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National Archaeological Museum of Naples, Italy
National Archaeological Museum of Naples

Campania

National Archaeological Museum of Naples

How to visit Naples' archaeological museum (MANN): the ticket, the opening hours, the Pompeii rooms to head for first, and whether it's worth a half-day off the city.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Where

Naples, Italy

Opening hours

Open 09:00–19:30 daily, with last entry at 18:30. Closed every Tuesday (with occasional public-holiday swaps). Confirm your date on museoarcheologiconapoli.it before you go.

Tickets

Full adult ticket €20 (about £17). EU/EEA visitors aged 18–24 pay €2; under-18s free. Free for everyone on the first Sunday of each month — but the Secret Cabinet, Egyptian and Magna Graecia rooms close on those free days.

Time needed

Two to three hours to do the Pompeii rooms, the Farnese marbles and the Secret Cabinet properly; a focused 90 minutes if you only want the headline pieces.

In short

Visiting National Archaeological Museum of Naples

This is where Pompeii's best frescoes, mosaics and bronzes actually ended up — including the Alexander Mosaic and the colossal Farnese sculptures — so it pays off most as a companion to a Pompeii or Herculaneum day, before or after. It's closed on Tuesdays, which catches people out. Head upstairs to the Pompeii mosaics and frescoes and the Secret Cabinet first, leave the Farnese marbles and the Egyptian basement for last, and allow about two to three hours.

How to visit without wasting the trip

The thing to understand before you go is that the best of Pompeii is not at Pompeii. When the site was excavated, the most fragile and valuable finds — the floor mosaics, the painted wall panels, the bronzes — were lifted out and brought here to the Museo Archeologico Nazionale (MANN) for safekeeping. So if you’ve booked a Pompeii or Herculaneum day, this museum is the other half of the same story, and it works best done before or just after. The single mistake to avoid is the Tuesday closure: the museum shuts every Tuesday, which is exactly the day visitors most often wander up the hill to find the doors locked.

The full adult ticket is €20 (about £17), bought at the desk or online through CoopCulture, and it rarely sells out — unlike the timed-entry blockbusters elsewhere, you can usually walk up and in. Pre-booking a slot mainly saves you the queue on a busy weekend or during a big temporary show. To get there, take Metro Line 1 to Museo or Line 2 to Cavour; either drops you a couple of minutes from the entrance at Piazza Museo, or it’s a 15–20 minute walk uphill from the Spaccanapoli streets of the old town. The first Sunday of the month is free, but the Secret Cabinet, Egyptian and Magna Graecia rooms close on those days, so a free Sunday is a poor day to come for the headline pieces.

What to see first, and is it worth it?

Go upstairs first, to the Pompeii mosaics and frescoes, while you’ve got the energy and the rooms are quieter: the Alexander Mosaic from the House of the Faun — millions of tiny tesserae showing Alexander routing Darius — is the one to find, alongside the painted panels prised off villa walls. The small Secret Cabinet (Gabinetto Segreto) of Roman erotica is worth the detour and tells you more about everyday Roman life than the marbles do. Leave the ground-floor Farnese sculptures — the colossal Hercules and the enormous single-block Farnese Bull — and the Egyptian basement for last, when you’re flagging. Allow two to three hours to do it properly, or a focused 90 minutes for just the highlights.

It’s worth it, but as a companion piece rather than a standalone. If you’re only in Naples for the pizza and the seafront and have no plans for the ruins, a packed antiquities museum may feel like homework. If you’re doing Pompeii or Herculaneum at all, skip it at your peril — you’ll have walked through half-empty rooms wondering where everything went, and the answer is here.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Naples city guide.

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National Archaeological Museum of Naples FAQs

Is the National Archaeological Museum of Naples worth visiting?
Yes, especially paired with Pompeii or Herculaneum — the most fragile and famous finds, including the Alexander Mosaic and the painted-room frescoes, were moved here for safekeeping, so the actual sites are partly stripped of their best pieces. Seeing both halves makes either visit make sense.
What day is the museum closed?
It's closed every Tuesday, the one weekday people most often turn up to find the doors shut. Opening is 09:00–19:30 the rest of the week, with last entry at 18:30, so a Tuesday-arrival itinerary should put MANN on a different day.
How do you get to the museum from central Naples?
Take Metro Line 1 to Museo or Line 2 to Cavour; both leave you a couple of minutes' walk from the entrance at Piazza Museo. It's also a 15–20 minute walk uphill from the Spaccanapoli old-town streets.
Should you book MANN tickets in advance?
It rarely sells out the way Pompeii or the Sagrada Família does, so on-the-day entry is usually fine. Pre-booking a timed slot online mainly saves you the ticket-desk queue on a busy weekend or when a big temporary exhibition is on.

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