Haus der Natur tickets & tours | Price comparison

Haus der Natur

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.
Haus der Natur, Salzburg's Museum of Natural Science and Technology, fills the stretch between Museumsplatz and the Salzach with dinosaurs, aquariums, a reptile zoo, and the hands-on Science Center. It is one of the city's easiest all-weather stops when you want real variety in one place.

For most visits, keep it simple with standard entry, or use the Salzburg Card if you are pairing other central sights the same day, so the value stays strong without rushing.
There are currently no available offers.
Some experiences and attractions are seasonal and might close temporarily.

6 tips for visiting the Haus der Natur

1
Use the first museum hour
If you want calmer sightlines around the aquarium, reptile zoo, and the busiest hands-on stations, arrive close to 9 am. Late morning usually feels denser once Old Town visitors and groups overlap. That gives you quieter galleries and easier lift access.
2
Give yourself three real hours
The museum stretches across eight levels in two buildings, so around 3 hours is the realistic sweet spot. If you only have about 90 minutes, pick one thread first: live animals, dinosaurs and space, or the Science Center. That way the visit feels complete rather than scattered.
3
Switch to the Science Center
If energy drops in the classical galleries, use the glass staircase and move into the hands-on zones of the Science Center. This works especially well with kids and mixed-age groups in the second half of the visit. It is one of the easiest ways to rescue museum momentum.
4
Choose the Salzburg Card selectively
If Haus der Natur is your main paid stop, a normal ticket is usually the simpler choice. If you also plan Mozart's birthplace, Mozart Residence, or Hohensalzburg Castle on the same day, the Salzburg Card can make more sense. Decide this before you arrive, so you are not doing ticket math at the door.
5
Travel light before you start
Large bags and umbrellas do not belong in the galleries, and the basement lockers make the visit much easier. If you are arriving straight from the station or a rainy Salzburg walk, store bulky items first. You move more comfortably, and the museum feels less cramped.
6
Add only one nearby stop
After Haus der Natur, choose one clear follow-up: Mozart's birthplace for Mozart, Stiftskirche St. Peter for Old Town atmosphere, or Mirabell Palace for palace gardens. One extra stop is usually enough after a full museum block. That keeps your day enjoyable instead of overplanned.

How to plan a Haus der Natur visit in Salzburg

This museum works best when you settle ticket choice, timing, and one nearby follow-up before you reach Museumsplatz.

Choose the ticket format before you arrive

Best for a museum-focused half-day: regular admission to Haus der Natur. Best if you are stacking several paid Salzburg highlights: use the Salzburg Card for one-time entry here plus other central stops. Decide this first, and the rest of the day becomes simpler instead of turning into ticket arithmetic.

Use morning for the quieter rooms

Start near 9 am if you want calmer aquarium glass, easier stroller handling, and less crowd pressure at the hands-on stations. Late morning usually feels denser once Old Town circulation and group visits meet. One small timing move can improve the whole visit rhythm.

Plan the museum by energy, not by floor numbers

Eight levels in two buildings sound bigger than they feel, but pace matters. Start with the sections you care about most, then switch to the Science Center when attention dips. Families usually do better with one strong first loop than with a heroic attempt to cover every room.

Add only one nearby follow-up

After Haus der Natur, keep the second act small: Mozart's birthplace for a Mozart stop, Mirabell Palace for gardens, or Stiftskirche St. Peter for older Salzburg atmosphere. One clear add-on usually gives a better day than trying to squeeze three Old Town checkmarks into the same afternoon. That leaves you with memories, not logistics fatigue.

What to see inside Haus der Natur

The appeal is range: one moment you are face-to-face with reef fish and reptiles, the next you are among dinosaurs, space displays, and hands-on experiments.

The main building sets the natural-history rhythm

Most of the classical galleries and zoo sections sit in the main building, so it is the best place to start if you want the broadest picture first. Dinosaurs, evolution, the human body, and animal worlds create the museum's core narrative. Start here if you want the visit to feel coherent from the first steps onward.

Aquarium and reptile zoo create the closest moments

These rooms slow visitors down in the best way: children stop rushing, adults linger longer, and the museum stops feeling like a checklist. On a first visit, they are often the emotional anchor of the whole route. Keep your camera simple, keep flash off, and let yourself stay a little.

The Science Center changes the pace completely

Across the glass staircase, the mood shifts from looking to doing. The experiments are not just for children; this is often where adults who came 'for the kids' start playing too. It is the best reset when museum fatigue starts creeping in.

Why this museum works so well on rainy days

Because the content range is so broad, Haus der Natur suits mixed groups better than many single-theme museums in central Salzburg. Nature lovers, science fans, younger children, and adults who only wanted a short indoor stop usually all find one section that pulls them in. That makes it one of the safest bad-weather choices in the city center.

History of Haus der Natur

The museum you see today grew out of a century of founding, renaming, relocation, political burden, expansion, and reinvention inside Salzburg's Old Town fabric.

1924: the museum opens in former barracks

On 15 July 1924, the institution opened in the former Hofstall barracks, where the Großes Festspielhaus stands today. That origin matters because the museum was born inside Salzburg's cultural core rather than on the city's edge. Even now, the visit still feels tightly woven into an Old Town day.

1936: the name Haus der Natur arrives

In 1936, the museum adopted the name Haus der Natur. That shift sounds small, but it helped turn a more technical founding label into a name that still feels open, broad, and visitor-friendly today. It fits the museum's mix of animals, natural history, and hands-on science surprisingly well.

1938 to 1949: a politically burdened chapter

After Austria's annexation by Nazi Germany in 1938, the museum was integrated into the SS research organization Ahnenerbe. This is not background noise; it is part of the institution's real history and changes how you read the early decades. The later museum has to be understood against that burden, not outside it.

1959: the move into the former Ursuline complex

In 1959, the museum moved into the former Ursuline complex that still frames the visit today. That relocation explains why the experience mixes historic walls with later scientific installations instead of feeling purpose-built from one single decade. The tension between old Salzburg fabric and newer exhibition design is part of the charm.

2009 and 2024: expansion meets centenary

By 2009, years of expansion had helped shape the larger museum visitors know now, including strengthened animal and interactive zones. In 2024, the centenary exhibition pulled historical objects back into view and reminded visitors that today's hands-on museum rests on a much longer story. That long arc is why Haus der Natur feels both rooted and lively.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much time should I plan for Haus der Natur?

For most visitors, around 3 hours is the realistic sweet spot. If you only want one focused loop, 90 minutes can work, but the museum is large enough that rushing it rarely feels satisfying.
Read more.

Is the Salzburg Card valid at Haus der Natur?

Yes. The Salzburg Card includes one-time free admission. It usually makes the most sense if you add at least one other paid Salzburg sight on the same day.
Read more.

Is Haus der Natur a good museum for children?

Yes. The aquarium, reptile zoo, dinosaurs, and the hands-on Science Center make it one of Salzburg's easiest family museums. With younger kids, start with one or two anchor zones first so energy lasts longer.
Read more.

Is the museum wheelchair accessible?

Yes. There is a ramp at the entrance, elevators to every floor, stairlifts for the outer space hall and reptile zoo, and accessible restrooms in the main building and Science Center.
Read more.

Can I take photos or videos inside Haus der Natur?

Yes, for private use, but not with flash, tripods, or other artificial light. In the animal areas, keep it especially simple and low-impact.
Read more.

Can children under 14 enter without an adult?

No. According to the museum's house rules, visitors under age 14 need adult accompaniment. If your group splits inside, agree on a clear meeting point first.
Read more.

What should I do with backpacks, umbrellas, or a large stroller?

Start with the basement lockers or cloakroom. Large bags and umbrellas stay out of the galleries, and very bulky strollers may need to remain in the foyer.
Read more.

What pairs well nearby after the museum?

The cleanest follow-up options are Mozart's birthplace for Mozart, Stiftskirche St. Peter for Old Town atmosphere, or Mirabell Palace for palace gardens. After a full museum block, one nearby extra is usually enough.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Current public hours (retrieved March 2026): daily from 9 am to 5 pm. On December 24 the museum is open until 4 pm, it stays closed on December 25, and last entry is at 4:30 pm. Around holidays, check the official site again before you go.

tickets

Published admission prices at retrieval (March 2026):
- Adults: €16.00
- Children ages 4-15: €10.50
- Seniors 60+: €15.00
- Students, apprentices, military, and civil service with ID: €13.00
- Visitors with disabilities: adults €9.00, children €5.00; one companion is free if noted on the ID
- Family ticket (2 adults + 2 children up to age 15): €48.00; each additional child €9.00
- Salzburg Card: one-time free admission

address

Haus der Natur
Museumsplatz 5
5020 Salzburg

lockers

Use the basement cloakroom and lockers before you start. Large bags, umbrellas, and items that could damage exhibits must stay out of the galleries, and oversize strollers may need to remain in the foyer. Traveling light makes the museum flow much easier.

how to get there

The entrance sits at Museumsplatz 5 in Salzburg's Old Town. Bus lines 1 or 8 to Mönchsbergaufzug and lines 4, 7, or 9 to Ferdinand-Hanusch-Platz leave a short walk of roughly 2-5 minutes. Regional lines 2 and 3 stop at Salzburg Mülln-Altstadt, about 15 minutes away on foot; if you drive, Altstadtgarage A is the closest old-town garage.

accessibility

Haus der Natur is set up for barrier-free visiting: there is a ramp at the entrance, elevators to every floor, stairlifts for the outer space hall and reptile zoo, and accessible restrooms in the main building, Science Center, and cafe area. Assistance dogs are welcome, and disabled parking spaces are in the Mönchsberggarage.

photography and filming

Private photo and video use is allowed, but not with tripods, flash, or other artificial light. In the animal areas, keep flash off completely, and do not use selfie sticks or drones. Commercial filming needs museum approval.

website

How useful was this page?
Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0.
Language
English
Currency
© 2020-2026 TicketLens GmbH. All rights reserved. Made with love in Vienna.