Tuesday, June 16, 2026

The British Museum, London: Rosetta Stone, Mummies & Free Entry (London Travel Guide)

The glass-roofed Great Court of the British Museum

Step into the British Museum and you step into the entire story of humankind, all under one roof — and entirely for free. From ancient Egypt to imperial China, this is one of the greatest collections on earth, and a couple of hours here can take you across thousands of years and dozens of civilizations. It is the museum I’d recommend to anyone visiting London for the first time.

A Free Window on World History

Founded in 1753, the British Museum was the first national public museum in the world, and its permanent collection remains free to all — only the special exhibitions are ticketed. Its home is a grand neoclassical building in Bloomsbury, and at its heart sits the Great Court, a breathtaking space capped by a sweeping glass-and-steel roof, the largest covered public square in Europe. It makes a stunning first impression the moment you walk in.

The Must-See Treasures

The collection is vast, so focus on the headline pieces. The Rosetta Stone — the inscribed slab that finally allowed scholars to decode Egyptian hieroglyphs — is the museum’s most famous object and usually mobbed, so visit it early. The Egyptian galleries, with their mummies and monumental statues, are perennial favorites. Don’t miss the marble Parthenon sculptures from ancient Athens, the treasures of the Sutton Hoo ship burial, and the Assyrian winged bulls that once guarded a palace.

An Egyptian sarcophagus in the British Museum

Don’t Try to See It All

Here’s the honest truth: the British Museum is simply too big to conquer in one visit, and trying will leave you exhausted and overwhelmed. The smart approach is to pick two or three galleries that genuinely excite you — Egypt and Greece for most first-timers — and explore them properly. Grab a free map at the entrance or join one of the free gallery talks, and accept that you’ll want to come back. That’s part of the museum’s charm.

Galleries inside the British Museum

Practical Tips

The museum sits in Bloomsbury, with Tottenham Court Road, Holborn, and Russell Square stations all a short walk away. Entry is free, but during busy periods it’s wise to reserve a free timed ticket online to guarantee smooth entry. Mornings right at opening and the last couple of hours before closing are quietest. There are cafes inside for a break, and the grand gift shop is a great spot for souvenirs. Leave large bags at your hotel to breeze through the security check.

More London guides: explore the full London Travel Guides series.

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