Home Travel Guide National WWII Museum New Orleans Guide 2026 — Tickets, How Long, Why It's Best in South
Travel Guide Updated April 2026 ⏱ 4 min read

National WWII Museum New Orleans Guide 2026 — Tickets, How Long, Why It's Best in South

TripAdvisor's #1 museum in the US for seven years running. Here is what $32.50 gets you, how to spend 6 hours without burning out, and why the Tom Hanks film is worth the extra $7.

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Quick Orientation

The National WWII Museum occupies a 6-acre campus in the Warehouse District of New Orleans, a 10-minute walk or 5-minute Uber from the French Quarter. It was founded in 2000 by historian Stephen Ambrose as the "D-Day Museum" (New Orleans was chosen because the Higgins landing craft was built here) and expanded massively through 2017 into its current 4-pavilion form.

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The museum tells the American experience of World War II through 250,000 artefacts, 10,000 personal stories, a 4D film and real restored aircraft suspended from the ceiling. It is not a war museum for enthusiasts — it is designed to be moving for anyone.

Ticket Prices 2026

TicketPriceIncludes
General Admission (adult)$32.50All 4 pavilions
Senior 65+$28All 4 pavilions
Child 5-12$20All 4 pavilions
Under 5Free
Active military / WWII vetFreeID or proof required
Beyond All Boundaries film+$748 min, 4D
Final Mission submarine+$625 min immersive
Combo: admission + film + sub$45Best value
2-Day ticket$45Same as combo, split across 2 days
Combo tickets save $1-2 vs buying separately, but the real value of the 2-day ticket is pacing. Trying to cover everything in one day is genuinely exhausting.

How Long You Need

Every honest guide agrees: this is a big museum. Planning too little time is the most common complaint.

  • 3 hours: enough for one pavilion (pick Road to Berlin or Road to Tokyo) plus the Beyond All Boundaries film. Rushed.
  • 4-5 hours: realistic for the main 4 pavilions + one film. You will be tired but satisfied.
  • 6-7 hours: thorough visit. Both films, submarine experience, US Freedom Pavilion aircraft, lunch on site.
  • 2 days: the 2-day ticket ($45) is only $12 more than single-day admission. For history enthusiasts this is correct.
  • Arrive: 9am opening on weekdays, 10am on weekends. Book film sessions on arrival — they fill by mid-morning.
Pace with a lunch break. BB's Stage Door Canteen (on-site, 1940s-themed) or a quick walk out to nearby American Sector or Cochon are all reasonable. Fresh air and food matter at the 3-hour mark.

The Four Pavilions

The campus is organised into four themed pavilions plus the US Freedom Pavilion aircraft hall.

  • Louisiana Memorial Pavilion (entry): Higgins landing craft, "Dog Tag Experience" where you follow one real person's story, train car that moves you into the exhibit.
  • Road to Berlin (European Theater): from Operation Torch through D-Day to Berlin. Full-scale trench exhibits, Battle of the Bulge environmental experience.
  • Road to Tokyo (Pacific Theater): Pearl Harbor through Iwo Jima, Guadalcanal and Okinawa. Emotional and thorough.
  • Campaigns of Courage: covers both Berlin and Tokyo pavilions, typically visited in sequence.
  • US Freedom Pavilion — the Boeing Center: real aircraft suspended at multiple levels including a B-17 Flying Fortress, B-25 Mitchell, Corsair, and a Sherman tank. Catwalks let you walk at wing level.
  • Arsenal of Democracy: the home-front pavilion, women in industry, war bonds, rationing.

Beyond All Boundaries Film

The Solomon Victory Theater shows "Beyond All Boundaries," a 48-minute immersive film narrated by Tom Hanks using the voices of Brad Pitt, Gary Sinise, Kevin Bacon and others for historical readings.

  • Format: 120-foot screen, 4D effects (seats rumble, snow falls during the Battle of the Bulge, smoke drifts in).
  • Length: 48 minutes.
  • Cost: $7 add-on to your admission ticket.
  • Sessions: every 90 minutes starting 10am, last show 4pm.
  • When to watch: many visitors put it first (as an overview) or last (as a capstone). Either works. Not both.
  • Expect: strong emotional content. Intense but not graphic. Appropriate age 10+.
Arrive 15 minutes before your session — the theater lobby has a pre-show exhibit of uniforms and personal items that adds context.

Why It's Ranked #1

TripAdvisor's Travelers' Choice has named it the #1 museum in the United States every year since 2018. A consistent set of reasons comes up in reviews:

  • Scale with coherence: 300,000 square feet of exhibits that still tell one narrative — the American experience of WWII — rather than a random collection.
  • First-person oral histories: every exhibit includes veterans' own recorded testimony, not narrator voice-overs. Profoundly humanising.
  • The Hanks film: professional Hollywood production values in a museum context.
  • Real aircraft at wing-level: the US Freedom Pavilion lets you walk catwalks beside suspended B-17 and B-25 bombers.
  • Designed for non-enthusiasts: the "Dog Tag Experience" follows one real person's war story through your visit, giving non-history-nerds an emotional anchor.
  • Quality of curation: exhibits are current, rotating, and include recent scholarship (including controversial topics like Japanese internment and the atomic bomb decision).
This is an emotionally heavy museum. Plan something lighter for the rest of the day (Magazine Street shopping, a jazz club, Café du Monde) rather than stacking another serious experience.

Parking, Food & Logistics

  • Address: 945 Magazine Street, Warehouse District, New Orleans.
  • From French Quarter: 10-minute walk, 5-minute Uber ($8-12), or #11 Magazine bus ($1.25).
  • Parking: on-site garage at 1016 Magazine, $17 flat day rate. Metered street parking nearby, $2/hour, 2-hour limit.
  • Hours: 9am-5pm daily except Thanksgiving, Christmas and Mardi Gras day.
  • Bag check: airport-style security, no bags larger than 18x18 inches. Lockers available at entry for free.
  • Dining on-site: BB's Stage Door Canteen ($18-28, 1940s-themed, some days includes live music), American Sector restaurant ($25-45 dinner), Soda Shop ($8-14 lunch).
  • Gift shop: the largest museum gift shop in Louisiana. Save for the end — it will take 30 minutes.
Buy tickets online to skip the main ticket queue (20-30 min saved on weekends). Print or save the QR code before arrival; WiFi inside is patchy.
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Preguntas Frecuentes

How much is the National WWII Museum in 2026?

$32.50 adult general admission, $28 senior (65+), $20 child (5-12), free for active military and WWII veterans. Add-ons: "Beyond All Boundaries" film $7, Final Mission submarine experience $6.

How long does the WWII Museum take?

4 hours is the bare minimum to see the main exhibits. 6-7 hours for a thorough visit including both films and the submarine experience. Consider the 2-day ticket ($45) if your feet need a break.

Why is the WWII Museum ranked #1 in the US?

TripAdvisor's Travelers' Choice has ranked it #1 museum in the US since 2018. Reasons: the scale (300,000 sq ft across 4 pavilions), the Tom Hanks-narrated immersive film, first-person veteran oral histories on every exhibit and the US Freedom Pavilion aircraft suspended from the ceiling.

Is Beyond All Boundaries worth the extra money?

Yes — the 4D film narrated by Tom Hanks in the Solomon Victory Theater is consistently the most-praised feature. 48 minutes, seats shake, snow falls. $7 add-on is good value.

Is the WWII Museum appropriate for kids?

Yes from age 10+. Some exhibits include graphic war imagery and Holocaust content (in the Road to Tokyo pavilion particularly). Younger kids enjoy the aircraft and the interactive dog-tag experience.

Should I book WWII Museum tickets in advance?

Yes for Saturday, Sunday and holiday periods. Timed-entry slots before 11am sell out 3-7 days ahead. Weekdays you can usually walk up, but the Beyond All Boundaries film sessions fill first.

Is there parking at the WWII Museum?

Yes — on-site garage at 1016 Magazine St is $17 flat for the day. Street parking is free but metered and usually full. Uber or the Magazine Street bus line are easy alternatives.