The Renaissance courtyard of the Palacio de Buenavista, home of the Museo Picasso Málaga — stone columns and wooden galleries around a sunlit patio in the historic centre of Málaga, Spain.

Picasso, hung in the city where he was born

Museo Picasso Málaga skip-the-line — 285 works given by the artist's family, shown in the 16th-century Palacio de Buenavista, ten minutes' walk from the house where Picasso was born in 1881. Timed entry slot, QR e-ticket straight to your inbox.

See ticket options
  • 1881 Picasso born in Málaga — a 10-minute walk from the museum
  • 285 works Given by Christine & Bernard Ruiz-Picasso, the artist's family
  • 16th century Palacio de Buenavista — Renaissance palace with Mudéjar ceilings
  • 2,800 years Phoenician, Roman and Moorish remains beneath the palace

Choose your ticket

Reduced ticket (65+ / students under 26)

Seniors 65+ and students under 26 — bring photo ID or student card to the door

€21

  • Skip the ticket-desk queue — timed-entry QR e-ticket, guaranteed slot
  • Permanent collection plus the current temporary exhibition
  • Valid with photo ID (65+) or student card (under 26) shown at entry
  • The Palacio de Buenavista, its courtyard and the archaeological basement
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve reduced ticket

Permanent collection only

Adults — the Picasso family collection without the temporary exhibition

€19

  • Skip the ticket-desk queue — timed-entry QR e-ticket, guaranteed slot
  • The full permanent collection given by the artist's family
  • The Palacio de Buenavista, its Renaissance courtyard and Mudéjar ceilings
  • The Phoenician, Roman and Moorish remains in the basement
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve collection ticket
  • Book in your languageYour currency, final price.
  • Pro tips includedBest times, the quiet hours, the basement most visitors miss.
  • Ready before you flyMobile QR ticket, ready in your inbox.
  • 24/7 human supportReal people, instant answers — any hour, any time zone.
4.8 from 52 verified travellers
Claire D.
Bristol, United Kingdom
“Seeing Picasso in Málaga is different — you walk past the square where he was born, then stand in front of work from every decade of his life. The palace courtyard alone is worth the visit. Our timed slot meant we walked straight past the queue at the desk.”
April 2026
Stefan M.
Hamburg, Germany
“The basement stunned me — Phoenician walls under a Renaissance palace under a Picasso museum. Three cities stacked on top of each other. The collection is more personal than Barcelona's: ceramics, family portraits, late works you don't see reproduced.”
March 2026
Amelia R.
Melbourne, Australia
“We did the combined ticket and the temporary exhibition turned out to be the highlight. Booked the evening before, QR arrived within the hour, in and out before the cruise crowds at midday. Exactly what we needed on a one-day stop.”
March 2026

5-minute audio guide

Your Museo Picasso Málaga 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit. Five minutes that turns a gallery visit into a homecoming — the boy from the Plaza de la Merced, the family who gave the collection, and the 2,800 years of city under the palace floor.

Included with your booking — your full guide arrives with your ticket.Get your guide
  • Why Picasso's family brought 285 works home to Málaga in 2003
  • The Palacio de Buenavista — Renaissance palace, Mudéjar ceilings
  • Doves and bulls: the Málaga childhood hidden across eight decades of art
  • The Phoenician walls in the basement — what to look for and why they're there

Included free with every ticket. No app, no download — plays in any browser.

About Museo Picasso Málaga

Pablo Ruiz Picasso was born in Málaga on 25 October 1881, in a house on the Plaza de la Merced, and spent the first ten years of his life in the city. The Museo Picasso Málaga, opened in 2003, is the museum that returns his work to his birthplace: a founding gift from Christine Ruiz-Picasso — the widow of the artist's eldest son Paul — and his grandson Bernard Ruiz-Picasso formed its first collection, spanning eight decades of the artist's career from early academic studies to late paintings. Through later donations and acquisitions, the permanent collection has grown to more than 230 works.

The setting is a work of art in its own right. The Palacio de Buenavista is a 16th-century palace in the heart of Málaga's old town, built around a Renaissance courtyard and crowned with Mudéjar wooden ceilings — the layered Andalusian style that mixes Castilian and Moorish craft. During the museum's construction, excavation beneath the palace uncovered remains of Phoenician city walls, Roman industrial buildings and Moorish structures, now preserved in the basement — so a single visit descends through 2,800 years of Málaga before climbing to the 20th century upstairs.

Unlike the Picasso museums of Barcelona and Paris, the Málaga collection was chosen by the artist's own family to show the range of a whole working life — paintings, drawings, sculpture and ceramics, from his student years to the prolific final decade. The galleries are calm and human-scaled, the temporary exhibitions bring major loans each season, and the whole museum sits a ten-minute walk from both the cathedral and the house where Picasso was born.

Practical information

Opening hours
Open daily, including Mondays, from 10:00. Closing is seasonal — 18:00 (Nov–Feb), 19:00 (Mar–Jun and Sep–Oct) and 20:00 (Jul–Aug); last admission shortly before close. The museum closes on 1 and 6 January and 25 December, and opens with reduced hours on 24, 31 December and 5 January. We confirm current hours with your booking.
Address
Museo Picasso Málaga, Palacio de Buenavista, Calle San Agustín 8, 29015 Málaga, Spain
Getting there on foot
In the pedestrian heart of the old town — 3 minutes from the cathedral, 5 minutes from Plaza de la Merced and the Casa Natal where Picasso was born, 10 minutes from the Alcazaba and Roman theatre.
Getting there from the station
≈20 minutes on foot from María Zambrano station, or a short taxi ride. From the airport, train line C1 to Centro-Alameda then a 10-minute walk.
Getting there from the Costa del Sol
Frequent trains and buses from Torremolinos, Fuengirola and Marbella reach central Málaga; the museum is a short walk from the centre.
Time needed
Allow 1.5–2 hours for the permanent collection and the palace, plus 30–45 minutes for the temporary exhibition. The archaeological basement adds another 15 minutes.
Accessibility
The museum is well adapted: level access, lifts to the gallery floors and accessible toilets. Some historic floor surfaces are uneven in places. Contact us before booking if mobility is a concern.
Photography
Permitted in the permanent collection without flash, tripod or selfie-stick; photography is generally not allowed in the temporary exhibitions. Check the signage in each gallery.
Food
The museum café opens onto the palace courtyard, and Calle San Agustín and the surrounding old town are lined with tapas bars and restaurants.

About our service

Picasso Málaga Tickets acts as a facilitator to help international visitors purchase timed-entry tickets for the Museo Picasso Málaga, which is managed by its own museum foundation. We are an independent concierge service and are not affiliated with the museum. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service, and our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, tickets are sold on the museum's own website, museopicassomalaga.org.

Frequently asked

Is this the same as the Picasso Museum in Barcelona or Paris?

No — there are three major Picasso museums in Europe, and this is the one in Málaga, the city where Picasso was born in 1881. The Museo Picasso Málaga holds the collection given by the artist's family and sits in the Palacio de Buenavista, ten minutes' walk from his birthplace. Barcelona's museum focuses on his formative years; Paris's on the artist's own estate.

What's included in the combined ticket?

Timed entry to the full museum: the permanent collection given by Picasso's family, the current temporary exhibition, the Palacio de Buenavista itself with its Renaissance courtyard and Mudéjar ceilings, and the Phoenician, Roman and Moorish archaeological remains in the basement.

Is the ticket for a specific time slot?

Yes. The Museo Picasso Málaga uses timed entry — you choose a date and entry slot, and we secure it for you. Your QR e-ticket admits you at that time, past the ticket-desk queue. Once inside, you can stay as long as you like during opening hours.

Do children need a ticket?

No — visitors under 18 enter the museum free. We don't sell a child ticket, and we'll never charge you for one: just bring ID for your under-18s and they walk in with you on your timed slot.

Who qualifies for the reduced ticket?

Visitors aged 65 and over, and students under 26 (including European Youth Card holders) with a valid card. Bring photo ID or your student card to the door — the museum checks eligibility at entry. If you're not sure your document qualifies, ask our concierge team before booking.

Is the museum ever free to enter?

Yes — the museum opens free of charge for the last two hours every Sunday. We'll be straight with you: if a free Sunday evening suits your plans, take it. The trade-off is that those hours are the most crowded of the week and entry is first-come, first-served, so most visitors with limited days in Málaga prefer a guaranteed weekday or morning slot.

What is actually in the collection?

A founding gift from Christine and Bernard Ruiz-Picasso — the widow of Picasso's eldest son and the artist's grandson — formed the first collection, since grown through further donations and acquisitions to more than 230 works. It spans from his early academic studies in the 1890s to paintings from his final years, and includes paintings, drawings, sculpture and ceramics, chosen to show the whole arc of his career.

How long does a visit take?

Allow 1.5 to 2 hours for the permanent collection and the palace, plus 30–45 minutes if your ticket includes the temporary exhibition, and about 15 minutes for the archaeological basement. Most visitors spend around two hours in total.

What's in the basement?

During the museum's construction, excavations under the Palacio de Buenavista uncovered remains of Phoenician city walls from Málaga's foundation, Roman industrial structures, and traces of the Moorish city. They are preserved in the basement and included in your visit — three civilisations beneath a Renaissance palace.

Can I also visit the house where Picasso was born?

Yes — the Casa Natal de Picasso on Plaza de la Merced, where the artist was born on 25 October 1881, is a separate, city-run museum about five minutes' walk away. It's a natural pairing: the birthplace first for the family story, then the Museo Picasso Málaga for the art. Tickets for the Casa Natal are sold separately by the city.

Is the museum open on Mondays?

Yes — the Museo Picasso Málaga opens daily, including Mondays, unlike many Spanish museums. It opens at 10:00 year-round and closes at 18:00 in winter, 19:00 in spring and autumn and 20:00 in July and August; it closes on 1 and 6 January and 25 December. We confirm the current schedule with your booking.

When is the museum quietest?

First thing at opening, and the last full-price hours of the afternoon. Mid-morning to mid-afternoon is busiest, especially on cruise-ship days when groups arrive from the port, and the free Sunday evening hours are the most crowded of the week. A timed slot at opening is the calmest way to see the collection.

Can we change the date or time?

Plans change — reply to your confirmation email as soon as you know, and our concierge team will work with the museum's booking system to move your slot where availability allows. The earlier you tell us, the more options we'll have.

How do I get there?

The museum is at Calle San Agustín 8, in the pedestrian old town — 3 minutes' walk from the cathedral and 10 from the Alcazaba. From María Zambrano station it's a 20-minute walk or short taxi; from the airport, take the C1 train to Centro-Alameda and walk 10 minutes.

Is the museum wheelchair accessible?

Yes, well so for a historic building — there is level access, lifts serve the gallery floors, and accessible toilets are provided. Some historic floors are uneven in places. If mobility is a concern, contact us before booking and we'll confirm the current arrangements with the museum.

Is photography allowed?

In the permanent collection, yes — without flash, tripod or selfie-stick. Photography is generally not allowed in the temporary exhibitions, so check the signage in each gallery.