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British Museum

Free to walk in, which is the best thing anyone can say about a museum this good. The Rosetta Stone, the Parthenon marbles, room after room of Egypt. The flip side: it is enormous, and trying to see all of it is how you end up exhausted and remembering none of it. Pick two or three rooms.

Aerial shot of the British Museum, London. Photo: Luke Massey & the Greater London National Park City Initiative (CC BY 2.0), via Wikimedia Commons
Is British Museum worth it?

Free to walk into, and the collection lives up to the hype. You will give out long before the galleries do, so pick a handful of rooms and leave the rest for another day.

Worth it for

  • Wanting world history under one roof without paying a penny to get in
  • A rainy afternoon when you need somewhere big and indoors to land

You can skip if

  • Vast, crowded museums wear you down fast and you would rather sit in a square outside

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Which ticket should you buy?

Entry to the permanent collection is free, so you do not need to pay anything to see the famous highlights. Reserve a free timed admission slot online to skip the entry queue, especially on weekends and school holidays. Only the rotating special exhibitions carry a charge, and those should be booked ahead since popular shows sell out.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
Special exhibition ticket Timed entry to the museum's major temporary exhibitions, which are separately ticketed; this also lets you into the free permanent galleries on the same visit Visitors who want to see the current headline show on top of the permanent collection
Great Russell Street, London, WC1B 3DG View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

The headline objects

The Rosetta Stone is the museum's most famous single object, the inscribed slab that let scholars finally read Egyptian hieroglyphs. Crowds gather around its case, so an early or late visit gives you a clearer look. Nearby, the Egyptian sculpture gallery holds colossal statues and the mummies that draw long lines of school groups.

The Parthenon sculptures, the carved marble friezes taken from the temple in Athens, fill a long purpose-built room and remain the subject of an ongoing ownership dispute with Greece. Other anchors include the Assyrian lion hunt reliefs, the Sutton Hoo Anglo-Saxon treasures, and the Lewis Chessmen, each worth seeking out.

The building itself

The Great Court at the center is worth a pause on its own. Once an open courtyard, it was roofed over with a vast geometric glass canopy and is now the largest covered public square in Europe, with the old circular Reading Room standing at its middle.

The scale of the place is genuinely large, so trying to see everything in one go leads to museum fatigue. Most people get more out of picking a few galleries, the Egyptian rooms, the Greek and Roman wings, or the Mesopotamian collection, than racing through floor after floor.

Visiting tips

Admission to the permanent collection is free, though the museum advises booking a free timed ticket and walk-up entry depends on capacity. The museum invites a donation, and you can give as much or as little as you like. Only the special temporary exhibitions carry a separate charge, and those are worth booking ahead if one interests you.

Security checks at the entrance can create a queue at peak times, so arriving at opening or later in the afternoon helps. Free maps and short themed trails near the entrance point you to the highlights if you have limited time, and free guided talks on specific galleries run through the day.

Around the museum

The museum sits in Bloomsbury, a district of garden squares, bookshops, and university buildings that rewards a short wander. Cafes and pubs cluster on the surrounding streets, and Covent Garden's restaurants and theaters are a walk to the south.

Several Tube stations ring the museum within a few minutes' walk, so it slots easily into a day that also takes in Soho, Covent Garden, or the West End. It makes a good rainy-day anchor given how much is under one roof.

Context and debates

Founded in the mid-eighteenth century, the British Museum was the first national public museum of its kind, open free to what its founders called the curious and studious. That free-entry principle still holds, and it shapes the museum's place in the city as somewhere you can dip into rather than commit a paid day to.

Many of the collection's most famous objects also come with active disputes over ownership. Greece has long sought the return of the Parthenon sculptures, and Egypt has raised claims over the Rosetta Stone, debates the museum addresses in its own displays. Reading the labels with this in mind adds a layer to the visit beyond the objects themselves.

The collection keeps growing and rotating, so galleries occasionally close for refurbishment or to swap in loans and new acquisitions. Checking which rooms are open before you go saves disappointment if there is a specific object you have come to see.

British Museum: FAQs

Yes. Entry to the permanent collection is free, supported by voluntary donations. You can give what you wish on the way in. Only special temporary exhibitions charge admission, and those can be booked separately.

Not for general entry to the permanent galleries. Booking is only required for ticketed special exhibitions. Reserving a free timed slot online can still help you move through security faster at busy times.

Two to three hours is enough to see the major highlights such as the Rosetta Stone, the Egyptian galleries, and the Parthenon sculptures. The collection is huge, so most people choose a few areas rather than attempt all of it.

The museum opens daily through most of the year and closes only for a few days around Christmas, on 24, 25, and 26 December. It also stays open later on Friday evenings.

The Rosetta Stone, the Parthenon sculptures, the Egyptian mummies, the Assyrian reliefs, and the Sutton Hoo treasures are the most celebrated. The glass-roofed Great Court at the center is worth seeing in its own right.

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