Munich is unexpectedly generous with free museums and culture. Every Sunday, the entire Bavarian State Museum network charges just €1 admission — including the Alte Pinakothek, Glyptothek, Lenbachhaus, and several others. Year-round, free or near-free options include open-air monuments, the BMW Welt showroom, the Hofgarten and Residenz courtyards, and a remarkable lineup of free walking tours. This complete free museums Munich guide for 2026 maps out every option, the magic €1 Sunday system, and a sample day that covers world-class culture for under €10.

Museum gallery visitors paintings art exhibition Munich Sunday
Bavarian state museums charge just €1 on Sundays

The €1 Sunday System — Munich’s Best Culture Deal

Bavaria’s state museums charge just €1 entry every Sunday. This is the single best deal in Munich culture, and includes some of the world’s most important collections:

MuseumNormal Adult EntrySunday EntryWhat’s Inside
Alte Pinakothek€7€1Old Masters: Dürer, Raphael, Rubens, Velázquez
Pinakothek der Moderne€10€1Modern art, design, architecture, graphics
Neue PinakothekClosed for renovationClosed through ~2029
Lenbachhaus€10€1Blue Rider — Kandinsky, Marc, Münter
Glyptothek (Königsplatz)€6€1Greek + Roman classical sculpture
State Antiquities Collection€6€1Greek vases, Etruscan jewelry
Sammlung Schack€4€1German Romantic painting
Museum Brandhorst€7€1Contemporary art — Warhol, Twombly

The math is incredible: A €5 Sunday lets you visit five world-class museums — equivalent to spending €34 on a normal weekday. This alone justifies scheduling a Sunday in your Munich trip.

Glyptothek Munich classical sculpture Greek Roman antiquity
The Glyptothek classical sculpture collection is €1 on Sundays

Best Sunday Museum Marathon

  • 10:00 — Alte Pinakothek (€1) — old masters; 2 hours
  • 12:30 — walk 5 min to Glyptothek + State Antiquities on Königsplatz (€2 combined) — 1 hour each
  • 14:30 — quick lunch on Brienner Straße
  • 15:30 — Lenbachhaus (€1) on Königsplatz — Blue Rider; 90 min
  • 17:00 — Pinakothek der Moderne (€1) — modern art; 90 min
  • Total spent: €5 admissions + €15 lunch = €20 for the day, FIVE world-class museums

Always-Free Cultural Sites

Munich Churches

  • Frauenkirche — Munich’s iconic 15th-century cathedral
  • Asamkirche — the most concentrated Rococo interior in the world
  • Theatinerkirche — bright yellow Italianate Baroque (1663–90)
  • Michaelskirche — largest Renaissance church north of the Alps
  • Peterskirche (Alter Peter) — Munich’s oldest parish church (tower paid €5)
  • Heiliggeistkirche — Gothic hospital church near Viktualienmarkt
  • Salvatorkirche — small late Gothic gem near Salvatorplatz

Open-Air Cultural Spaces

  • Marienplatz + Glockenspiel show — daily 11:00 and 12:00 (and 17:00 March–October); free
  • Hofgarten — Renaissance formal garden behind the Residenz; free entry
  • Residenz courtyards (Brunnenhof, Apothekenhof) — free; the palace interior costs €17
  • Königsplatz — neoclassical square; free year-round; outdoor concerts in summer
  • Olympiapark grounds — climb Olympiaberg for views (free); tower €13
  • English Garden — 375-hectare park; Eisbach surfers; free year-round
  • Viktualienmarkt — free browsing of 110 stalls
  • BMW Welt showroom — free entry; BMW Museum next door €10
  • White Rose Memorial at LMU University — pavement memorial + basement museum, free

Always-Free Museums

  • DenkStätte Weiße Rose at LMU University — White Rose Memorial museum; Mon-Fri 10:30-16:30
  • Munich Volkshochschule exhibits — rotating free shows
  • Many gallery openings on first Thursdays of the month — gallery hopping with free wine in Maxvorstadt
  • Studio Krenn-Zellner — rotating contemporary exhibits

Free or Tip-Based Walking Tours

Walking tour Munich Marienplatz guide group tourists
Free walking tours leave Marienplatz daily (tip-based)

Munich has multiple free walking tour operators leaving daily from Marienplatz. These are tip-based: pay what you think the tour was worth, typically €5–€15 per person. Excellent introduction on day one of any visit.

  • SANDEMANs New Munich — daily 10:00 and 14:00 from Marienplatz; 2.5-hour classic walking tour; tip-based
  • Original Munich Walking Tour — daily 10:00, 12:00, 14:00 from Marienplatz; 2-hour tour
  • New Europe Free Tour — daily; 2.5-hour central old town focus
  • Third Reich free tour (SANDEMANs / others) — 2.5-hour Nazi-history focus from Marienplatz; deeply moving
  • Beer tour (paid €15–€30) — visits to traditional beer halls with stories about beer culture

Cheap Cultural Events

State Opera Performances

The Bayerische Staatsoper performs at the National Theater on Max-Joseph-Platz. Standing-room tickets for evening performances are €5–€15 — astonishing value for what is one of Europe’s premier opera houses. Buy at the box office 90 minutes before curtain. Dress smart-casual.

Philharmonic and Chamber Music

The Munich Philharmonic performs at the Gasteig HP8 (€15–€80 tickets). The BR Symphony Orchestra performs at the Herkulessaal in the Residenz. Many free or cheap (€10) chamber-music concerts at the LMU University and various churches.

Cinema

Munich cinemas operate Cheap Tuesdays — most tickets €7–€9 on Tuesdays. Look for OmU (Original mit Untertiteln) showings for English-language films with German subtitles. Best for OmU: Cinema, City Kino, and the Werkstattkino in Glockenbachviertel.

Free Outdoor Festivals

  • Stadtgründungsfest (June 14) — Munich’s birthday celebration; free citywide festival
  • Tollwood Summer Festival at Olympiapark (mid-June – late July) — free entry, world music
  • Tollwood Winter Festival at Theresienwiese (Nov–Dec) — free entry; see our Tollwood guide
  • Christmas Markets — see our guide; free entry
  • Frühlingsfest at Theresienwiese (April–May) — free entry; mini Oktoberfest
  • Oktoberfest — free entry; see our guide
  • Bayerische Filmreise — outdoor cinema weeks in summer; free at Westpark and Olympiapark

Free Library and Archive Access

  • Bayerische Staatsbibliothek — Bavarian State Library on Ludwigstraße; free to enter; the famous “Aventinussaal” reading room is a free Renaissance-revival space worth visiting just to look
  • Stadtbibliothek HP8 (currently temporary home) — Munich’s main public library; free to enter; reading rooms with city views
  • Architecture Museum library at the Pinakothek der Moderne — free to enter even without the museum ticket

Sample 2-Day Free/Cheap Cultural Itinerary

Day 1: Saturday Free Walking + Free Churches

  • 09:00 — Coffee + Brez’n at Bäckerei Wimmer (€4)
  • 10:00 — Free SANDEMANs walking tour from Marienplatz (tip €8)
  • 12:30 — Lunch at Bratwursthäusl (€7)
  • 13:30 — Free entry: Frauenkirche, Asamkirche, Theatinerkirche, Michaelskirche
  • 15:30 — Hofgarten + Residenz courtyards (free)
  • 16:30 — Coffee at Café Tambosi (€4)
  • 17:30 — English Garden Eisbach surfers + Chinese Tower beer garden (€11 Maß)
  • 20:00 — Standing-room opera at the National Theater (€10)
  • Total day spent: ~€44 + meals

Day 2: Sunday €1 Museum Marathon

  • 10:00 — Alte Pinakothek (€1)
  • 12:30 — Glyptothek + State Antiquities Collection (€2 total)
  • 14:30 — Lunch + walk around Maxvorstadt (€10)
  • 15:30 — Lenbachhaus (€1)
  • 17:00 — Pinakothek der Moderne (€1)
  • 19:00 — Free Tollwood Summer Festival concert at Olympiapark (June–July)
  • Total day spent: €15 + dinner

How Much You Can Save

A typical “do everything” Munich trip spends €30–€60/day on attractions. With this guide’s strategy, the same cultural exposure costs €5–€15/day.

  • Normal 3-day Munich visit: ~€120 in attractions + transit
  • Strategic 3-day visit: ~€30 in attractions + transit (mostly Sunday museum coverage + free churches/parks)
  • Net saving: €90 per person across 3 days; €360 for a family of four

Tips and Tricks

  • Sunday Schedule: Open the Alte Pinakothek at 10:00 sharp — by midday the queue stretches 30+ minutes
  • Special exhibitions at Bavarian state museums are sometimes excluded from €1 Sundays — check signage
  • Children under 18 always free at Bavarian state museums
  • Audio guides still cost €4 even on €1 Sundays
  • Free or cheap WCs: at the museums, transit stations (€0.50), and restaurants (patrons)
  • Bring your own snacks — museums allow you to eat in cafés, but bring water; refill at park fountains April–October
  • Coat check is free at all major museums; backpacks usually go in lockers
  • Photography: generally allowed without flash in permanent exhibitions; check signage in special exhibits

Frequently Asked Questions

When is the Alte Pinakothek free?

Every Sunday, the Alte Pinakothek charges €1 admission (Normal price €7). This applies to all Bavarian State Museums year-round. Children under 18 are always free.

Are Munich churches free to enter?

Yes — the Frauenkirche, Asamkirche, Theatinerkirche, Michaelskirche, and Peterskirche all have free entry. Towers (Frauenkirche €7.50, St. Peter’s €5) and crypts (Michaelskirche €2) sometimes charge admission. The Frauenkirche south tower reopened to visitors in 2024 after a long renovation.

Is the BMW Welt free?

Yes, BMW Welt (the showroom and delivery building) is entirely free to enter. The BMW Museum next door is €10. See our BMW Museum and Welt guide.

Are Munich’s free walking tours actually free?

They’re tip-based — pay what you think the tour was worth. Typical tip: €5–€15 per person. Tour quality varies; SANDEMANs and the Original Munich Walking Tour are reliably good.

What’s the best free thing to do in Munich?

The English Garden is one of the best free things on Earth, period — and the Eisbach surfers, Chinese Tower beer garden, and Monopteros viewpoint are all free. The Marienplatz Glockenspiel show is the most central free attraction.

Can I visit Dachau for free?

Yes — entry to the Dachau Memorial is free. Audio guides (€4) and guided tours (€4) are recommended. See our Munich WWII history guide.

The €1 Sunday: A Deep History

Munich’s beloved €1 Sunday museum tradition is younger than many visitors assume. Bavaria implemented universal €1 Sunday admission across its state museum network in October 2016 as part of a broader policy aimed at making world-class cultural institutions accessible regardless of income. The move was politically contested at the time — museum directors worried about lost revenue — but the program has since become one of Bavaria’s most popular cultural policies. Annual attendance at participating museums on Sundays has risen by an estimated 40%, with substantial growth among visitors under 30 and from non-German-speaking households. Roughly 270,000 €1 admissions are sold each year across the network.

The program currently covers 18 Bavarian State Museums (Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen, the Glyptothek and State Antiquities, the Schackgalerie, the Lenbachhaus, the Museum Brandhorst, and others). It does not cover the privately-operated Deutsches Museum or the BMW Museum, nor temporary exhibitions in some cases (always check at entry). The €1 fee is symbolic — meant to maintain the principle of paid admission while removing financial as a barrier. Children under 18 are always free regardless of day.

The 18 Bavarian State Museums on Sundays — Full List

MuseumTypeLocationMunich Card €1 Sundays
Alte PinakothekOld Master paintingsMaxvorstadtYes
Pinakothek der ModerneModern art + design + architecture + graphicsMaxvorstadtYes
Sammlung BrandhorstContemporary art (Warhol, Twombly)MaxvorstadtYes
SchackgalerieGerman Romantic paintingLehelYes
LenbachhausBlue Rider (Kandinsky, Marc, Münter)MaxvorstadtYes
GlyptothekGreek + Roman sculptureKönigsplatzYes
Staatl. AntikensammlungenGreek vases + Etruscan jewelryKönigsplatzYes
Bayerisches NationalmuseumBavarian decorative arts + folkLehelYes
Museum für Mensch und NaturNatural history (kids’ favorite)NymphenburgYes
Staatliches Museum Ägyptischer KunstEgyptian artMaxvorstadtYes
Staatliche MünzsammlungCoins + medalsAltstadtYes
Archäologische StaatssammlungPrehistoric and early historicLehelYes
State Museum of Ethnology Five ContinentsNon-European culturesMaximilianstraßeYes
Mineralogische StaatssammlungMinerals + gemsSchwabingYes
Münchner StadtmuseumCity history (currently closed)AltstadtClosed for renovation through 2028
NS-DokumentationszentrumNazi-era historyKönigsplatzFree always, not €1 Sunday
Jewish Museum MunichJewish history + cultureAltstadtNot part of state network
Deutsches TheatermuseumTheatre historyHofgartenYes

The Best Sunday Museum Strategies

Open the doors at 10:00 sharp for any museum on a €1 Sunday — by 11:30 the queue at the Alte Pinakothek typically stretches around the corner. Even seasoned Münchners know to start early. Use the natural walking distances between museums to your advantage:

Strategy 1: The Kunstareal Walking Marathon

The five most-visited art museums all sit within a 10-minute walking radius in the Kunstareal (Art Quarter) of Maxvorstadt. Plan: Alte Pinakothek at 10:00 (2 hours) → Glyptothek + State Antiquities at 12:30 (90 min combined, 5-min walk) → Lenbachhaus at 14:30 (90 min) → Museum Brandhorst at 16:00 (60 min) → Pinakothek der Moderne at 17:00 (90 min). Total: 5 world-class museums in one Sunday, €5 admission.

Strategy 2: The Family-Friendly Loop

With children, the natural-history Museum für Mensch und Natur and the Egyptian Art Museum both engage kids more reliably than the painting galleries. Take the U-Bahn to Nymphenburg for Mensch und Natur in the morning, then walk through the Nymphenburg Palace gardens (free) before lunch, then U-Bahn to Königsplatz for the Egyptian Art Museum. Add the Glyptothek if older kids enjoy Greek mythology.

Strategy 3: The Quiet Sunday

Skip the queue at the Alte Pinakothek entirely. The Schackgalerie in Lehel — a peaceful 19th-century painting collection — and the Mineralogische Staatssammlung in Schwabing rarely have queues even on €1 Sundays. The Archäologische Staatssammlung is similarly quiet. All three are world-class but underappreciated.

Beyond €1 Sundays: Other Discounted Days

Several Munich museums offer regular discounts not tied to Sundays:

  • Deutsches Museum: family ticket (2 adults + own kids up to 17) €33 — works out to €8.25 per person for a family of 4
  • BMW Museum: combined Welt+Museum ticket is €15 for adults; under 18 free
  • Hellabrunn Zoo: family ticket €43 for 2 adults + own children up to 17
  • Allianz Arena tour: €19 adult, €10 child
  • Munich Card: includes 25–50% discounts at 80+ paid attractions; pays for itself with 2–3 visits per day
  • Munich City Pass: free entry to 45+ attractions; pays off with 3+ visits per day

Free Always — The Full List

Churches

  • Frauenkirche — Munich’s twin-onion-domed cathedral
  • Asamkirche — the world’s densest Rococo interior
  • Theatinerkirche — bright yellow Italianate Baroque
  • Michaelskirche — largest Renaissance church north of the Alps
  • Peterskirche (Alter Peter) — Munich’s oldest parish church
  • Heiliggeistkirche — late Gothic hospital church
  • Bürgersaalkirche — small Baroque chapel; Father Rupert Mayer crypt €2
  • Salvatorkirche — small late Gothic gem near Salvatorplatz
  • Damenstiftskirche — Baroque church off Sendlinger Straße
  • Bonifaz Abbey on Karlstraße

Parks and Outdoor Spaces

  • Englischer Garten — 375 hectares; one of the largest urban parks in the world
  • Hofgarten — Renaissance formal garden behind the Residenz
  • Residenz courtyards (Brunnenhof, Apothekenhof) — free; palace interior costs €17
  • Königsplatz — neoclassical Greek-temple precinct
  • Olympiapark — 1972 Olympic grounds; tower €13 (free to climb the Olympiaberg hill)
  • Marienplatz and the Glockenspiel show (11:00, 12:00, 17:00 summer)
  • Westpark — themed gardens, free outdoor cinema in summer
  • Botanical Garden — €6, but the Schlosspark Nymphenburg around it is free
  • Hirschgarten — largest beer garden in the world (free entry; pay only for food/drink)
  • Riemer Park — eastern edge; free swimming lake
  • Luitpoldpark — view hill with the best free sunset over central Munich

Free or Tip-Based Tours

  • SANDEMANs Free Walking Tour — daily 10:00 and 14:00 from Marienplatz; 2.5 hours
  • Original Free Munich Walking Tour — daily 10:00, 12:00, 14:00
  • Third Reich free walking tour (Sandemans) — 2.5 hours focused on Nazi history
  • White Rose Memorial at LMU University — free permanent installation + basement museum
  • Free outdoor festivals: Tollwood Summer + Winter, Stadtgründungsfest, Frühlingsfest, Oktoberfest entry, all Christmas markets

Sunday Museum Practical Tips

  • Open online tickets the Friday before — €1 Sunday tickets often available as e-tickets to skip queues
  • Arrive before 10:00 sharp — by 10:15 the queue at the Pinakothek has grown
  • Free coat check + lockers at major museums; bring a padlock if needed
  • Audio guides cost €4 even on €1 Sundays
  • Special exhibitions are sometimes excluded from €1 — verify at entry
  • Most museums are CLOSED on Mondays — plan Monday for free churches or outdoor walks
  • Photography is permitted without flash in most permanent exhibitions; restricted in temporary shows
  • Café and toilets at all major museums; lunch in museum café usually €10–€18
  • Mid-day crowds peak around 12:00–14:00 — open at 10:00 or arrive after 15:00
  • Family ticket €1 still applies — children under 18 always free anyway

Free Culture Days Beyond the €1 Sunday

Visitors viewing paintings in a Munich museum gallery
Munich’s state museums drop to just one euro every Sunday

The €1 Sunday is Munich’s headline deal, but it is not the only date worth circling. Three more land on the calendar each year, and two of them cost nothing at all.

International Museum Day (Internationaler Museumstag) falls on a Sunday in mid-May, and dozens of Munich houses either waive admission outright or pile on free guided tours and workshops. Tag des offenen Denkmals — German Open Monument Day, the second Sunday of September — throws open historic buildings that are normally locked: church towers, crypts, private courtyards off Sendlinger Straße, working restoration ateliers, with the city publishing a route map each August. And the Lange Nacht der Münchner Museen, the Long Night usually held on a Saturday in mid-October, is not free, but a single ticket around €20 buys after-dark entry to roughly 90 museums plus the MVG shuttle buses that loop between them until 02:00 — the best per-euro culture night of the year. Beneath all of this sits the standing rule: under-18s enter every Bavarian state museum free, every single day.

Munich’s free and near-free culture calendar runs well beyond the €1 Sunday.
OccasionWhenWhat it gets youCost
€1 SundaysEvery SundayThe 18 Bavarian State Museums, €1 each€1
International Museum DayMid-May (Sunday)Free entry and programmes at dozens of museumsFree
Open Monument Day2nd Sunday of SeptemberHistoric buildings normally closed to the publicFree
Long Night of MuseumsUsually mid-October~90 museums plus shuttle buses, one ticket~€20
Under-18 admissionDailyEvery Bavarian state museumFree

Time a trip around these and you can string together our Pinakothek art museums and the Deutsches Museum for almost nothing, anchoring the wider Munich on a budget plan. Travelling with children? Pair the dates with our Munich with kids guide, since the under-18 rule makes the state collections free for them anyway.

Munich’s Free Open-Air Art: U-Bahn Galleries and Street Sculpture

Some of Munich’s best art has no admission desk because it lives underground or out on the pavement — and the U-Bahn network is the city’s most overlooked free gallery. Ride to Westfriedhof to stand beneath Ingo Maurer’s eleven enormous dome lamps glowing red, blue and yellow over a raw concrete platform; Candidplatz washes its walls in a full rainbow gradient; St.-Quirin-Platz arcs a glass shell over the tracks so daylight pours down to the trains; and Georg-Brauchle-Ring is plastered platform to platform with Franz Ackermann’s clashing travel-poster murals. A ticket you already hold — or even a transfer mid-journey — turns the ride into a tour. Our U-Bahn and S-Bahn guide maps which lines reach them.

Above ground the sculpture is just as free. Jonathan Borofsky’s 17-metre Walking Man strides up Leopoldstraße outside the Munich Re building; Rita McBride’s 52-metre Mae West lattice towers over the Effnerplatz roundabout in Bogenhausen; and the playful Brunnenbuberl fountain spouts beside the Karlstor at the edge of the Altstadt. Wander the Königsplatz forecourt and the lawns between the Pinakotheken and you bank world-class architecture for the price of the walk. For more in this vein, our free things to do and Munich landmarks guides keep the no-ticket sightseeing going.

Plan Your Munich Trip

This free museums guide is part of our deeper Munich on a budget guide. For free things to do beyond museums see our free things to do guide. For specific museum recommendations see our museums guide. For art-focused itineraries see our Pinakothek guide.


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