The names of the vast State Museums in Berlin hardly hint at what may be seen in the different buildings on Museumsinsel, Kulturforum, and beyond. The collections are better named but often spread through different museum buildings and exhibitions.
The Staatliche Museen zu Berlin (state or national museums) in Berlin have some of the world’s largest and most important collections of art and cultural objects. The names of the different museums do not often reveal what can be seen inside: the antiquities in the Old Museum are newer than the Egyptian works in the New Museum. Bode Museum? It does not even mean anything particular in German -– it is a surname. Hamburger Bahnhof / Hamburg Station? The last train departed in 1884. The names of the individual collections or the various museums grouped in a single building generally give a much better indication of what is on show.
From 16 April 2024, several smaller museums will be closed on both Monday and Tuesday with shorter opening hours on many days. Opening hours for the Alte Nationalgalerie will be longer for much of the year, as the Caspar David Friedrich exhibition tickets are selling out fast, and also longer in summer 2024 for the top museums. See the latest Berlin museum opening hours for details.
Currently, time-slot reservations are essential only for the Caspar David Friedrich exhibition in the Alte Nationalgalerie (until 4 August 2024). However, it is sensible to book timeslots if available for the Alte Nationalgalerie, Gemäldegalerie, Neue Nationalgalerie, Neues Museum, and Das Panorama. (The Pergamon Museum itself is closed until 2027!) Timeslots are released only a few weeks in advance. Buy tickets and make reservations online at GetYourGuide or at SMB.
Online tickets for museums without timeslot reservations are skip-the-line — go directly to the entrance to scan the ticket. Many multiple-museum tickets and passes are again accepted, including Kulturforum, Museumsinsel, and the excellent value 3-day Berlin Museum Pass.
The Berlin State Museums’ vast collections of items from antiquity, the ancient Near East, Byzantium, and Islamic art are spread over the museums on Museum Island. Non-European art and culture (Asian Art and the Ethnological Collection) are displayed in the Humboldt Forum in the reconstructed Berlin Schloss on Museum Island.
European (or Western) paintings and sculptures are divided throughout the city but the largest concentrations are in Kulturforum, on Museumsinsel, and in the Hamburger Bahnhof:
The most famous and most important museums in Berlin are on the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage-listed Museumsinsel (Museum Island) in the heart of Berlin Mitte. Most museums here focus on antiquities but the Old National Gallery has 19th-century art, while the Ethnological and Asian Art collections are in the rebuilt Berlin Schloss / Humboldt Forum.
This island in the Spree River was for centuries at the heart of Berlin. The Prussian royal palace, recently rebuilt, was here and was joined by various museums during the nineteenth century. These buildings were extensively damaged during the Second World War and only properly restored at the end of the 20th century.
Work continues to link most of the museums on the island via underground passages. A new visitors center — the James-Simon-Galerie — opened in July 2019 as the main entrance to the Pergamon and Neues Museum.
The Pergamon Museum is closed to visitors until at least 2027 and will only fully reopen by the mid-2030s.
The Pergamon Museum claimed to be the most popular museum in Berlin but the Pergamon is being renovated and the entire museum is closed since October 2023. Some parts, including the Hellenic Halls, the famous Pergamon Altar, and the Islamic Art Museum will reopen in 2027, while the rest may be closed until the mid-2030s. Some statues from the Pergamon Altar may be seen in the temporary and separate Panorama Exhibition.
The museum originally completed in 1930 is most famous for the reconstructions of the large archaeological structures: the Pergamon Altar, the Market Gate of Miletus, the Ishtar Gate and Processional Way from Babylon, and the Mshatta Façade.
The main collections in the Pergamon Museum are:
The Neues Museum is in a mid-19th-century building by Friedrich August Stüler but was seriously damaged during the Second World War.
Ironically, the New Museum now houses a collection even older than the antiquities in the Old Museum:
The Neues Museum competes with the Pergamon as the most-visited top museum in Berlin and requires time-slot tickets – buy online from Get Your Guide as mobile phone tickets.
Entrance to the Neues Museum is either through the Simon James Gallery or from the older entrance across the square from the Alte Nationalgalerie.
The Alte Nationalgalerie was the third museum on the island and opened in a neo-classical temple-like building in 1876. It is still the home of the national art collection, although the collection is now so large that several buildings in Berlin are used to display the paintings and sculptures.
The collection in the Alte Nationalgalerie:
The Altes Museum is a neo-classical building with an impressive 18 Ionic column facade designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in the 1820s. It is on the open Lustgarten square together with the Berliner Dom and the Schloss.
The Altes Museum now houses the:
The Bode Museum opened in 1904 as the Kaiser Friedrich Museum but is now known after its original curator. The building was seriously damaged during the Second World War and only reopened in 2006.
The Bode Museum houses the:
The Humboldt Forum in the rebuilt Berlin Schloss on Museum Island reopened in December 2020. The Stadtmuseum Berlin (local history), Humboldt University, and other institutions have temporary exhibition rooms here but the two main SMB museums in the Berliner Schloss are:
Note that both museums follow the opening hours and ticket system of the Humboldt Forum and are not included in general Museum Island passes. Admission to both museums is currently free and without time-slot reservations.
A contemporary of the Altes Museum and also designed by Schinkel, the Neo-Gothic Friedrichwerdersche Kirche was the first large brick building built in Germany since the Middle Ages.
The church is used by the Nationalgalerie to exhibit part of its collection of 19th-century sculptures – covering the period from Schinkel to the end of the Kaiserreich (ca. 1789 – 1918). The church is just off Museumsisland across the Spree Canal from the Berliner Schloss. Admission is free.
The Kulturforum / Cultural Forum is a collection of purpose-built museums and cultural centers. The focus here is European art.
Most buildings here were erected during the Cold War, at a time when the reunification of Germany seemed impossible. In addition to the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin buildings, the area is also home to the Berliner Philharmonie.
The contract for the building of the Gemäldegalerie was awarded only three years before the fall of the Berlin Wall. By the time the modern building was finished, the divided collections could be united leaving the Gemäldegalerie with one of the most important collections of European Old Masters art in the world.
The Neue Nationalgalerie opened in 1968 as the last building designed by Mies van der Rohe. The Neue Nationalgalerie is used for major exhibitions of modern art from the early 20th century to around the 1960s, although the current two-year exhibition covers the period 1945 to 2000.
(Contemporary art is in the Hamburger Bahnhof while a new large museum for 20th-century art is under construction next to the Neue Nationalgalerie.)
The Kupferstichkabinett Berlin is the largest collection of prints and drawings in Germany and the fourth largest in the world. Its collection of 550,000 prints and 100,000 drawings spans a thousand years and ranges from Andy Warhol to Dürer and illuminated manuscripts. Visitors enjoy frequently changing temporary exhibitions and the possibility to request viewings of specific works.
A huge library of art and cultural works with occasional special exhibitions.
The Kunstgewerbemuseum displays decorative arts from the early Middle Ages to the present, a large collection of clothes from the 18th century to the present, designer furniture, and parts of the magnificent Welfenschatz (Guelph Treasure).
The Musikinstrumenten-Museum (Musical Instruments) is not part of the state museums but is absolutely worth seeing and is included in the Kulturforum ticket. Around 800 musical instruments are on display including a working Wurlitzer theater organ.
The Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum für Gegenwart – Berlin is one of the largest contemporary art museums in the world. The former station was already converted into a museum in 1916 but the name stuck.
The Hamburger Bahnhof displays contemporary art from the 1970s to the present. It is only two blocks from the new Berlin Hauptbahnhof. It stages a variety of temporary exhibitions every year.
The collections of the museums in and near Schloss Charlottenburg have mostly left for Museum Island since the reunification of Germany. Two art galleries across the road from Schloss Charlottenburg remain part of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. In contrast to the rest of the National Gallery, both these centers are mostly based on specialized originally private collections.
The Museum für Fotografie / Photography Museum has a permanent exhibition of Helmut Newton works and large temporary exhibitions of photos owned by various other museums. This museum is to the west of the Zoologischer Bahnhof station.
The Museum Europäischer Kulturen / Museum of European Cultures shows everyday items, rather than high art, from the contacts between different cultures in Europe since the 18th century. It is the only museum that remained in the 1960s museum building in Dahlem in the southwest of Berlin.
Schloss Köpenick is a Baroque palace commissioned by Friedrich I of Prussia. It is in the far eastern outskirts of Berlin and thus rarely visited by casual visitors to Berlin.
Note new opening times for many Berlin museums from mid-April 2024. Timeslot reservations are essential only for the Caspar David Friedrich exhibition (until 4 August 2024) but sensible (and sometimes needed in busy periods!) for the Alte Nationalgalerie, Gemäldegalerie, Neue Nationalgalerie, Neues Museum, and Pergamon – Das Panorama. (The Pergamon Museum itself is closed until 2027!). Timeslots are released only a few weeks in advance. Online tickets are available from GetYourGuide, which seems to have timeslots available when SMB has already sold out. Many passes and multi-museum tickets are again sold (Kulturforum / Museums Island). Individual museum ticket prices range from €8 to €14 (€20 for special exhibitions). Online tickets are skip-the-line — go directly to the gallery entrance to scan the code but pick up free audioguides first.
For more general information on the Berlin State Museums:
News & Temporary Exhibitions:
More Museum Reviews and Museum-Specific Information: