American History is free, and current visitor guidance says no ticket or timed pass is required for standard entry.
Read more.

How much time should I plan for a visit?

It depends on your interests, but most first-time visitors are happiest with about 2 to 3 hours. If you like reading labels in depth or add family spaces, you can easily stay longer.
Read more.

Which Metro station is closest?

For most routes, Federal Triangle and Smithsonian are the two easiest Metrorail options on the Blue, Orange, and Silver lines. Choose Federal Triangle for the simpler walk to Constitution Avenue, or Smithsonian if you are already moving along the National Mall.
Read more.

Can I bring bags, food, or a water bottle?

Yes, you can bring a backpack and sealed food or drinks, but you cannot consume them in the galleries. Limited lockers are available on a first-come, first-served basis, so traveling light is still the easiest plan.
Read more.

Is the museum accessible for wheelchair users?

Yes. National Museum of American History has barrier-free entrances, elevator access to all public levels, accessible restrooms, and free wheelchairs available on a first-come, first-served basis.
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Can I take photos inside the museum?

Usually yes for noncommercial photos and video. The main exception is the Star-Spangled Banner Gallery, and tripods, monopods, and selfie sticks are not permitted anywhere in the museum.
Read more.

Should I book a guided tour or use an audio guide?

Choose a guided tour if you want the headline objects explained quickly or you are linking this stop with another museum the same day. An audio guide suits you better if you want to move slowly, revisit rooms, or keep the schedule fully flexible.
Read more.

Is the museum good for families?

Yes. Families usually do best by mixing one or two headline galleries with kid-friendly stops like Wegmans Wonderplace or Draper Spark!Lab. Check those spaces' current hours before you go, because they can be shorter than the main museum day.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

National Museum of American History is open daily from 10 am to 5:30 pm and closes on December 25. Some family spaces inside the building keep shorter weekly hours, so check same-day listings if Wegmans Wonderplace or Draper Spark!Lab matters to your plan.

address

National Museum of American History
1300 Constitution Ave NW
Washington, DC 20560
United States

how to get there

Public transportation is the easiest option. Federal Triangle and Smithsonian on the Blue, Orange, and Silver lines are the closest Metrorail stops, and there is no public Smithsonian parking facility on the National Mall.

website

accessibility

Barrier-free entrances are on Madison Drive and Constitution Avenue. All public levels are reachable by elevator, restrooms and water fountains are wheelchair accessible, and wheelchairs are available free on a first-come, first-served basis.

security

All visitors pass security at the Constitution Avenue or Madison Drive entrance, and there may be a short wait at busy times. Tripods, monopods, selfie sticks, knives, pets, and open food or drink containers are not allowed, so a small day bag is the easiest choice.

lockers

The museum has a limited number of self-service lockers on a first-come, first-served basis. They are useful if you arrive with a jacket or sealed snacks, but do not count on unlimited storage on busy days.

photography and filming

Noncommercial still photography and video are generally allowed. Photography is not permitted in the Star-Spangled Banner Gallery, and tripods, monopods, and selfie sticks are never allowed.
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