Skip to content
Departly.
Teylers Museum, Netherlands
Teylers Museum

North Holland

Teylers Museum

The oldest museum in the Netherlands, open since 1784 and barely changed โ€” the daylit Oval Room, fossils and instruments, and rotating Michelangelo and Rembrandt drawings.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Haarlem, Netherlands

Opening hours

Typically Tuesday to Sunday from late morning until late afternoon, closed Mondays and some public holidays. Hours shift seasonally. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

From about โ‚ฌ16 (roughly ยฃ14) for an adult; reductions for some categories and free entry for the youngest visitors. Confirm current prices on the official site.

Time needed

About 1.5 hours โ€” longer than people expect, because the Oval Room, the instrument cabinets and the rotating drawings all reward a slow look.

In short

Visiting Teylers Museum

The oldest museum in the Netherlands, open since 1784 and barely altered. The daylit Oval Room of dark wood and glass cases is the showpiece, surrounded by fossils, minerals, scientific instruments and a print room that rotates Michelangelo and Rembrandt drawings. It is genuinely unusual and rewards more time than most people give it. Allow about ninety minutes.

A museum that never modernised

Teylers opened in 1784 and has been running ever since, which makes it the oldest museum in the Netherlands โ€” and, unusually, it has barely been brought up to date. The heart of it is the Oval Room, a two-storey gallery of dark polished wood and glass cabinets lit from above by daylight, with the original handwritten labels still in place. Standing in it feels less like visiting an exhibition and more like stepping into the Enlightenmentโ€™s own idea of how knowledge should be displayed.

Adult entry is from about โ‚ฌ16 (roughly ยฃ14), with reductions for some visitors. It closes on Mondays and shifts its hours by season, so check the official site before you go. Haarlem stays quiet compared with Amsterdam, so you can almost always walk up and buy a ticket without booking ahead. It is a short, flat walk from the Grote Markt and sits right on the river Spaarne.

What to look at, and how long to give it

People expect to whip round in half an hour and end up staying far longer. Beyond the Oval Room there are cases of fossils and minerals, a remarkable cabinet of antique scientific instruments โ€” electrostatic generators, lenses, an enormous early generator โ€” and a coin collection. The museum also owns an important set of master drawings, including Michelangelo and Rembrandt, but because paper fades they are shown in rotation, so what is on the walls depends on the current exhibition; check ahead if a particular sheet is your reason for coming.

Allow about ninety minutes. The pleasure here is not scale but atmosphere: the creak of the floors, the low light, the sense of a place preserved rather than refreshed. It is genuinely one of the more characterful museums in the country, and paired with the Frans Hals Museum a few minutes away it makes an easy, crowd-free half-day in Haarlem.

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

More to see in Haarlem

Book the essentials

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide
See the full Netherlands guide

Teylers Museum FAQs

Why is Teylers Museum special?
It is the oldest museum in the Netherlands, open continuously since 1784, and it has barely been modernised โ€” the Oval Room still relies on daylight from above, with original wooden cases and handwritten labels. You are essentially walking through an 18th-century idea of a museum, kept almost exactly as it was.
Can you see the Michelangelo and Rembrandt drawings?
Sometimes. Teylers holds an important collection of master drawings, including Michelangelo and Rembrandt, but works on paper are light-sensitive, so they are shown in rotation rather than permanently on view. Check the current exhibition on the official site if a specific drawing is your reason for going.
Is Teylers Museum worth it?
Yes, and it tends to surprise people. It is small enough to feel manageable but odd enough to stay with you โ€” fossils, antique instruments, coins and a candlelit-feeling Oval Room under one roof. Pair it with the Frans Hals Museum for a quiet, low-crowd half-day in Haarlem.

Ready to book?

Check tickets & tours

Go