The grand marble staircase and octagonal dome of the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, beneath painted ceilings and gilded ornament

Where the Habsburgs kept their most beautiful things

Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna, skip-the-line. The world's greatest Bruegel collection, Vermeer, Raphael and a treasury of imperial wonders — one concierge ticket, we handle the booking.

See ticket options
  • 1891 Opened by Emperor Franz Joseph
  • 12 Bruegels World's largest collection
  • 60 m Octagonal dome over the entry hall
  • 8 collections Old Masters to ancient Egypt

Choose your ticket

Adult

Museum entry

€39

  • Museum entry — Picture Gallery, Kunstkammer & all permanent collections
  • Skip-the-line priority entry
  • Free 5-minute audio history before your visit
  • Full refund if we can't secure your entry
Reserve my ticket

Habsburg Treasures

Museum + Imperial Treasury

€54

  • Museum + Imperial Treasury combined
  • All permanent collections at the main building
  • Skip-the-line priority entry to both
  • Free 5-minute audio history before your visit
Reserve the Treasures ticket

Masterticket

All galleries incl. sister collections

€62

  • All-galleries pass incl. sister collections
  • Picture Gallery, Kunstkammer & every permanent collection
  • Skip-the-line priority entry
  • Free 5-minute audio history before your visit
Reserve the Masterticket
Helen P.
Bristol
“Seeing twelve Bruegels in one room is something I'll never forget. Booking ahead meant we skipped the queue on a rainy Saturday and went straight in. Confirmation came through within the hour.”
2026-05-22
Marco B.
Milan
“The little audio guide they sent the day before was brilliant — five minutes and we knew exactly where to find the Vermeer and the Saliera. No wandering, no wasted time.”
2026-04-18
Sophie L.
Lyon
“The building itself is a masterpiece — that staircase and dome took my breath away before we even reached the paintings. Smooth booking and clear instructions throughout.”
2026-05-09
  • Refund if we can't deliver your entry
  • Cards, Apple Pay & Google Pay in 17 currencies
  • Instant confirmation - ticket in your inbox within hours
  • Concierge in your language, 7 days a week

5-minute audio guide

Your Kunsthistorisches Museum 5-minute guide

Hand-written and narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer before their visit. Five minutes that turn a vast museum into a clear plan - what the dome and Klimt staircase are really telling you, where the twelve Bruegels hang, how to find Vermeer's Art of Painting, and which treasure in the Kunstkammer you should not leave without seeing.

  • The Klimt staircase and Makart dome - what to look up at before you climb
  • The twelve Bruegels - the world's largest collection, in one room
  • Vermeer's Art of Painting, Raphael, Caravaggio and the Velázquez infantas
  • The Kunstkammer's golden Saliera - the one treasure not to miss

Included free with every ticket. No app, no download - plays in any browser.

About Kunsthistorisches Museum

The Kunsthistorisches Museum is the house the Habsburgs built for the most beautiful things they owned. Opened in 1891 by Emperor Franz Joseph I, it was raised on Vienna's Ringstrasse to designs by Gottfried Semper and Carl von Hasenauer as a palace for art itself — a twin to the Natural History Museum that faces it across Maria-Theresien-Platz. You feel the ambition the moment you step inside: a grand marble staircase rising beneath an octagonal dome some sixty metres high, painted by Hans Makart and decorated by a young Gustav Klimt before the world had heard his name.

At its heart is the Picture Gallery, one of the finest collections of Old Master paintings anywhere. Here hang the world's largest collection of works by Pieter Bruegel the Elder — twelve panels, including the celebrated Hunters in the Snow, the Tower of Babel and the Peasant Wedding, a gathering found in no other museum on earth. A few rooms away are Vermeer's luminous The Art of Painting, masterpieces by Raphael, Titian, Rubens and Caravaggio, and the tender Infanta portraits in which Velázquez immortalised the children of the Spanish Habsburgs.

Beyond the paintings lies a museum within a museum. The Kunstkammer displays more than two thousand imperial treasures — among them the golden Saliera, Benvenuto Cellini's salt cellar, the only goldsmith's work that can be securely attributed to him. Older still are the Egyptian and Near Eastern Collection, the Greek and Roman Antiquities and one of the world's great Coin Collections, each a wing in their own right. It is less a single museum than a constellation of them under one dome.

This is an independent concierge ticket service. We secure your skip-the-line entry, send instant confirmation and a free audio guide, and stay reachable in your language right up to visit day — so you arrive, walk past the queue, and spend your time with the Bruegels and the Saliera instead of standing in line.

“The whole thing was handled by email in under an hour. We walked straight past a long queue and went straight up to the Bruegel room. Worth every euro.”

— Sophie L., Amsterdam

Practical information

Address
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Maria-Theresien-Platz, 1010 Vienna, Austria
Getting there
On the Ringstrasse opposite the MuseumsQuartier. U-Bahn line U2 to Museumsquartier or U3 to Volkstheater, both a few minutes' walk; tram lines 1, 2, 71 and D and bus 48A stop nearby on the Ring. From the city centre (Stephansplatz) it is about a 15-minute walk.
Time needed
2-4 hours - the Picture Gallery and Kunstkammer alone can fill an afternoon; art lovers often stay longer
What to wear
Smart-casual; the museum is climate-controlled, so a light layer is enough. Large bags and coats must be left in the cloakroom
Accessibility
The museum is wheelchair accessible with lifts to all collection floors and accessible toilets; contact us ahead and we'll share the current step-free routes and any temporary closures

About our service

Kunsthistorisches Museum Tickets is an independent ticket-concierge service that helps international visitors book skip-the-line entry to the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. We are not affiliated with the museum or its operator. Our service fee is included in the displayed price, and we refund you in full if a booking cannot be secured.

Frequently asked

Where is the Kunsthistorisches Museum and how do I get there?

The museum stands on Maria-Theresien-Platz, on Vienna's Ringstrasse opposite the MuseumsQuartier. Take U-Bahn line U2 to Museumsquartier or U3 to Volkstheater, both a short walk away, or trams 1, 2, 71 and D along the Ring. From Stephansplatz in the old town it is about a 15-minute walk.

What is included in each ticket?

The Adult ticket covers museum entry to the Picture Gallery, the Kunstkammer and all permanent collections in the main building. The Habsburg Treasures ticket adds the Imperial Treasury, and the Masterticket is an all-galleries pass that also includes the museum's sister collections.

Why is the Kunsthistorisches Museum so famous?

It holds one of the world's greatest collections of Old Master paintings — including the largest collection of Pieter Bruegel the Elder anywhere, twelve panels in all — alongside Vermeer's The Art of Painting, Raphael, Caravaggio and Velázquez. Add the Kunstkammer's imperial treasures and the Egyptian and antiquities wings, and it is among Europe's finest art museums.

Do you offer skip-the-line entry?

Yes. We secure your entry in advance so you bypass the on-site ticket-office queue and go straight to the galleries with the confirmation we email you. Queues can build on rainy days and busy summer afternoons, so this saves real time.

How and when will I receive my ticket?

Confirmation is emailed to you within hours of booking, usually much sooner. Your entry document and a free 5-minute audio guide arrive before your visit — no app or printing required, though a printed copy never hurts.

Is there a timed entry slot I have to pick?

No. We use an open-date model — you book for a specific date and can arrive any time during opening hours. There is no fixed half-hour slot to choose.

How much are tickets?

The Adult museum ticket is €39, the Habsburg Treasures ticket (museum plus Imperial Treasury) is €54, and the Masterticket (all galleries including the sister collections) is €62. The current price for every option is shown on the booking page.

Do children pay for entry?

Visitors under 19 enter the museum free of charge, so there is no child or youth ticket to buy — just bring them along. Our tickets cover the adult visitors in your group and let you skip the on-the-day queue.

Which day is the museum closed?

From September to May the museum is closed on Mondays and open Tuesday to Sunday. In June, July and August it is open every day, including Mondays. We will only confirm a date the museum is actually open.

What are the opening hours?

The museum is open 10:00 to 18:00, with late opening on Thursdays until 21:00. Last admission is shortly before closing, so aim to arrive with at least a couple of hours to spare.

How long should I plan for a visit?

Allow 2 to 4 hours. The Picture Gallery and the Kunstkammer alone can fill an afternoon, and the Egyptian, antiquities and coin collections add more. Art lovers regularly stay the better part of a day.

Where are the Bruegel paintings and Vermeer's Art of Painting?

The twelve Bruegels hang together in the Picture Gallery on the first floor, in the Flemish wing — the world's largest collection of the artist in a single room. Vermeer's The Art of Painting is in the same gallery's Dutch rooms. Our free audio guide tells you exactly where to turn.

What is the Kunstkammer and is it worth seeing?

The Kunstkammer is the Habsburgs' chamber of art and wonders — more than two thousand precious objects in carved ivory, gold, rock crystal and bronze. Its star is the golden Saliera by Benvenuto Cellini, the only goldsmith's work securely attributed to him. Many visitors rate it the highlight of the whole museum.

Is the museum accessible for wheelchairs or limited mobility?

Yes. The museum is wheelchair accessible with lifts to all collection floors and accessible toilets. Contact us before your visit and we'll share the current step-free routes and note any temporary gallery closures.

Is there a café inside?

Yes. The café-restaurant sits beneath the great dome in the Cupola Hall — one of the most beautiful spots in Vienna to pause for coffee and cake mid-visit, open throughout museum hours.

What happens if you can't secure my entry?

You get a full refund. We only confirm once your entry is locked in, and if anything prevents us delivering it, you are refunded in full.

Can I get a refund or change my date?

Reach out to our concierge team as early as you can and we'll readily rebook your date. Refunds are guaranteed in the event we cannot deliver the entry you booked.