Attica
National Archaeological Museum
How to visit Athens' National Archaeological Museum: the €20 ticket, which galleries to prioritise, how far it is from the Acropolis, and whether it's worth the half-day.
Where
Athens, Greece
Opening hours
Summer (4 May–15 Nov 2026): Wed–Mon 08:00–20:00, Tue 13:00–20:00. Winter (16 Nov–early May): Wed–Mon 08:30–15:30, Tue 13:00–20:00. Last admission 30 minutes before close. Always confirm your date on namuseum.gr.
Tickets
Flat €20 (about £17) year-round from January 2026 — the same in summer and winter now. Reduced €10 (~£8.50) for EU over-65s in the 1 Oct–31 May window; under-25 EU citizens, students and under-5s free. Cash or card at the door.
Time needed
2–3 hours to do the headline galleries justice; a fast highlights loop takes about 75 minutes.
In short
Visiting National Archaeological Museum
This is the Mycenae gold, the Antikythera mechanism and the bronze Artemision Zeus under one roof — the deepest single collection of Greek antiquity anywhere, and a useful counterpoint to the marble-only Acropolis Museum. It sits a 25-minute walk north of the Plaka tourist core in Exarcheia, so it's easy to skip; don't. Buy the €20 ticket at the door (it rarely queues like the Acropolis), allow two to three hours, and arrive at opening on a midweek morning if you want the building near-empty — note Tuesday is the one day it doesn't open until 13:00.
How to visit without burning a whole day
The museum sits on Patission Street in Exarcheia, about a 25-minute walk north of Plaka or a short Metro hop to Victoria (Line 1) or Omonia (Line 2). That distance is exactly why a lot of Athens itineraries quietly drop it — they stack the Acropolis, the Acropolis Museum and the Agora into one southern cluster and run out of legs before they head north. Treat this as a separate morning rather than a fourth thing on a packed day.
Entry is a flat €20 (about £17) from 2026, the same in summer and winter now that the old cold-season discount has gone. You don’t need to book: unlike the Acropolis, it rarely sells a slot out and the door queue is short, so buy at the kiosk or online via namuseum.gr if you’d rather walk straight in. Hours swing hard by season — roughly 08:00–20:00 in summer but only 08:30–15:30 in winter (Wednesday to Monday), with a late Tuesday afternoon start either way — so check your exact date before you build a morning around it.
Which galleries, and is it worth it?
Allow two to three hours, or about 75 minutes if you’re doing a highlights loop. Prioritise the Mycenaean gold in Room 4 (the so-called Mask of Agamemnon), the spare white Cycladic figurines, the Artemision Bronze of Zeus or Poseidon mid-throw, and the corroded gearwork of the Antikythera mechanism. Don’t try to read every case — the room after room of pottery is where stamina goes to die, and skimming it is the right call.
If you do one museum in Athens, do this one over the Acropolis Museum. The Acropolis Museum is sharper and closer to the action, but it’s about a single hill; this is the entire arc of Greek antiquity in one building, and there’s nothing else like the concentration of it. The catch is that it’s older, the labelling is dated and the neighbourhood is scruffy — so come with a plan or an audio guide, and you’ll get far more out of the €20 than a wander would suggest.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Athens city guide.
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