Milan Museum Tickets — Brera, Ambrosiana, Leonardo & More Compared
Past the cathedral, Milan's museums run from old-master galleries to da Vinci's machines — the choice is which collection fits your day: art at Brera and the Ambrosiana, Leonardo at the Science Museum and Leonardo3, or design at Villa Necchi.
Available
11 options
Avg. rating
4.7 - 6,283 reviews
From
$9 EUR
Cancellation
Free up to 24h before
Milan Museums: what to know before booking
Past the cathedral, Milan's museums run from old-master galleries to da Vinci's machines — the choice is which collection fits your day: art at Brera and the Ambrosiana, Leonardo at the Science Museum and Leonardo3, or design at Villa Necchi.
- Availability
- 11 ticket options compared
- Starting price
- Tickets currently start around $9 EUR before checkout fees.
- Rating signal
- Compared options average 4.7 stars across 6,283 traveler reviews.
- Location
- Across central Milan — Brera and the Ambrosiana near the Duomo, the Science Museum near Sant'Ambrogio
- Best time
- Late morning or mid-afternoon on a weekday for the calmest rooms
- Ticket note
- Dated or timed entry on most; guided-tour meeting times are fixed
Milan Museums in Milan
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Everything you should know before you book
Milan's second tier of museums is where the city gets unexpectedly deep. The Pinacoteca di Brera holds Raphael, Caravaggio, and Mantegna's foreshortened Dead Christ; the Pinacoteca Ambrosiana keeps Leonardo's Codex Atlanticus and Caravaggio's only still life. For the city's Renaissance genius made tangible, the Leonardo da Vinci National Science and Technology Museum reconstructs his machines, and Leonardo3 lets you operate working models of his inventions.
Pick by theme rather than trying to do them all — an art day pairs Brera with the Ambrosiana, a Leonardo day pairs the Science Museum with Leonardo3, and a quieter design afternoon belongs to the 1930s rationalist Villa Necchi Campiglio. The Museum of Senses suits families, and the Branca Tower (Torre Branca) in Parco Sempione gives a panoramic alternative to the Duomo rooftop. Most sell timed or dated entry, so book the busy ones ahead.
Frequently asked questions
Which Milan museum is best after the Duomo?
The Pinacoteca di Brera for old-master painting, or the Leonardo da Vinci Science and Technology Museum if you want his inventions brought to life. The Ambrosiana is the quieter art pick and holds Leonardo's Codex Atlanticus.
Where can I see Leonardo da Vinci's work in Milan?
Beyond the Last Supper, the Ambrosiana holds the Codex Atlanticus, the Science and Technology Museum reconstructs his machines, and Leonardo3 has interactive models of his inventions you can operate.
Are these museums good for a rainy day?
Ideal — Brera, the Ambrosiana, the Science Museum, Leonardo3, and the Museum of Senses are all indoors and bookable with dated entry, so they make reliable wet-weather plans.











