Bavaria
BMW Museum & BMW Welt
How to visit the BMW Museum and BMW Welt in Munich: which of the two is the paid one, the €10 museum ticket and free-entry Welt, getting there on the U3 to Olympiazentrum, and how to add the factory tour.
Where
Munich, Germany
Opening hours
BMW Museum: Tuesday to Sunday, 10:00–18:00, last entry around 17:30; closed Mondays. BMW Welt: open daily — the building (the Doppelkegel double cone) from about 07:30 and the exhibition areas and brand stands from 09:00 to roughly 18:00. The separate BMW Group plant tour runs on weekdays only and on fixed timed slots.
Tickets
BMW Museum: adults €10 (about £9), reduced (students/seniors) €7 (about £6), and a family ticket €24 (about £21); under-6s free. BMW Welt: free entry, no ticket needed. The guided BMW Group plant tour is a separate booking at about €13 (around £11) per adult and must be reserved well ahead.
Time needed
Allow about two hours for both buildings — roughly 60–90 minutes for the museum's seven themed houses and another 30–45 minutes wandering BMW Welt and the showroom over the road. Add two hours and a separate booking if you do the plant tour, and another half-hour if you stop for lunch at one of the Welt restaurants.
In short
Visiting BMW Museum & BMW Welt
Munich's BMW visit is really two buildings facing each other across the Petuelring by the Olympiapark. The bowl-shaped BMW Museum is the ticketed one — €10 (about £9) for adults — and walks you through 125 years of cars, motorcycles and the M division. BMW Welt, the swooping double-cone delivery centre over the road, is free to walk into and where new owners collect their cars. Get there in 15 minutes on the U3 to Olympiazentrum, allow about two hours for both, and pre-book the separate BMW Group plant tour weeks ahead if you want to see the production line.
Two buildings, one of them free
The BMW visit in Munich is really two buildings staring at each other across the Petuelring, next to the Olympiapark. The BMW Museum is the silver bowl tucked beside the famous four-cylinder HQ tower — that’s the ticketed one, €10 (about £9) for an adult, €7 reduced and a €24 family ticket, with under-6s free. Inside, seven linked “houses” walk you through about 125 years of cars and motorcycles: the early Dixi, the 507 roadster, the M division, the art cars and the motorbikes.
Across the road, BMW Welt — the swooping glass double cone (Doppelkegel) — is free to walk into. It’s the delivery centre where new owners actually collect their cars off a turntable, and the ground floor doubles as a showroom for the current range, the M cars and Rolls-Royce. Start with the free Welt, then cross the footbridge to the museum so you’re not paying for the bit you can see for nothing.
Hours, getting there, and the factory tour
The museum opens Tuesday to Sunday, 10:00–18:00, with last entry around 17:30, and closes on Mondays — the single most common wasted trip, so don’t plan it for the start of the week. BMW Welt opens daily, the building from about 07:30 and the exhibition stands from 09:00. Getting there is easy: take the U3 to Olympiazentrum from Marienplatz or the Hauptbahnhof, about 15 minutes, then a two-minute walk — it’s covered by any MVV inner-zone or Munich day ticket, so there’s no extra fare and no reason to drive.
The one thing to sort in advance is the BMW Group plant tour: a separate, guided walk through the working production line next door, about €13 (around £11) and capped to small groups, so it books out weeks ahead and runs weekdays only. Allow about two hours for the two main buildings — 60–90 minutes in the museum, 30–45 in Welt — and budget two more if you add the plant tour.
If you or anyone you’re travelling with cares about cars, it’s a genuinely good half-day and the free Welt alone is worth the U3 ride. If you don’t, the €10 museum is skippable — wander the free showroom, watch a delivery turntable spin, and spend the rest of the day back in the Altstadt instead.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Munich city guide.