Archaeological Museum of Córdoba tickets & tours | Price comparison

Archaeological Museum of Córdoba

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Archaeological Museum of Córdoba, locally Museo Arqueológico y Etnológico de Córdoba, turns one compact old-town stop into a sweep from prehistory to al-Andalus inside the Renaissance Palacio de los Páez de Castillejo and a later extension built over the city's Roman theatre. The basement ruins are the real hook: you do not just see finds from Córdoba, you walk down into one of its ancient stages.

Start with the guided museum entry if this is your first visit, because the official admission is simple but the collection makes much more sense with context, and the roughly 90-minute format keeps your Córdoba day moving cleanly.
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Museum and winery tasting combo

Choose this if you want a longer culture-and-taste day, pairing the archaeological museum with a tasting visit at Bodegas Toro Albalá rather than keeping the plan inside one compact old-center stop.
Córdoba: Visit the Archaeological Museum and enjoy a tasting at Bodegas Toro Albalá
 
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Current exhibitions

Fiesta de los Patios de Córdoba

Museum courtyard event

During the Cordoba Patio Festival, the museum opens the decorated Patio del Palacio de los Paez outside the competition, letting visitors enjoy one of the city's signature spring traditions inside the historic complex during normal museum hours.

May 4, 2026 – May 17, 2026

Pintura mural

Temporary exhibition

This temporary display centers on an Almohad-period wall painting with geometric laceria decoration and explains why some archaeological remains must be preserved ex situ. The presentation connects the fragment's artistic value with the museum's conservation work.

Apr 7, 2026 – Jun 7, 2026

Bronce, plata y almagra en la Córdoba almohade

Temporary exhibition

Created for the 900th anniversary of Averroes' birth, this temporary exhibition traces Almohad Cordoba through bronze objects, silver coinage and mural fragments from sites such as Plaza de Chirinos, Finca Berlanga and Priego. It focuses on material culture from the 12th and early 13th centuries.

Apr 9, 2026 – Jun 21, 2026

Averroes y la Córdoba almohade

Themed guided visits

These themed guided visits on 16 and 23 May lead visitors through the temporary Averroes exhibition and its Almohad bronzes, silver coins and domestic objects. The route places the philosopher's world within 12th-century Cordoba.

May 16, 2026 – May 23, 2026

Visitas guiadas, Córdoba encuentro de Culturas

Sunday guided visits

The museum's free Sunday guided visits continue on the remaining published dates from 17 May to 28 June, leading visitors through the chronological route from prehistory to Qurtuba and the Roman theatre. Reservations are handled through the museum website.

May 17, 2026 – Jun 28, 2026

Dentro del Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba

Behind-the-scenes guided visit

This small-group behind-the-scenes visit opens the museum's storage areas and restoration lab for International Museum Day. It is designed for adults who want to see how the collection is studied and preserved beyond the galleries.

May 19, 2026 – May 19, 2026

En torno a los bronces romanos: los efebos de Pedro Abad

Book presentation

This public presentation introduces the proceedings volume devoted to the bronze efebos of Pedro Abad, with participating specialists discussing the archaeological context and technical importance of the finds. The event takes place in the museum library.

May 20, 2026 – May 20, 2026

Con el barro en casa

Workshop

This workshop is listed as part of the parallel program for the temporary Almohad Cordoba exhibition and continues the museum's experimental-archaeology strand around craft and material culture. The official exhibition announcement names it for 6 June.

Jun 6, 2026 – Jun 6, 2026

6 tips for visiting the Archaeological Museum of Córdoba

1
Bring ID for the free ticket
If you qualify for free EU admission, keep your ID ready before you reach the desk, especially in the late morning when a small museum foyer feels tighter than a big monument forecourt. If you do not, the official base price is low enough that there is no reason to overcomplicate the decision. That way the visit begins cleanly instead of with a paperwork pause.
2
Use the long season hours
From September 16 to June 15, Tuesday-to-Saturday opening runs until 9 pm, which makes a calmer late-afternoon museum stop much easier. In the summer schedule, the museum closes at 3 pm, so earlier is smarter. This helps you read the cases and labels without the midday squeeze.
3
Save time for the Roman theatre
If your energy starts fading upstairs, do not leave before the basement. The Roman theatre remains are part of the main payoff, and they turn the museum from a sequence of objects into actual ground under your feet. Keep 15 to 20 minutes in reserve so the finish lands properly.
4
Choose context or combo
If you want the museum itself to make immediate sense, take the guided museum entry. If you already know you want a longer food-and-culture detour, the museum-and-winery combo makes more sense. Choosing between those two before the day starts avoids last-minute decision fatigue.
5
Keep photos handheld
If photos matter to you, plan on a phone or handheld camera only. Flash, selfie sticks, and tripods are not allowed, and temporary exhibitions can tighten the rules further. That keeps you focused on the objects instead of negotiating the rules room by room.
6
Pair one old-town neighbor
This museum works best with one nearby anchor, not three: Mosque–Cathedral of Córdoba if you want Córdoba's headline monument, Jewish Quarter of Córdoba for a broader quarter walk, or Córdoba Synagogue if you prefer a shorter Jewish-heritage pairing. One extra stop is enough, so the museum stays a real visit instead of background filler.

How to plan an Archaeological Museum of Córdoba stop

This museum works best as one focused cultural stop inside the old center, not as a rushed extra between headline monuments. Choose the format first, protect the Roman theatre ending, and keep the nearby pairing tight.

Choose guided entry for your first visit

Best for first-timers and history-focused visitors: the official admission is easy, but the collection covers prehistory, Roman Córdoba, Visigothic layers, and al-Andalus, so a guide saves you from decoding it cold. The mapped guided format wraps entry and interpretation into about 90 minutes, which is exactly the right size for a packed old-town day. If your priority is clarity without losing half a day, this is the smart first move. Book now.

Use the winery combo only for a longer detour

Great when the museum is part of a broader food-and-culture day rather than a compact old-center loop. The second mapped format pairs the museum with a tasting at Bodegas Toro Albalá, so the payoff is not speed but a fuller Andalusian arc. Choose it only if you already want the visit to spill beyond one neat historic-center stop. Book now.

Follow the route the museum expects

The current visit begins in the 2011 extension on Plaza Jerónimo Páez, where you enter through the newer building, then rises to the first floor, loops through the ground floor, and ends at the archaeological basement. That order matters because the Roman theatre works best as the climax, not as a hurried add-on once you are already thinking about lunch. Let the route descend into the ruins and the whole visit feels much more coherent.

Pair one old-town neighbor, not a marathon

This stop pairs beautifully with Mosque–Cathedral of Córdoba, Jewish Quarter of Córdoba, or Córdoba Synagogue, all within an easy historic-center radius. If you still want a fuller second monument after that, Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos is the stronger next step, but you do not need all of them in one sweep. One nearby anchor keeps the day rich without turning Córdoba into checklist territory.

History and highlights at the Archaeological Museum of Córdoba

What makes this stop stronger than a generic archaeology museum is that the institution, the palace, the current route, and the ground beneath it all tell the same city story. You move through Córdoba as overlapping layers, not as a dry row of eras.

The museum itself has a long Córdoba story

The institution began as an antiquities collection in 1844, formally became Córdoba's archaeological museum in 1868, and only gradually found its own stable physical home. Those dates matter because this is not a themed attraction invented around one spectacular dig. It is the century-and-a-half result of Córdoba learning how to keep its own fragments.

The Renaissance palace is not just a container

The current seat in the Palacio de los Páez de Castillejo gives the visit a very Cordoban contrast: Renaissance courtyards and rooms holding material from worlds far older than the building itself. Under Ana María Vicent Zaragoza, the museum settled here from 1959 onward, and the palace still acts as the warm counterweight to the sharper 2011 extension.

The Roman theatre is the turning point

When the extension works opened, archaeologists uncovered the city's Roman theatre on the site. Today the restored basement remains let you end the visit inside 1st-century AD infrastructure rather than in front of another glass case, and the route also reveals later layers such as a medieval lime kiln and an Islamic water basin. That shift from object to place is the museum's real trick.

The current route is broader than just Roman Córdoba

The still-active exhibition Córdoba, encuentro de culturas runs from prehistory to the Middle Ages through three large themes: territory, power, and daily life. Along the way you meet prehistoric ceramics, gladiator epitaphs, coins, and Andalusi pieces such as the Botella de los músicos. That breadth is why the stop works not only for Roman-history fans, but also for visitors who prefer the texture of everyday life to imperial grandeur.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Roman theatre included in the museum visit?

Yes. The Roman theatre remains are part of the museum route and open to the public in the basement, which is why you should not treat them as a separate add-on.
Read more.

Do I need to book in advance?

Not for an individual visit or for a group under 10 people. Groups of 10 or more need advance reservation through the museum platform, while TicketLens guided and combo products are separate paid booking choices.
Read more.

How much time should I plan for the visit?

For most visitors, 60 to 90 minutes feels right, and around 2 hours works better if you read labels carefully and linger in the theatre basement. The mapped guided format is roughly 90 minutes, which is a useful real-world anchor.
Read more.

Is entry really free for EU visitors?

Yes, for accredited EU visitors. The museum's published standard admission for visitors from other countries is €1.50, so this is not an expensive museum even without the free-entry rule.
Read more.

Can I take photos inside?

Yes, for private use with a phone or camera. Flash, tripods, and selfie sticks are not allowed, and temporary exhibitions can apply stricter no-photo rules.
Read more.

Which paid format makes the most sense?

If this is your first museum visit in Córdoba, the guided entry is the best default because it adds clarity without stretching the day too much. The museum-and-winery combo only makes more sense when you actively want a longer food-and-culture detour.
Read more.

Which nearby Córdoba stops pair best with the museum?

The easiest pairings are Mosque–Cathedral of Córdoba, Jewish Quarter of Córdoba, and Córdoba Synagogue. If you want a fuller monument second act instead of a lighter walk, add Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Published opening pattern (retrieved 2026-04-18): June 16 to September 15, Tuesday to Sunday and holidays, 9 am to 3 pm. September 16 to June 15, Tuesday to Saturday, 9 am to 9 pm; Sundays and holidays, 9 am to 3 pm.

Monday is closed except the eve of a public holiday. January 1 and 6, May 1, and December 24, 25, and 31 are closed. Entry is allowed until 15 minutes before closing, and holiday exceptions are worth checking again on the museum site.

tickets

Published museum admission (retrieved 2026-04-18): accredited EU visitors enter free; visitors from other countries pay €1.50.

Groups of 10 or more need advance reservation through the museum booking platform, while individual visitors and smaller groups do not. Paid guided and combo experiences listed on TicketLens are separate formats built around the museum visit.

address

Archaeological Museum of Córdoba (Museo Arqueológico y Etnológico de Córdoba)
Plaza Jerónimo Páez, 7
14003 Córdoba
Spain

how to get there

City buses 1, 3, 7, and 12 stop around Plaza de las Tendillas or Calle San Fernando, and taxi stands sit at Plaza de las Tendillas and Ribera. Córdoba-Central is the main train station.

If you are coming by car, the nearest public parking listed by the museum is at Calle Málaga, El Corte Inglés, Miraflores, and El Arcángel. On foot, the museum sits neatly inside the old center around Plaza de Jerónimo Páez.

photography and filming

Private-use photos are allowed with a camera or mobile device. Flash, tripods, and selfie sticks are not allowed, and temporary exhibitions can apply stricter no-photo rules.

Professional shoots and any non-private use need advance authorization.
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