9 of the Best Museums in Athens and How To Visit

No guide to Athens' museum highlights could fail to mention the Acropolis Museum, where—after having marveled at the Acropolis itself—you can dig deeper into its history. But that's far from the only cultural institution the city has to offer.
From the awe-inspiring treasures of the Acropolis to the cutting-edge works housed in the National Museum of Contemporary Art (EMST), the best museums in Athens invite you to embark on a captivating journey through time. In this Athens museums guide, we’ll give you the lowdown on which Athens' cultural institutions to explore, as well as highlight their must-see exhibits.
1. Acropolis Museum

Discover the stories behind Greece’s most famous landmark at the Acropolis Museum.
At the Acropolis Museum you’ll find a remarkable collection of sculptures and artifacts that once graced the ancient site, perhaps the most famous among them the Caryatids, Peplos Kore, and the Parthenon Frieze—significant parts of which the Greek government is trying to repatriate.
Packed with immersive multimedia displays, the Acropolis Museum offers one of the most dynamic and interactive museum experiences in Athens. To get the inside track and avoid queuing for Acropolis Museum tickets, consider an Acropolis Museum tour.
Don’t miss: The LEGO® Acropolis made of 120,000 bricks—great for kids and kids at heart.
2. Benaki Museum

The Benaki Museum is a one-stop shop for all things Greek history and culture.
If you’re only briefly in Athens and want a whirlwind tour of the country’s heritage, the Benaki Museum is a treasure trove of more than 100,000 artifacts spanning many eras and civilizations. In addition to illuminating exhibits, such as an extensive collection of Greek regional costumes and items dating from Greece's war for independence, the art offering through the ages is particularly exceptional: Think well-preserved Byzantine icons and works by the Cretan-born painter and sculptor El Greco. While you’re there, pop into the National Gardens of Athens (Ethnikos Kipos).
Don’t miss: The complete sitting rooms from mansions in northern Greece and, for some bonus culture, the Benaki Museum of Islamic Art.
3. Museum of Cycladic Art

The Museum of Cycladic Art is a neoclassical mansion packed with millennia-old treasures.
The Museum of Cycladic Art is, as you might expect, home to the world’s most extensive collection of ancient Cycladic figurines. For the uninitiated, the Cyclades refers—in addition to the name of a popular island group—to an ancient Aegean culture dating back to the 3rd millennium BC (and we thought the Parthenon was old!).
More than 3,000 artifacts of Cycladic—as well as ancient Greek and Cypriot—art are showcased here, with the remarkable early Cycladic sculptures (often naked female figures, crafted from marble) being the biggest draw.
Don’t miss: The fascinating permanent exhibition Scenes from Daily life in Antiquity, as well as wine from boutique vineyards in the tree-filled café.
4. Byzantine and Christian Museum

Take a fascinating journey to the intersection of history and spirituality at the Byzantine and Christian Museum.
Set in the chic Kolonaki neighborhood, and arguably one of the unsung heroes of Athens’ historical museums, the Byzantine and Christian Museum offers captivating insight into Greece’s rich religious heritage. The monastery-esque former mansion known as Villa Ilisia showcases an impressive collection of more than 25,000 artifacts, including well-preserved icons, frescoes, manuscripts, ceramics, ecclesiastical textiles, paintings, and jewelry.
This rich offering is divided into two sections: The first is devoted to Byzantium (4th–15th centuries), with the second running until the modern era.
Don’t miss: The bonus mini exhibitions on Athens’ water supply and the Byzantines’ conception of “paradise” in the charming gardens.
5. National Archaeological Museum

The National Archaeological Museum hosts the world’s greatest collection of ancient Greek artifacts.
If being in Athens has done nothing but ignite your enthusiasm for all things antiquity, make a beeline for the National Archaeological Museum. Though inevitably losing out in raw visitor numbers to the Acropolis Museum, this is nonetheless one of the top-rated Athens museum attractions—not to mention the largest archaeological museum in Greece.
The rich collection features items that range from the prehistoric to the Roman periods, with highlights including the gold funerary Mask of Agamemnon, dated 1550–1500 BC; sculptures such as the Artemision Bronze, dating to 450 BC; and frescoes from Santorini.
Don’t miss: The Antikythera mechanism, the oldest known example of an analog computer.
6. Athens National Historical Museum

Discover how modern Greece was founded at the Athens National Historical Museum.
So, you’ve (probably) had your fix of ancient history, but what happened after the end of the Byzantine period? Housed in the former seat of Parliament, the Athens National Historical Museum (Ethnikó Istorikó Mouseío) is the place to find out, with its permanent exhibition tracing Greece’s history from Ottoman rule until today.
The museum’s collections provide insight into the national identity and historical narratives that have shaped Greece, with a particular focus on the War of Independence and the founding of the modern Greek state.
Don’t miss: Ektor Doukas’s oil painting The Women of Pindus captures the vital role of Greek women at the onset of World War II as they deliver supplies to Greek troops.
7. National Gallery of Greece Alexandros Soutsos Museum

Get the ultimate introduction to Greek art history at the Alexandros Soutsos Museum.
No Athens museums guide worth its salt could fail to mention the National Gallery of Greece. As you might have inferred, this Athens institution is the country’s preeminent art gallery, with more than 20,000 works in its collection of post-Byzantine Greek and European art.
Spanning the 14th–20th centuries, the National Gallery boasts works by artists as diverse as El Greco, Auguste Rodin, Henri Matisse, and Nikolaos Gyzis. The museum reopened in 2021 after a lengthy renovation, with the striking, glass-clad building befitting the splendor of the collection within its walls.
Don’t miss: The neighboring imposing glass sculpture The Runner (also known as Dromeas)—undoubtedly among the most iconic artistic landmarks in Athens.
8. National Museum of Contemporary Art Αthens – EMST

The EMST building went from a brewery to a creative hot spot.
When it comes to exploring contemporary art in Athens, perhaps unsurprisingly, the National Museum of Contemporary Art should be top of the itinerary. Taking over a former brewery, the museum’s collection of works by Greek and international artists—from Ilya Kabakpv and Nan Goldin to Chryssa and Marina Abramović—is complemented by a calendar of thought-provoking temporary exhibitions.
Once you’ve explored Greece’s most impressive selection of conceptual art, head to the building’s roof terrace and take in some of the best views in Athens, looking across to the Parthenon and the sea.
Don’t miss: The open-air cinema that opens up on the museum’s rooftop in the summer months.
9. Basil and Elise Goulandris Foundation

Get lost in one of Greece’s richest modern art collections at the Basil and Elise Goulandris Foundation.
The Basil and Elise Goulandris Foundation may have only opened its doors to the Athenian public in 2019, but this relative newcomer is already considered among the top art galleries in Athens. The modern art museum is named after shipowner Basil Goulandris and his wife Elise Karadontis, whose collection (we’re talking around US$3 billion worth of art) is now on show.
Beyond the big international names you’ll find here—think: Joan Miró, Pablo Picasso, Vincent Van Gogh, and Jackson Pollock, to name just a few—the museum’s setting in a 1920s neoclassical mansion offers a prime opportunity to indulge your inner architecture nerd.
Don’t miss: The portrait of Elise herself by Marc Chagall (1969), along with the two floors dedicated to 20th-century and contemporary Greek art.
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