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Plan Your Visit

Suggested Admission

New York State residents and New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut students: the amount you pay for admission is up to you, but you must pay something ($00.01 minimum per ticket).

To buy pay-what-you-wish tickets online, you must have a New York State billing address. New Jersey and Connecticut students can only buy pay-what-you-wish tickets in person with valid student ID. Accepted forms of residency verification include New York State driver’s license, New York State identification card, IDNYC, current bill or statement with a New York State address, student ID, and New York library card.

General Admission

NY residentsPay what you wish
NY, NJ, and CT studentsPay what you wish
Adults$30
Seniors (65 and over)$22
Visitors with a disability (in-person only)$22
Students$17
Children (12 and under)Free
Members and PatronsFree
Care partner of a visitor with a disability (in-person only)Free

Complimentary admission eligibility and passes

The Met Fifth Avenue

Over 5,000 years of art from around the world.
The Met Fifth facade
1000 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10028View on map

Getting There

The Metropolitan Museum of Art is located on the Upper East Side of Manhattan along Fifth Avenue, bordering Central Park. Visitors can reach the Museum using a variety of transportation options. The Museum also offers accessible entrances and accommodations to help ensure a welcoming and convenient experience for all visitors.

By subway/bus

From East Side of Manhattan: Subway: Take the 4, 5, or 6 train to 86th Street and walk three blocks west to Fifth Avenue. This walk is about a half mile and takes approximately 10 minutes. Bus: Take the M1, M2, M3, or M4 bus along Fifth Avenue (from uptown locations) to 82nd Street or along Madison Avenue (from downtown locations) to 83rd Street.

From West Side of Manhattan: Take the 1 train to 86th Street, then the M86 crosstown bus across Central Park to Fifth Avenue; OR take the C train to 81st Street, then the M79 bus across Central Park to Fifth Avenue.

From Penn Station: Take the M4 bus to 83rd Street and Madison Avenue; OR take the C local train to 81st Street and transfer to the M79 crosstown bus across Central Park to Fifth Avenue.

From The Met Cloisters: Take the M4 bus directly to 82nd Street and Fifth Avenue; OR take the A train to 125th Street, transfer to the B or C local train, exit at 81st Street, and transfer to the M79 crosstown bus across Central Park to Fifth Avenue.

Some transfers are free. Please note: Certain restrictions apply to bus and train transfers. Please visit the MTA website for additional details, and for bus and subway maps.

By Sightseeing Tour bus

Gray Line NY Sightseeing Tours and CitySights NY Bus Tours: Uptown Loop, Stop #35.

By Metro-North Railroad

Take the Hudson, Harlem, or New Haven Line to Grand Central. From there, take the following:

Subway: Take the 4, 5, or 6 train to 86th Street and walk three blocks west to Fifth Avenue. This walk is about a half mile and takes approximately 10 minutes.

Bus: Take the M1, M2, M3, or M4 bus along Madison Avenue to 83rd Street.

By car

From The Met Cloisters, Bronx, Northern New Jersey, and New England: Take southbound Henry Hudson Parkway to 96th Street exit; cross Central Park and turn right on Fifth Avenue; enter Museum parking garage at 80th Street.

From Brooklyn and Staten Island: Take Williamsburg Bridge, Manhattan Bridge, Brooklyn Bridge, or Battery Tunnel to northbound/uptown FDR Drive; exit at 96th Street; proceed straight onto York Avenue; turn right on 86th Street; turn left on Fifth Avenue and enter Museum parking garage at 80th Street.

From Southern New Jersey: Take New Jersey Turnpike to Holland Tunnel–Uptown exit; northbound Hudson Street becomes Eighth Avenue, which becomes Central Park West; at 86th Street, turn right and cross Central Park; turn right on Fifth Avenue and enter Museum parking garage at 80th Street.

From Bronx, Queens, Long Island, Upstate New York, and New England via RFK Bridge: Take southbound/downtown FDR Drive to 96th Street exit; proceed straight onto York Avenue; turn right on 86th Street; turn left on Fifth Avenue and enter Museum parking garage at 80th Street.

From Queens and Long Island via Queensborough Bridge: Use either level; take right-lane exit onto 60th Street (westbound); at Madison Avenue, turn right and drive north/uptown; turn left on 81st Street then left on Fifth Avenue; enter Museum parking garage at 80th Street.

Parking

The Met Fifth Avenue's parking garage is located at Fifth Avenue and 80th Street. Parking is only available on weekday evenings and weekends. Please note, due to reduced parking capacity, on-site parking is not guaranteed. Vehicles may be valet parked. The clearance is six feet, six inches (6' 6").

Public Hours + Rates
Monday – Friday: 6 pm – 12 am
Saturday – Sunday: Open 24 hours

For pricing or to reserve a spot during public hours go to Laz Parking. Members receive a 10% discount with validation.

Members
Parking is only available on weekday evenings and weekends. Please note, due to reduced parking capacity, on-site parking is not guaranteed. During public parking hours, a 10% parking discount is available to Met Museum Members. To receive a discount, Museum Members must have their tickets validated at the Uris Center for Education Membership desk. For more information, please call 212-570-3753 between 9 am and 5 pm, Monday through Friday.

Accessibility
Parking is only available on weekday evenings and weekends. Please note, due to reduced parking capacity, on-site parking is not guaranteed. Pre-book your parking spot here during public parking hours.

Bike Parking
Bicycle racks are provided inside the Museum parking garage, located at 80th Street and Fifth Avenue, during regular Museum hours for free. Please note, due to reduced parking capacity, on-site parking is not guaranteed.

Information for Bus Drivers

Buses are not permitted to stand, park, or idle on Fifth Avenue. Buses may stop long enough to unload or load passengers. Please note that these laws are strictly enforced by the New York City Police Department and Department of Transportation. After unloading on Fifth Avenue at 83rd Street, buses may cross Central Park at 79th Street or 65th Street and proceed to West 62nd Street between Columbus Avenue and Amsterdam Avenue, most of which is reserved for bus layovers. The recommended return route is north on Amsterdam Avenue to 86th Street, east on 86th Street across Central Park, and south on Fifth Avenue.

Visit the official New York City website for updated motor coach regulations and Charter Bus Parking Guidelines.

woman with a walking cane observing a Greek and Roman era marble statue.
The Museum is committed to making its collection, buildings, programs, and services accessible to all audiences.
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Explore the Museum as a family with special guides, events, and a dedicated play space for kids at our 81st Street Studio.

A slider containing 35 items.
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The Temple of Dendur, Aeolian sandstone
completed by 10 B.C.
Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat (obverse: The Potato Peeler), Vincent van Gogh  Dutch, Oil on canvas
Vincent van Gogh
1887
Washington Crossing the Delaware, Emanuel Leutze  German American, Oil on canvas, American
Emanuel Leutze
1851
The Little Fourteen-Year-Old Dancer, Edgar Degas  French, Partially tinted bronze, cotton tarlatan, silk satin, and wood, French, Paris
Edgar Degas
Founder Cast by A. A. Hébrard
1922 (cast), 2018 (tutu)
Autumn Rhythm: Number 30, 1950, Jackson Pollock  American, Enamel on canvas
Jackson Pollock
1950
Madame X (Virginie Amélie Avegno Gautreau), John Singer Sargent  American, Oil on canvas, American
John Singer Sargent
1883–84
Mangaaka Power Figure (Nkisi N’Kondi), Yombe-Kongo artist and nganga (ritual specialist), Wood, iron, resin, ceramic, plant fiber, textile, pigment, Kongo peoples
Yombe-Kongo artist and nganga (ritual specialist)
ca. 1880–1900
The Astor Chinese Garden Court, Taihu rocks, granite terrace, ceramic tile flooring, roof tiles, and door frames,  various woods (nan wood columns, pine beams, gingko latticework), brass fittings, China
China
17th century style
Bridge over a Pond of Water Lilies, Claude Monet  French, Oil on canvas
Claude Monet
1899
Terracotta Panathenaic prize amphora, Euphiletos Painter, Terracotta, Greek, Attic
Attributed to the Euphiletos Painter
ca. 530 BCE
Young Woman with a Water Pitcher, Johannes Vermeer  Dutch, Oil on canvas
Johannes Vermeer
ca. 1662
Self-Portrait, Rembrandt (Rembrandt van Rijn)  Dutch, Oil on canvas
Rembrandt (Rembrandt van Rijn)
1660
Perseus with the Head of Medusa, Antonio Canova  Italian, Marble, Italian, Rome
Antonio Canova
Patron Commissioned by Count Jan and Countess Valeria Tarnowski
1804–6
Facade of the Second Branch Bank of the United States, Martin Euclid Thompson  American, Marble, American
Architect Martin Euclid Thompson
1822–24
Juan de Pareja (ca. 1608–1670), Velázquez (Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez)  Spanish, Oil on canvas
Velázquez (Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez)
1650
Shiva as Lord of Dance (Nataraja), Copper alloy, Indian (Tamil Nadu)
Indian (Tamil Nadu)
ca. late 11th century
The Harvesters, Pieter Bruegel the Elder  Netherlandish, Oil on oak
Pieter Bruegel the Elder
1565
Ceremonial House Ceiling, Sago palm spathe, paint, wood, Kwoma people
Kwoma people
1970–1973
Damascus Room, Wood (poplar) with gesso relief, gold and tin leaf, glazes and paint; wood (cypress, poplar, and mulberry), mother-of-pearl, marble and other stones, stucco with glass, plaster ceramic tiles, iron, brass
dated 1119 AH/1707 CE

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