
Duration
1h 30m
Best Time
Any time
Price
€€
Closures
Closed on Monday
The Nobel Museum occupies the elegant former stock exchange building on Stortorget, housing artifacts, documents, and interactive displays about Nobel Prize winners from 1901 to today. You'll find Alfred Nobel's original will, personal items from laureates like Einstein's pipe, and rotating exhibitions on groundbreaking discoveries in peace, literature, science, and economics. The permanent collection focuses on how these achievements changed our world, with touchscreens letting you explore laureate biographies and watch acceptance speeches.
The museum feels intimate rather than grand, with just four main rooms flowing around a central atrium. Overhead, a slow-moving cable car system displays portraits of all 900+ laureates, creating an oddly mesmerizing backdrop as you read about their work. The temporary exhibitions change every few months and often tackle current global issues through a Nobel lens. The museum shop stocks books by Nobel literature winners and science-themed gifts you won't find elsewhere.
Most visitors finish in under two hours, and honestly, that's plenty. The 120 SEK admission feels steep for the size, but the quality of curation justifies it if you're genuinely interested in scientific breakthroughs or literature. Skip the audio guide and use the interactive screens instead. The museum gets packed during summer afternoons, so morning visits feel much more relaxed.
Enter through the courtyard entrance on Köpmantorget rather than the main Stortorget entrance to avoid the crowds that gather around the square
Most visitors rush through the biographical displays, but the handwritten letters and personal artifacts in the glass cases tell better stories than the digital presentations
Visit the Bistro Nobel upstairs even if you're not eating: the view over Stortorget is excellent and it's where laureates dine during Nobel Week ceremonies
Skip the queue: Book tickets online to avoid the ticket line.
Plan for about 1h 30m.
Nobelmuseet is in the Gamla Stan neighborhood of Stockholm. The address is Stortorget 2, 103 16 Stockholm, Sweden. The area is well-served by metro.
This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.
Closed on Monday. Check the official website for holiday closures and special hours.