National World War II Museum tickets & tours | Price comparison

National World War II Museum

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National WWII Museum (formerly the National D-Day Museum) is a powerful stop in New Orleans's Warehouse District, where immersive galleries, veteran voices, and theater experiences turn global history into a personal story.

Start with a general-admission ticket and add Beyond All Boundaries if you want a stronger first overview with less planning stress, especially during busy fall and spring weeks.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Admission tickets

Choose this first if you want full gallery access and the flexibility to add timed experiences on the same day.
New Orleans: The National WWII Museum Ticket
4.8(2878)
 
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6 tips for visiting the National World War II Museum

1
Book your slot early
If your dates fall in spring, fall, or the week between Christmas and New Year's, book ahead instead of deciding on-site. Early booking usually means faster entry and better add-on show choices. That way you start calmly, not in a ticket line.
2
Use a split day
If you want a slower pace, check in, tour your priority galleries, then step out for lunch in the Warehouse District and return the same day. Re-entry is allowed after check-in until 5 pm. This keeps heavy content manageable and saves your energy.
3
Add one theater experience
If your priority is context before details, add one timed format: the 48-minute Beyond All Boundaries show or the shorter Priddy Family Freedom Theater experience. Choosing one add-on keeps timing realistic, especially on a first visit. You get a clearer narrative without overloading your schedule.
4
Pack light for entry
If you are carrying gear, keep it small. All guests pass a security checkpoint, lockers are limited, and large rolling-luggage storage depends on available space. Light bags make entry quicker and reduce friction between buildings.
5
Pair it with French Quarter nights
If you want contrast after the galleries, keep daytime for the museum and move music and dinner to French Quarter in the evening. This works especially well after emotionally heavy exhibits. You avoid rushing and still get classic New Orleans atmosphere.
6
Ask for access support early
If you use mobility or sensory support, ask early at guest services or plan ahead by email. Complimentary manual wheelchairs are first come, first served, elevators run across campus, and sensory bags are available subject to availability. Setting this up first gives you a smoother, less stressful day.

How to plan your National WWII Museum day in New Orleans

A strong day at National WWII Museum is about sequence. Pick the right entry format, reserve the experiences you care about, and leave buffer time between heavy galleries.

Choose your entry format first

If this is your first visit, start with general admission and add one timed experience, usually Beyond All Boundaries or the Priddy Family Freedom Theater. This gives you a clear narrative frame before deeper galleries and keeps your day realistic. Book now.

Use a split schedule in the Warehouse District

Because same-day re-entry is possible until 5 pm, you can visit priority rooms first, take a break, and return with fresh focus. This is especially useful for families or anyone who needs slower pacing. You avoid museum fatigue and keep attention high for the galleries that matter most.

Pair the evening with French Quarter atmosphere

A practical couple-or-friends plan is museum in daytime, then French Quarter for dinner, music, and lighter energy after dark. The contrast works because your route stays compact while the mood shifts clearly from reflective to social. It also leaves space to decompress after emotionally heavy rooms.

Keep plantation routes for a separate day

If your trip includes Houmas House Plantation and Gardens, treat it as a dedicated half-day or full-day extension instead of forcing it into the same museum day. First-time visitors usually enjoy both experiences more when they are not compressed into one tight schedule. Book now.

The museum story behind your visit

This campus matters because it is not a static war collection. It keeps expanding how the American WWII story is told, while preserving a strong emotional link to individual service members and families.

From 1944 memory to a 2000 institution

The D-Day landings of 1944 are still a core interpretive anchor, and the museum was dedicated in 2000 as the National D-Day Museum. That origin explains why the visit often feels personal before it feels monumental. You are not only reading strategy, you are meeting individual voices.

Congressional status and modern campus growth

The institution is now designated by Congress as America's National WWII Museum, and growth milestones continued with a major campaign announcement in June 2025. That development phase supports the current seven-pavilion campus logic visitors experience today.

Why repeat visits still add value

A major renovation of the flagship D-Day exhibit was announced in February 2026, with completion targeted for 2027. If you have already visited once, a return visit can feel meaningfully different as galleries evolve. Repeat travelers often get more depth by focusing on one major theme per visit.

Match format to your travel style

Families usually do best with one timed add-on and flexible breaks, solo history-focused visitors often prefer longer gallery blocks, and couples frequently combine museum daytime with evening culture in New Orleans. Choosing your style first reduces decision fatigue and improves the whole day. Book now.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much time should you plan for National WWII Museum?

You can do a focused visit in about two hours, but many visitors stay much longer. A practical first visit is usually a half day with one add-on experience. If you want to read deeply and watch multiple shows, plan two days.
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Do you need to buy tickets in advance?

Buying in advance is usually the smoother option, especially in high-demand periods. On-site purchase is available, but prebooking often saves time and gives you better timed add-on choices.
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Can you leave and return on the same day?

Yes. After check-in and admission-pass pickup, same-day re-entry is allowed until 5 pm. This makes lunch breaks and split-day pacing easy to manage.
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When is the museum busiest?

The busiest windows are usually fall, spring, and the week between Christmas and New Year's Day. If you can, choose earlier slots and book key experiences in advance to reduce wait stress.
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Is National WWII Museum accessible for visitors with reduced mobility?

Yes. The campus has an accessible entrance ramp, elevators, and wheelchair-accessible restrooms. Complimentary manual wheelchairs are available first come, first served.
Read more.

Are photos and videos allowed inside?

Personal photos without flash are allowed in galleries. Recording is not allowed in galleries or movie experiences.
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What bag policy should you expect at entry?

All guests pass through security screening, and bags may be searched. Small backpacks and purses are typically allowed, lockers are limited, and rolling-luggage storage at guest services depends on available space.
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General information

opening hours

Museum exhibits and the Museum Store are open daily from 9 am to 5 pm. The museum is closed on Mardi Gras Day, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve, and Christmas Day. Add-on show windows currently run from 10 am to 4 pm for Beyond All Boundaries, from 9:50 am to 4:20 pm for the Priddy Family Freedom Theater, and from 11:15 am to 4:15 pm for Final Mission: USS Tang Submarine Experience.

tickets

General admission currently ranges from $26 to $36 (checked March 4, 2026): adult $36, senior (65+) $33, student (K-12th/college) $26, military with ID $26, and children under 5 are free. Add-ons: Beyond All Boundaries $9, Freedom Theater $9, combo ticket $12, second-day pass $15.

address

The National WWII Museum
525 Andrew Higgins Boulevard (main visitor drop-off)
New Orleans, LA 70130
United States

how to get there

The museum sits in the Warehouse District on Andrew Higgins Drive between Magazine Street and Camp Street. You can arrive by car, bus or streetcar, taxi, rideshare, or bike. The official garage is at 1024 Magazine Street; rideshare drop-off is easiest at 525 Andrew Higgins Boulevard.

accessibility

All buildings and exhibits are accessible, and the main entrance at 525 Andrew Higgins Boulevard has a ramp. Complimentary manual wheelchairs are available first come, first served, and elevators are available across campus. Sensory bags are offered subject to availability, and one professional aide can receive a free Museum Campus Pass.

security

All visitors pass a metal detector at entry, and bags may be searched. Small bags are allowed in galleries, while storage for rolling luggage is limited and depends on available space at guest services. Personal photos without flash are allowed in galleries, but recording is not allowed in galleries or movie experiences.
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