European Night of Museums 2026: Dates, Program & Best Locations to Visit
Table of contents
- What is Museum Night and why has it become a phenomenon?
- France: a classic that never tires
- Italy: Antiquity under the night sky
- Poland: even castles and government buildings are open
- Berlin: its own format at a different time
- Practical tips: how to avoid disappointment
- Where to go for the first time?
Museum Night 2026 will take place simultaneously in 30 European countries on May 23. Find out which museums will be open for free, what Paris, Rome, Warsaw and Berlin are preparing, and how to plan the perfect cultural evening abroad
Every year in May, Europe experiences a special night – when the doors of the world’s largest museums open after sunset and thousands of people embark on a night-time journey through art, history and culture. Museum Night 2026 is the 22nd in a row, and it promises to be bigger than any previous one.
Official date: May 23, 2026. This Saturday, more than 3,000 museums, galleries, castles and cultural centers in 30 European countries will open their doors for free – from sunset until late at night.
We tell you where to go and what to see in this article.
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What is Museum Night and why has it become a phenomenon?
It all started in 2005. The French Ministry of Culture launched an initiative with a simple task: to show that a museum is not a boring institution for school excursions, but a living space capable of surprising. The idea worked so well that the following year dozens of countries joined the campaign. Today, the event is held under the patronage of UNESCO, the Council of Europe and the International Council of Museums (ICOM).
The main idea has remained unchanged: to see a museum in the dark means to see it completely differently. Night lighting, empty halls, live performances between paintings and sculptures, the mystery of nooks and crannies that you barely notice during the day - all this together turns an ordinary cultural walk into a full-fledged emotional experience.
After the pandemic, interest in such events has increased dramatically: people began to look not just for information, but for a live experience. The Night of Museums responds to this request like nothing else.
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France: a classic that never tires
The homeland of the idea remains its main focus. This year, more than a thousand museums will join the action in France alone. In Paris, the list of participants includes the Pompidou Center, the Carnaval Museum, the Picasso Museum, the Museum of Man, the Museum of Fine Arts and dozens of smaller, but no less interesting institutions.
The Musée d’Orsay and the Louvre are traditionally the main tourist attractions. The Musée d’Orsay is preparing night concerts, and the Louvre is offering special itineraries through halls that are difficult to reach during the day due to crowds.
The Musée d’Orangerie is worth a special mention: on May 23, it will open its doors from 6:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. with free admission. Visitors will have access to all the halls, from Claude Monet’s famous “Water Lilies” to the Walter-Guillaume collection and temporary exhibitions. Guides will be available to answer questions from 8:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
The Palace of Versailles is offering something truly unique this year: a musical evening in the Gallery of the Great Battles with four concerts for two pianos, after which guests will be able to walk through the Empire Halls accompanied by students from the Louvre School. Admission is free – but only with prior online registration.
The regions are also bustling with life. In Avignon, the Palais Rouret will open (tour only with lanterns!), the Calvet Museum with family tours of ancient Egypt and numerous small galleries. In Arles, the LUMA cultural center offers night walks in the park and workshops for children.
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Italy: Antiquity under the night sky
In Italy, the format of the Night of Museums is somewhat different: most institutions are open until midnight or with a symbolic entrance fee of €1. The main events are traditionally concentrated in Rome, Florence, Milan and Naples, but 2026 brings openings to smaller cities as well.
Bologna, for example, has prepared a great program this year: the Municipal Archaeological Museum, the Museum of the Middle Ages, the MAMbo (Museum of Modern Art) and the Morandi Museum - all with evening hours and a symbolic ticket of €1 from 18:00. Some institutions, in particular the Ustica Memorial Museum, are free of charge.
In Rome, the Capitoline Museums and the Vatican Museums traditionally attract the largest queues - experienced travelers advise coming after 21:00, when the flow of tourists decreases a bit.
The Uffizi Gallery in Florence offers night tours of the Renaissance halls with live music.
The special atmosphere of the Night of Museums in Italy is the courtyards of ancient palaces, illuminated by a projector, and the sound of a live violin, echoing from under the arches. This is difficult to recreate during the day.
We tell you why a trip to a museum improves your mood at the link.
Poland: even castles and government buildings are open
The Polish Night of Museums has long outgrown its purely museum format. In Warsaw, not only classical museums are open on this day, but also theaters, castles, palaces and galleries of contemporary art. Among the most popular locations are the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews, the Royal Castle and the Copernicus Science Center. Entrance to most of them is free, but popular institutions gather long queues - and it is better to come to them with a margin of time or book a place online in advance.
Berlin: its own format at a different time
It is worth clarifying: Berlin (Germany) and Vienna (Austria) are not participating in the pan-European Museum Night in May – they have developed their own independent formats. Berlin’s Lange Nacht der Museen will take place on August 29, 2026: around 75 museums and exhibition spaces will take part, including the Museum Island, the Jewish Museum, the Humboldt Forum and the Natural History Museum. Night buses will run between the locations, concerts and lectures will be held. A ticket purchased before August 17 costs €8 cheaper.
The Great Egyptian Museum in Giza opened on November 4, 2025. Read this article for opening hours, tickets, routes and the main treasures of the GEM.
Practical tips: how to avoid disappointment
A few things to know before you go:
- Book in advance. Some museums in France, especially the Palace of Versailles and some Parisian institutions, require advance online registration – and places sell out quickly. In Spain (for those planning to combine with Madrid), the Temple of Debod sells out within a few hours of the program announcement.
- Arrive later. The main wave of visitors is from 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM. After 9:00 PM, the lines are much shorter and the atmosphere is more intimate.
- Check the official websites. The program is updated every year, and some museums may be under renovation or have changed opening hours. The official website of the French Museum Night is nuitdesmusees.culture.gouv.fr.
- Dress comfortably. The night involves moving between locations – on average, participants walk 5–10 kilometers per evening.
- Plan your route. In large cities, it is realistic to visit 3–5 locations in one night, if they are nearby. Don't try to cover everything - it's better to dive deeper into fewer places.
Train travel London - Paris - Geneva: how to see 3 European countries cheaper than traveling by plane we tell in our previous article.
Where to go for the first time?
If you’ve never been to Museum Night, Paris is the best choice for a first experience: over 80 free museums, all-night transportation, and the city’s unique atmosphere after sunset. For a more intimate experience and a modest budget, consider Prague (the event takes place there on June 13 and is also free) or Polish cities, where the lines are shorter and the program is no less intense.
Museum Night is no longer just a “free museum.” It’s a cultural festival that takes place simultaneously in dozens of cities and offers something that’s hard to find on any other day of the year: live art, at night, without rushing, and with a sense of belonging to something big.
Museum Night means dozens of kilometers on foot, late returns to the hotel, big crowds, and a city at night. In such a busy format, surprises happen more often than you think: you can twist your foot on the pavement, catch a cold, or find yourself in a situation where the flight is canceled, and the reservation has already been paid for.
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Don't put it off until the last moment: insurance is needed before departure, and some risks (for example, cancellation of a trip due to illness) are covered only if the policy is applied for in advance.
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Let's remind you! European tourists in 2026 are increasingly choosing lesser-known destinations instead of expensive and crowded capitals. Slovenia, Latvia, Montenegro and Albania offer quality vacations at significantly lower prices. We have already talked about the cost of accommodation, food and the features of each of these countries.
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asked questions
Do you need a visa to visit the Night of Museums in France, Poland or Italy?
What is the difference between International Museum Day (May 18) and Museum Night (May 23)?
Is it safe to travel alone to Museum Night and is it worth taking out insurance?
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