REVIEW · LISBON
Lisbon: Banksy Museum Permanent Exhibition Entry Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Museu Banksy · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Banksy in Lisbon has a way of making you look twice. This entry ticket for Museu Banksy is a one-day visit built around over 100 full-size reproductions and a mix of mediums, from mural-style pieces to projections and video installations. I especially like the way it strings his career together, and how you get to see well-known works like Girl with Balloon and Sweep It Under the Carpet alongside lesser-seen pieces. One fair heads-up: this is an unauthorized exhibition, so you’re not going to see verified originals.
I also like that it moves beyond a flat gallery. You’ll walk through physical displays plus digital elements, then finish with a reproduction of the Walled Off Hotel in Bethlehem. If you’re short on time, plan for about an hour or two—long enough to see a lot, not so long that you feel stuck.
The potential drawback for some people is the same thing that makes it accessible: you’re seeing copies. If you want the real, rare street-artist artifacts, this won’t fully scratch that itch.
In This Review
- Key highlights you’ll notice right away
- Museu Banksy ticket in Lisbon: what you’re paying for
- Getting oriented at the Museu Banksy meeting point
- What the exhibition feels like: a Banksy career walk-through in rooms
- The famous hits: seeing Girl with Balloon and Sweep It Under the Carpet
- More than copies: murals, canvases, and street textures in one place
- Digital media moments: projections and video installations
- Regional chapters: works tied to the US, Paris, and the UK
- The Walled Off Hotel reproduction: closing image with Bethlehem ties
- How long it takes and how to fit it into your Lisbon day
- Price vs. value: is $15 worth it?
- Who should book this ticket?
- Should you book the Banksy Museum Permanent Exhibition?
- FAQ
- Where is the Banksy Museum permanent exhibition located?
- How much is the entry ticket?
- How long should I plan for this visit?
- Is food included or allowed inside?
- What kinds of displays will I see?
- Will I see well-known Banksy works?
- Are there works from different places in the exhibition?
- What languages are available?
- Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
- What should I know about authorization?
- FAQ
- What’s the latest time I can enter?
- Is there a ticket option to pay later?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
Key highlights you’ll notice right away

- Over 100 works in original size, so the pieces feel big, not postage-stamp scale
- Mixed media inside Museu Banksy, including projections and video installations
- A career timeline feel, from earlier work to more recent pieces
- Must-see favorites like Girl with Balloon and Sweep It Under the Carpet
- Regional chapters with selections tied to the US, Paris, and the UK
- Walled Off Hotel reproduction in the final stretch, as a memorable closing image
Museu Banksy ticket in Lisbon: what you’re paying for

At $15 per person for an entry ticket, this museum is aimed at one simple goal: giving you a focused Banksy experience without turning it into a half-day side quest.
Here’s what makes the value feel clearer than it sounds. You’re not just looking at a handful of images on walls. The exhibition includes murals, graffiti-style works, canvases, plus projections and video installations. In other words, it uses multiple ways to show Banksy’s ideas, and that variety helps you keep interest as you move room to room.
Also, the ticket is sold for a valid 1-day entry, and you choose a time slot based on what’s available. That matters because a lot of Lisbon plans run on tight schedules—this is the kind of stop you can reasonably fit between neighborhoods.
One more practical note: food and drinks aren’t part of the entry, and food isn’t allowed in the exhibition. So I’d treat this as a before-or-after activity. Grab something nearby, then come in with a comfortable stomach and a little time to wander.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Lisbon
Getting oriented at the Museu Banksy meeting point

Your visit starts at Museu Banksy. That’s the main anchor you need, and it’s helpful because the experience is self-contained. Once you’re inside, you’re not hunting for off-site murals or chasing a walking route.
The museum also runs with staff who speak Portuguese, English, and Spanish, which is a big deal if you want quick help or just want to understand what you’re seeing without language friction. Wheelchair access is listed too, so it’s designed to be doable for visitors with mobility needs.
Timing is also worth respecting. The last entry is 1 hour before closing, so if you plan to arrive late in the day, don’t leave it to chance.
What the exhibition feels like: a Banksy career walk-through in rooms

The overall structure is pretty straightforward: you move through sections that feel like chapters of his career. The exhibition is built to show early beginnings through to present-day themes, and it does this with a mix of presentation styles.
You’ll encounter everything from street-art looks to studio-like formats. The key is that it isn’t one kind of display repeated over and over. Physical works are shown in a way that aims for impact at original size, while the digital pieces add motion and context.
That mix is especially useful if you’re visiting for the art and not just the name. Even if you know a few iconic pieces, the exhibition is designed to make you notice the patterns—how subjects repeat, how social commentary shifts over time, and how style can stay recognizable while the message evolves.
The famous hits: seeing Girl with Balloon and Sweep It Under the Carpet

If you’re a Banksy fan, you’ll be pleased that the exhibition includes clear standouts. Two of the best-known include Girl with Balloon and Sweep It Under the Carpet. They’re placed so you can find them without turning your visit into a treasure hunt.
What I like about seeing these in this setting is not just recognition. It’s scale and presence. Because the show presents works in full, original size, the impact comes faster than it does when you only see cropped versions online.
And if you’re not a hardcore fan, this is still a smart way to start. Those pieces act like a roadmap. Once you’ve seen them, the surrounding works make more sense, because you can connect the style and message you already know to the wider set of ideas presented throughout the rooms.
More than copies: murals, canvases, and street textures in one place
Even though the show is made of reproductions, it still offers a lot to look at. The exhibition includes items presented like:
- mural-style works
- graffiti-like pieces
- canvases
- and supporting visual elements through projections and video installations
That variety is important. Street art is all about texture, surface, and context, and the museum tries to recreate that feeling through the way the works are displayed. You don’t have to be an art student to appreciate that the creator’s approach isn’t only about what’s drawn—it’s about where it sits, how it looks, and what mood it carries.
This is also where the projection and video bits can help. They bring movement and atmosphere into what would otherwise be a static gallery loop.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Lisbon
Digital media moments: projections and video installations
One of the most practical reasons to choose this museum ticket is that it uses more than walls and frames. The exhibition explicitly includes projections of artworks and video installations.
In real life, digital elements can go one of two ways: either they add meaning, or they feel like a tech gimmick. Here, the digital pieces seem intended to support the story of Banksy’s themes and career arc—so you’re not just watching for entertainment. You’re watching to connect ideas.
If you’re traveling with someone who likes visuals but doesn’t want a slow-paced museum, these digital segments can be the difference between a quick stop and a genuinely satisfying visit.
Regional chapters: works tied to the US, Paris, and the UK
The exhibition doesn’t keep everything in one universal bucket. It includes selections connected to the United States, Paris, and the United Kingdom.
I like this for two reasons. First, it gives you a sense of how street art culture travels and adapts. Second, it gives you a way to organize what you’re seeing while you walk—your brain already wants “themes,” and geography is one of the easiest themes to hold onto.
So as you move through rooms, you can think in terms of context: how Banksy’s work might look similar in tone but different in reference, depending on the place.
The Walled Off Hotel reproduction: closing image with Bethlehem ties
The exhibition ends with a reproduction of the Walled Off Hotel in Bethlehem. That final stop gives the museum a strong last impression, because it links Banksy’s visual language to a specific, real-world location and ongoing conversation.
Even if you only came for the famous pieces, this ending helps you walk away with more than nostalgia. It shifts the conversation from pop-art recognition to something more grounded—how images can travel, and how art can keep returning to issues people argue about.
How long it takes and how to fit it into your Lisbon day
This is listed as a 1-day ticket, but in practice it’s built for a short museum window. People typically treat it like a focused hour or two, which works well in Lisbon.
Here’s how I’d plan it:
- Put it in the middle of your day, when you want a break from walking heat or crowds.
- Pair it with nearby cafés and restaurants, since food and drinks aren’t included and food isn’t allowed inside.
- If you’re doing multiple paid attractions, remember the last entry is 1 hour before closing, so don’t schedule it as a last-minute gamble.
Also, the museum’s location is described as a bit extra to reach compared to the most central tourist lanes. That doesn’t make it a bad choice—it just means you should plan your route, not your vibes.
Price vs. value: is $15 worth it?
Let’s talk value plainly.
At $15, you’re paying for:
- entry to a multi-room display
- 100+ full-size reproductions
- plus digital elements like projections and video installations
- and recognizable works that make it easy to connect with the show quickly
For casual Banksy fans, it’s a strong deal because the experience is efficient. You’re not spending half a day searching for references; you’re getting a concentrated hit of the iconography and themes.
For serious art collectors or people who want originals, the pricing won’t change the biggest limitation: this is an unauthorized exhibition made of reproductions. If that’s a dealbreaker, you may feel disappointed no matter what the ticket costs.
So the key question is not whether it’s worth $15. The question is whether you want Banksy as a visitable experience or Banksy as original artifacts.
Who should book this ticket?
This one fits best if you:
- like modern street-art culture and want a quick, organized introduction
- enjoy museums that mix physical displays with projections and video
- want to see a lot of Banksy imagery without committing to a long day
- are traveling with someone who will enjoy visual storytelling, even if they’re not a deep art scholar
You might skip it if you:
- want verified originals only
- hate exhibitions where most works are reproductions
- prefer strictly guided commentary and lots of deep analysis onsite
Should you book the Banksy Museum Permanent Exhibition?
I’d book it if you’re a Banksy fan or you want to understand why people are so drawn to him—style, provocation, and the way art can make politics personal. The mix of mediums plus over 100 full-size works means you’ll likely leave feeling like you saw more than you expected for the time.
I’d hesitate if you’re traveling expecting an official Banksy collection or genuine originals. The show is clearly positioned as an unauthorized exhibition, and the central experience is built around reproductions and copies.
If you’re on a tight Lisbon schedule, this is a good way to get a Banksy-focused stop without sacrificing your whole day.
FAQ
Where is the Banksy Museum permanent exhibition located?
It takes place at Museu Banksy in Lisbon.
How much is the entry ticket?
The price is $15 per person.
How long should I plan for this visit?
The experience is described as lasting 1 day, and many visitors treat it as a short visit through the exhibition.
Is food included or allowed inside?
Food and drinks are not included, and food is not allowed inside the exhibition.
What kinds of displays will I see?
You can expect murals, unique pieces from private collectors, graffiti-style works, canvases, plus projections and video installations.
Will I see well-known Banksy works?
Yes. The exhibition includes well-known pieces such as Girl with Balloon and Sweep It Under the Carpet.
Are there works from different places in the exhibition?
Yes. There are examples connected to the United States, Paris, and the United Kingdom.
What languages are available?
The host or greeter speaks Portuguese, English, and Spanish.
Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
Wheelchair accessibility is listed.
What should I know about authorization?
This is an unauthorized exhibition.
FAQ
What’s the latest time I can enter?
The last entry is 1 hour before closing time.
Is there a ticket option to pay later?
Yes. There is a reserve now & pay later option.
Can I cancel and get a refund?
Free cancellation is offered up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






























