Why Saint Petersburg is the museum capital of Russia
Automatic translate
St. Petersburg is a rare city where the museum map almost coincides with the map of city symbols. Imperial residences have become showcases of world painting, fortresses — sites of historical exhibitions, and former factories — spaces of contemporary art. The main museums of St. Petersburg cover everything: from ancient artifacts and Renaissance masterpieces to cutting-edge modern art, engineering achievements and memorial apartments of outstanding figures. Such scale and diversity make them an integral part of the cultural code of the city, allowing you to travel through centuries and eras in a few days without leaving its borders.

2 The main museums for the first acquaintance
3 Thematic and niche museums
4 Contemporary art and new formats
5 Routes for 1 – 3 days
6 Practical advice
From Imperial Collections to the Avant-garde
The foundations of the museum collections here were laid by the Romanovs: from the Kunstkamera "curiosities" of Peter the Great to the luxurious collections of painting and applied art in the Winter Palace. The 20th century added avant-garde, Silver Age literature and difficult political history to the palette. Today, the city has hundreds of museums - from giants with world-famous names to chamber apartment-museums and modern art venues.
How to plan a visit
The main mistake is to try to “see everything.” It is more realistic to take 1-2 large museums a day and supplement them with one thematic point nearby. Buy tickets online, allow time for queues and a cloakroom, and come to temporary exhibitions at the opening or 2-3 hours before closing. It is useful to have a detailed guide to St. Petersburg at hand to flexibly rebuild the route and take into account schedules, weather conditions and your own pace of walking.
The main museums for the first acquaintance

The State Hermitage Museum
One of the largest museums in the world with collections from Antiquity to the 20th century. The "first time in the Hermitage" route usually includes the Grand Staircase, the Pavilion Hall with the "Peacock", the Leonardo, Raphael and Rembrandt galleries, as well as the Impressionists in the General Staff building. The principle of "less is more" works especially well here. It is better to buy tickets to the Hermitage online from official distributors.
Russian Museum
A collection of national art from ancient Russian icons to avant-garde. The obligatory halls are Aivazovsky, Repin, Vrubel, Malevich and Filonov. If you are short on time, choose the main building – the Mikhailovsky Palace; if you have the strength, add the Marble Palace or Stroganov.
Peter and Paul Fortress and the Museum of the History of St. Petersburg
The place where the city began. In addition to the cathedral with the emperors’ tomb, pay attention to the bastions, the Trubetskoy Bastion prison and the exhibitions on urban life in the 19th and 20th centuries. In summer, walks along the fortress walls and panoramas of the Neva are interesting.
Kunstkamera
The oldest museum in Russia, founded by Peter I. Today, it houses anthropological and ethnographic collections of peoples of the world: from the life of Siberian peoples to the cultures of Africa and Oceania. Go for the context of the era and the "scientific curiosity" of Peter the Great’s time.
Thematic and niche museums
Museum of Political History of Russia
A lively story about revolutions, perestroika and everyday life of the 20th century. The strong point is the presentation of the material: documents, posters, things, media installations. Good for high school students and adults who want to "collect" history without boredom.
Central Naval Museum
From sailing ships to submarines and modern navigation. Models, maps, flags and rare devices. Conveniently combined with a walk around New Holland or the Naval Cathedral in Kronstadt (if you are planning a trip out of town).
Museum of Russian Railways
Large halls with steam locomotives, locomotives and interactive features. One of the best family routes: lots of equipment, clear captions, driver simulators. Allow at least two hours for the tour.
Apartments-museums of writers
Petersburg is a city of literary addresses. The most famous are Pushkin’s House on the Moika, Dostoevsky’s Apartment Museum, and the Akhmatova Museum in the Fountain House. These are intimate spaces where details and atmosphere are important.
Contemporary art and new formats
Erarta
The largest private museum of contemporary art in Russia: painting, sculpture, media, regular temporary projects. A strong curatorial program and clear navigation make Erarta a convenient "entry" into contemporary art.
Street Art Museum
Situated on the territory of a working factory, the exhibition and large-scale seasonal projects show how street art interacts with the industrial landscape. It is especially bright here in the summer.
Faberge Museum
A collection of jewellery art by Carl Faberge and Russian masters. Imperial eggs, cameos, porcelain and household items of the high society of the early 20th century. Good as an elegant end to the day.
Routes for 1 – 3 days
Day 1: "Classic"
Morning — Hermitage (main building, 2–3 hours). Lunch — short walk along Palace Embankment. Afternoon — General Staff Building with impressionists (1.5–2 hours). Evening — St. Petersburg panorama from Trinity Bridge.
Day 2: "Russian Art and Fortress"
Morning — Russian Museum (2 hours). Lunch — in the Summer Garden or nearby on Karpovka. Afternoon — Peter and Paul Fortress (museum + cathedral, 2 hours). Optional — climb to the Singer observation deck or roofs in the center (excursions).
Day 3: "Topics and Interests"
Choose a block: family (Railway Museum + planetarium), historical (Political history + Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood), contemporary art (Erarta + street art). Finish with a quiet walk around New Holland.
Practical advice
Tickets and queues
Large museums sell electronic tickets with fixed time slots - this way you can save up to an hour in line. In high season, choose early or evening slots on weekdays. Temporary exhibitions often have separate entrances.
Free Days and Museum Night
Many venues have discounted hours/days for students, schoolchildren, and pensioners. Once a year, the "Night of Museums" takes place - long queues, but a special atmosphere and non-standard programs. If you don’t like crowds, it’s better to go on regular weekday evenings.
With children
Look for interactive, models and "touching" zones: Railways, Planetarium, Water Museum, Russian Railways simulators. In large museums, check the cloakrooms, cafes and rest areas in advance - this saves the pace of the walk.
Photos and navigation
Photography is often allowed without flash; tripods and selfie sticks are usually prohibited. Use official apps and audio guides: they help you plot short routes and not get lost in the enfilades.
Pace and "overheating" of impressions
After each large museum, plan an "empty" window - a walk around the courtyards, coffee, a short walk along the embankment. The impressions are absorbed better, and you will not "burn out" by the middle of the day.
St. Petersburg museums are an encyclopedia of the city, told through the interiors of palaces, the history of Russia, technology and art of the 20th and 21st centuries. Choose 3-5 addresses that suit your interests, alternate “giants” with intimate places and leave space for spontaneous discoveries. And if you need a ready-made list to start with and visual routes, return to the material “which museums to visit in St. Petersburg” and put together your ideal museum day.
- Museums of the world - a large archive of museum collections of paintings
- MAGIC RINGS OF ALMANZOR (3+) fabulous adventures
- "Colorful Zoo". Drawing courses for children 4-6 years old
- Irkutsk Art Museum invites visitors to participate in the Museum Selfie international event
- Exhibition "Gamardzhoba! Keti Melkadze"
- Igor Dryomin: MMOMA