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Centre Pompidou Malaga, Spain
Centre Pompidou Malaga

Andalusia

Centre Pompidou Malaga

How to visit the Centre Pompidou Malaga: the €9 ticket that covers both shows, the free Sunday window, and whether the Cube is worth an hour off the beach.

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

Where

Malaga, Spain

Opening hours

Monday and Wednesday–Sunday 09:30–20:00; closed every Tuesday, plus 1 January and 25 December. Last entry is 30 minutes before closing. Always confirm your date on centrepompidou-malaga.eu.

Tickets

€9 (about £7.70) for the combined ticket covering both the semi-permanent and temporary displays; €7 (~£6) for the semi-permanent only; reduced rate €5.50 (~£4.70). Free for everyone on Sundays from 16:00.

Time needed

1–1.5 hours for the collection; closer to 2 if a strong temporary show is on. No security queue — you walk straight in once ticketed.

In short

Visiting Centre Pompidou Malaga

The Cube is small — roughly 90 works on one underground floor, walkable in an hour to ninety minutes — so size your expectations to that, not to the Paris flagship. Pay €9 for the combined ticket (it covers the semi-permanent display and the temporary show together) or go free on a Sunday after 16:00. The free audio guide is genuinely good and worth picking up. Closed every Tuesday, so don't build a Tuesday around it.

How to visit without overpaying or overstaying

The Centre Pompidou Malaga lives under the coloured glass Cube on Muelle Uno, the marina walkway at the port. It’s a flat ten-to-fifteen-minute stroll from the cathedral and old town, so you don’t need a taxi or a bus — just follow the waterfront round from the centre. Straight off a flight, the airport bus (Line A) drops you in the centre and you walk the rest.

Buy the €9 combined ticket at the desk: it covers both the semi-permanent display and whatever temporary show is running, which is the version worth seeing. There’s a cheaper €7 ticket for the semi-permanent floor alone, but the temporary exhibition is usually the freshest part, so the few extra euros earn their keep. Pick up the free audio guide on the way in — it’s available in English and it does the heavy lifting of explaining the rotating selection from Paris. Tickets rarely sell out, so pre-booking online saves only a minute at the desk; the one date to avoid is Tuesday, when the Cube is closed.

A smart hour, or one to skip?

If you can flex your plans, go Sunday after 16:00, when entry is free for everyone and the audio guide is still included — a genuinely good deal for an hour of modern art. Otherwise any morning works; there’s no security queue, so you walk straight in. The whole thing is one underground floor of roughly ninety works, so budget an hour to ninety minutes, not an afternoon — overstaying is the easy mistake here, not under-booking.

This is a smart, air-conditioned hour for people who already enjoy modern and contemporary art, not a headline sight you cross Spain for. It’s a curated slice of the Paris collection rather than the full thing, and if you’re indifferent to twentieth-century art you can skip it and lose nothing. Pair it with a wander along Muelle Uno and the Malagueta beach next door, or the climb up to Gibralfaro castle for the view, and you’ve got a balanced port-side afternoon.

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

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Centre Pompidou Malaga FAQs

Do you need to book Centre Pompidou Malaga tickets in advance?
No. Unlike Barcelona's big sights, the Cube rarely sells out and you can usually buy on the door. Pre-booking online only saves a couple of minutes at the desk; the main reason to book ahead is to lock in a guided slot or a combined museum pass.
Is the Centre Pompidou Malaga worth it?
For €9 and an hour, yes — if you already like modern and contemporary art. It's a curated single-floor slice of the Paris collection, not a blockbuster, so treat it as a smart hour out of the heat rather than the reason you came to Malaga. Art-indifferent travellers can skip it without regret.
When is Centre Pompidou Malaga free?
Every Sunday from 16:00 until close (20:00), free for the general public, with the free audio guide included. Minors, students, teachers, registered job seekers and visitors with disabilities go free at any time on proof.
How do you get to the Centre Pompidou Malaga?
It's the coloured glass cube on Muelle Uno at the port, a flat 10–15 minute walk from the cathedral and old town along the marina. Numerous city buses stop nearby, and the airport bus (Line A) runs into the centre if you're coming straight off a flight.

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