Community of Madrid
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
How to visit Madrid's Thyssen-Bornemisza: which ticket, the free windows worth knowing, and whether the private collection earns a slot alongside the Prado.
Where
Madrid, Spain
Opening hours
Tuesday–Friday and Sunday 10:00–19:00; Saturday 10:00–23:00; Monday only 12:00–16:00 (free, permanent collection). Last entry is 30 minutes before closing. Closed 1 January, 1 May and 25 December. Hours can shift slightly in July–August, so confirm your date on museothyssen.org.
Tickets
€14 general admission (about £12), €10 reduced for over-65s, pensioners and students, €12 for groups of 7+. Under-18s, the unemployed, Museum Friends and visitors with a disability of 33%+ go free. Free for everyone Mondays 12:00–16:00 (permanent collection only, no online booking — queue at the desk) and Saturdays 21:00–23:00 (temporary exhibitions on the ground and lower floors only, not the permanent collection).
Time needed
1.5–2 hours for the permanent collection at a steady pace; add about 45–50 minutes if there's a ground-floor temporary exhibition you want too.
In short
Visiting Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
The Thyssen is Madrid's most chronological art museum: start on the top floor with medieval and Renaissance work and walk down through Impressionism to Pop Art, so it reads like a timeline rather than a maze. General admission is €14 (about £12) and you can usually buy on the day — it rarely sells out like the Prado. If you can, time it for the free Monday window (12:00–16:00, permanent collection only) or the free Saturday-night slot (21:00–23:00, temporary exhibitions only). Allow 1.5–2 hours.
How to visit without the Prado fatigue
The Thyssen is the third point of Madrid’s art triangle, on Paseo del Prado 8 between the Prado and the Reina Sofía. The nearest metro is Banco de España on Line 2, a two-minute walk. General admission is €14 (about £12), dropping to €10 for over-65s and students, and unlike the Prado it almost never sells out — you can usually buy at the desk or online the evening before. Only the ground-floor temporary exhibitions have capacity limits worth pre-booking.
The smart move is to start at the top and walk down. The collection is hung chronologically across three floors, so beginning on the second floor with medieval and Renaissance panels and descending through Impressionism to twentieth-century Pop Art means you read European painting as one continuous timeline rather than doubling back through rooms. It’s a genuinely different experience from the Prado’s dense Spanish Old Masters: lighter, broader, and far less exhausting.
Worth it after the Prado?
If your budget is tight, time the visit for the free Monday window, 12:00–16:00 (permanent collection only — you can’t book it online, so join the ticket-desk queue). There’s also a free Saturday-night slot, 21:00–23:00, but read the small print: it only opens the temporary exhibitions on the ground and lower floors, not the permanent collection upstairs, so it’s a bonus rather than a substitute for a proper visit. Outside those windows the museum runs Tuesday to Friday and Sunday, 10:00–19:00, with Saturdays open right through to 23:00. Allow an hour and a half to two hours for the permanent collection, plus 45 minutes or so if a temporary show tempts you.
Do the Thyssen even if you’ve already done the Prado — it fills exactly the gaps the Prado leaves, from Dutch primitives to Hopper and the Expressionists, and it’s the calmer, more manageable of Madrid’s big galleries. What to skip: don’t try to stack all three Golden Triangle museums into one day. Pair the Thyssen with a wander through the Retiro or a coffee on Paseo del Prado, and save the Prado for a separate morning.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Madrid city guide.
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