Lesser Poland (Małopolska)
Schindler's Factory Museum
How to visit Kraków's Schindler's Factory: why you must book a timed slot, what the occupation-era museum actually covers, and the 'Schindler's List' expectation that catches visitors out.
Where
Kraków, Poland
Opening hours
Generally 10:00–20:00 Tuesday to Sunday and 10:00–14:00 on Mondays, when entry is free and slots go fast (closed the first Monday of each month and a handful of public holidays). Last entry is usually about 90 minutes before closing. Always confirm your date on the official Muzeum Krakowa site.
Tickets
About 38 zł full / 30 zł concession (roughly £7.60 / £6), with free Monday entry on a limited number of timed tickets. An English guided tour runs from around 200–250 zł for the group on top of admission, so it's best value split between several people.
Time needed
1.5–2 hours to walk the full one-way exhibition route; add time for the security and ticket check on arrival, and don't book a tight lunch reservation after it.
In short
Visiting Schindler's Factory Museum
Book a timed Schindler's Factory ticket online before you fly — slots in the museum on Lipowa 4 in Podgórze sell out days ahead in season, and there is no reliable on-the-day queue. Go in knowing what it is: a dense, occupation-era social-history museum about everyday life in Nazi-occupied Kraków from 1939 to 1945, not a recreation of the film 'Schindler's List'. Allow about 1.5–2 hours for the full one-way route, and book the English guided tour if you want the rooms explained rather than read alone.
How to visit without being caught out
The thing to fix before you go is the expectation. Plenty of UK visitors arrive at Lipowa 4 in Podgórze picturing a recreation of ‘Schindler’s List’ — the office, the list, Liam Neeson — and that’s not what this is. The permanent exhibition, Kraków under Nazi Occupation 1939–1945, uses Oskar Schindler’s former enamelware factory as the building, but the story it tells is the whole city’s: ordinary Poles, the Jewish ghetto across the river, the resistance, daily life under occupation. Schindler and his workers are one powerful thread, not the headline.
Book a timed-entry ticket online before you fly. Slots sell out days ahead in season, the free Monday tickets vanish almost instantly, and there’s no reliable on-the-day queue — turning up on spec often means no entry. Pick the self-guided ticket if you’re happy to read at your own pace, or add a small-group English guided tour if you’d rather the personal stories were narrated, since much of the museum is dense text and reconstructed rooms.
What to expect inside, and is it worth it?
The route is one-way and immersive — narrow recreated streets, a tram, the ghetto wall — so allow an hour and a half to two hours and don’t stack a tight lunch booking straight after. It’s emotionally heavy rather than a quick photo stop, and the layout makes it hard to double back, so go in unhurried.
It’s one of Kraków’s strongest museums if you come for the wider occupation history rather than the film. Pair it with a walk round Podgórze and the Ghetto Heroes Square just outside, rather than stacking it against an Auschwitz day-trip on the same day — both are weighty, and they deserve to be felt separately.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Kraków city guide.
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