Camp Nou Museum Barcelona 2026: Is It Worth Visiting During Construction?
The stadium is a construction site. The museum is still open. At €36 for trophies and a 360° immersive show, is the Camp Nou experience worth it in 2026?
You walk up to Camp Nou expecting the world's most famous football stadium. What you see is scaffolding, cranes, and a €600 million renovation in progress. The pitch? Closed. The dressing rooms? Closed. The tunnel walk? Closed. What's left is the museum, a viewpoint of the construction, and a 360° immersive show. The ticket still costs €36.
Whether that's worth it depends on one thing: how much you care about FC Barcelona.
What you actually get in 2026
The Barça Museum covers 2,400 m² across several floors. The collection spans trophies, match memorabilia, interactive displays, and a timeline of the club's history from 1899 to the present. There's a Ballon d'Or section, original match kits, and footage from key moments.
The highlight is Spotify Camp Nou Live, a 360° immersive room that surrounds you with match footage and crowd audio. It's well produced. If you're a fan, it gives you chills. If you're not, it's a slick audiovisual show and not much more.
The construction viewpoint lets you look over the renovation from an authorized spot. You'll see the scale of the project, but it's essentially a building site.
Construction Viewpoint at Camp Nou (2026)
The €36 ticket includes access to a designated construction viewpoint overlooking the ongoing renovation. You can see the scale of the project from an authorized area: the partially dismantled upper tiers, the exposed structural frame, and the crane activity across the site.
Most visitors spend 5–10 minutes here. It's the one part of the 2026 visit that has a genuine expiry date — the trophy cabinet and Ballon d'Or section exist in Barça exhibitions elsewhere, but the mid-rebuild view of Camp Nou won't be available once the stadium reopens in August 2026. If that's your reason for visiting now rather than waiting, it's a fair one.
Is the Camp Nou Museum worth visiting during construction?
For dedicated Barça fans, yes. The museum itself is well designed and the trophy collection is impressive. Visitors who care about the club consistently rate it 4 out of 5 stars. The immersive show adds something you won't find elsewhere.
For casual tourists, the value is harder to justify. TripAdvisor reviews from 2025 and 2026 repeat the same complaint: €36 for a museum you can walk through in 45 minutes, with no access to the parts that made the old Camp Nou Experience worth it. Several visitors describe the price as a "rip-off" given the limited access.
The honest assessment: the museum is good, the price is too high for what's currently available. When the renovation finishes (expected August 2026), the full experience with pitch access and stadium tour will return. If you can wait, wait.
What visitors wish they'd known
Where to book
Our take: Book direct on fcbarcelona.com at face value (€36). Avoid third-party resellers that charge €5-15 extra. GYG's immersive exhibition ticket is the exception — adds free cancellation at the same price level, useful if your Barcelona plans shift.
Third-party resellers charge €5–15 extra for the same basic ticket. The flexible basic ticket (€36) has open-date validity until June 30, 2026.
Go on a weekday morning. Weekend crowds make it hard to see exhibits and read information panels. Several visitors mention feeling rushed by the flow of people.
The RoboKeeper challenge (€4.40 extra) lets you take penalty kicks against a robotic goalkeeper. It's a fun addition if you're visiting with kids, but skippable otherwise.
Camp Nou is in Les Corts, about 20 minutes by metro from the city centre (L3, Palau Reial or L5, Collblanc). It's not near Barcelona's main museum cluster, so plan it as a separate trip.
Tickets and prices (2026)
- Basic ticket
- €36 (museum + audio guide + construction viewpoint)
- Book tickets
- GetYourGuide (free cancellation) · fcbarcelona.com
- Guided tour
- From €51
- Children
- Under 4 free. Reduced prices for ages 4–10
- Opening hours
- Mon–Sat 9:30–19:30, Sun 10:00–14:30 (check official site for match day changes)
Hours and prices can change, especially on match days. Confirm on the official site before you go.
Last verified: May 2026
Frequently asked questions
Can you visit Camp Nou during the renovation?
Partially. The stadium pitch, dressing rooms, and tunnel are closed. You can visit the museum (2,400 m²), the 360° immersive show, and a construction viewpoint. The full stadium tour resumes when renovation finishes, expected August 2026.
How much are Camp Nou Museum tickets in 2026?
The basic ticket costs €36 and includes museum access, digital audio guide, and construction viewpoint. Immersive guided tours start at €51. Children under 4 are free.
How long do you need at the Camp Nou Museum?
Most visitors spend 60 to 90 minutes. Football fans who read every panel may spend up to 2 hours. The museum alone takes about 45 minutes.
If you're weighing up where to spend your museum budget in Barcelona, the art museums offer better value right now. The Picasso Museum costs €12, and the Articket gives you six major museums for €38. For other things to see, check our best art museums in Barcelona guide or the free museum days calendar. Camp Nou will be worth revisiting once the renovation wraps up.