Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide

Visit Mozart’s preserved Vienna apartment and a multi-level exhibition with an included audio guide for adults and kids, plus optional Haus der Musik entry.

4.2(2,344 reviews)From $18 per person

Our review of the Mozarthaus Vienna is all about one big idea: you get to walk the rooms tied to Mozart’s Vienna years (1784 to 1787) and hear how he built works like Figaro while living here. The ticket includes an audio guide designed for both adults and children, so you can move at your pace.

What I like most is the sense of place. This isn’t a random Mozart-themed stop—it’s his only remaining apartment in Vienna that’s been preserved. I also appreciate how the visit is structured across three exhibition levels, with a clear focus on his creative peak in Vienna.

One thing to consider: several visitors mention the experience can feel text-heavy and less interactive than you might expect. If you’re hoping for lots of original instruments and objects, you may find the displays more interpretive than hands-on.

Marie

Inge

Neil

Key Points at a Glance

Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Key Points at a Glance
Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Mozart’s Apartment in Vienna: What You’re Really Paying For
Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Getting There and Meeting Point: Keep It Simple
Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Walking Through Mozart’s Vienna Years (1784–1787)
Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - The Audio Guide: Great When It Works, Worth Planning For
Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Three Exhibition Levels: How the Museum Keeps You Oriented
Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - What About the Artifacts: Expect Interpretation, Not a Storage Room of Mozart Stuff
Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Special Exhibitions and What They Add
Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Photo and Video Rules: Plan for No Photos Inside
1 / 9

  • Mozart’s preserved apartment: his Vienna home from 1784–1787
  • Audio guide included: adults in 13 languages and kids in 8
  • Multi-level exhibition: three floors, focused on the Vienna years
  • Optional add-on: combo ticket can include Haus der Musik
  • Rules inside: no video recording and no photography inside
  • Small-group feel: limited to 10 participants for smoother entry
You can check availability for your dates here:

Mozart’s Apartment in Vienna: What You’re Really Paying For

Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Mozart’s Apartment in Vienna: What You’re Really Paying For

Let’s talk value first. At about $18 per person for a full-day visit, you’re buying access to a specific, historically important space plus an included audio story you can follow at your own pace. For Vienna, that’s not a luxury price. It’s more like “pay to see something you can’t replicate anywhere else.”

You’re also not stuck with just one mode. The exhibition is arranged over three levels, and the audio guide is tailored—adult narration in 13 languages and a separate children’s track in 8. That matters, because Mozart museums can be either brilliant or a slog. This one is built to keep a wider range of visitors engaged.

If you’re visiting with kids, this ticket is one of those rare options where you can actually make progress in the same place at the same time. Adults can focus on context and works; kids get a lighter, more guided path.

Michael

Anastasia

Ginna

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Vienna

Getting There and Meeting Point: Keep It Simple

Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Getting There and Meeting Point: Keep It Simple

The meeting point can vary depending on the option booked, so check your confirmation details closely. This isn’t unusual in Vienna, but it’s still worth a quick look before you show up hungry (food isn’t included, more on that later).

Also note the practical stuff:

  • You get a cloakroom, which helps if you’re traveling with a backpack or extra layers.
  • Bring a passport or ID card, and if you have one, a student card as well.

And yes, you should plan for “museum pacing” rather than “I’ll sprint through this.” Even when you’re self-guided with audio, most visitors end up slowing down once the story gets good.

Walking Through Mozart’s Vienna Years (1784–1787)

Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Walking Through Mozart’s Vienna Years (1784–1787)

The anchor of the visit is Mozart’s preserved apartment. According to the description, it’s his only remaining Vienna apartment and it shows the period when he lived here from 1784 to 1787.

Swati

Kathleen

Steve

This is the part that often surprises people. You’re not just looking at Mozart as a name in a textbook—you’re walking through a real layout tied to how a composer’s life actually worked: rooms, time, movement, and the everyday background that shaped creativity.

You’ll also hear how this period connects to major works—your ticket highlights that Mozart composed music here connected to his famous Figaro. That connection is what turns a “museum stop” into a “wait, I get it” moment.

The Audio Guide: Great When It Works, Worth Planning For

Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - The Audio Guide: Great When It Works, Worth Planning For

The audio guide is included, and it comes in many languages, including English, German, Spanish, French, Italian, Polish, Russian, Chinese (and others). If you want the exact list, it includes English, German, Slovak, Spanish, French, Hungarian, Italian, Polish, Russian, Chinese, Czech, Japanese, and Korean.

What to expect in practice: most visitors like the self-paced nature. The museum experience is built around the audio track, so you’ll spend a good chunk of your time listening and then moving room to room as the story progresses.

Leia

Somak

Mark

A couple of real-world notes from visitors:

  • One review said they could only use their phone for the audio tour.
  • Another suggested bringing headphones (plugging into the guided module) so your hands are free and you’re not stuck holding your device.

So my advice is simple: plan to have headphones ready. Even if your experience ends up using an audio device, you’ll still be glad you can block street noise and focus.

Also, don’t be shocked if the museum’s tech is… museum tech. One visitor mentioned issues related to Wi‑Fi, so if you depend on mobile audio, have a backup mindset (offline access if your app supports it, or just keep moving with the physical audio flow the museum provides).

More Great Tours Nearby

Three Exhibition Levels: How the Museum Keeps You Oriented

Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Three Exhibition Levels: How the Museum Keeps You Oriented

The exhibition is spread over three levels, and the focus is specifically Mozart’s Vienna years, described as the peak of his creative achievement. That’s the key: this isn’t a “Mozart career highlights” museum. It’s “Mozart in Vienna—what the city gave him and what he made.”

sanath

Ulf

Melina

In a practical sense, three floors means you’re not stuck in one long corridor of panels. You can also pace your visit better:

  • If you like context, you can linger longer on the explanation-heavy rooms.
  • If you prefer the story beats, you can move faster and let the audio guide carry you.

A common theme in visitor feedback is that the museum has a lot of reading and a lot of “stand and listen.” If you’re the type who hates being stationary, you might find certain sections less exciting. On the flip side, for Mozart fans, it’s hard to beat the feeling of walking where he lived while hearing the timeline unfold.

You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Vienna

What About the Artifacts: Expect Interpretation, Not a Storage Room of Mozart Stuff

Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - What About the Artifacts: Expect Interpretation, Not a Storage Room of Mozart Stuff

Some visitors go in expecting lots of original artifacts—an instrument here, a personal item there, the full wow-factor. Others feel there aren’t as many tangible objects as in some other composer museums.

That doesn’t make it a bad visit. It just changes what you should expect going in. Mozart left fewer physical pieces behind than you might assume, so the museum leans on the apartment setting and the story-building through exhibition panels and audio narration.

One visitor noted that something they expected (an actual note) was shown via projection rather than the original item being on display. Another felt the room was rather empty of period décor.

So, here’s the balanced takeaway: if you’re mainly there for the idea of Mozart in Vienna, and you enjoy hearing the how-and-why behind his work, this works well. If you’re hunting for a “hands-on treasure hunt” of original items, you might be slightly underwhelmed.

Special Exhibitions and What They Add

Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Special Exhibitions and What They Add

Beyond the permanent exhibition, there’s also a special exhibition that changes each year and is included in your admission.

This is worth mentioning because it means your visit won’t be identical to your friend’s visit from last year. If you’re going on a short trip to Vienna and want one targeted Mozart stop, this added layer can keep it from feeling repetitive.

Optional Combo Ticket: Mozarthaus Vienna Plus Haus der Musik

If you select the combo, your ticket includes admission to Haus der Musik. The description calls it a modern, interactive sound museum in the historic city center, with four floors in a palace setting and hands-on options that let visitors try making music themselves.

This combo is especially good if:

  • Your group has mixed preferences (someone loves Mozart history; someone wants more interaction).
  • You want to keep the day from feeling too “listening-only.”

That said, your decision should depend on what you want today. If you’re here specifically for Mozart’s apartment, the Mozarthaus alone might be enough. If you want a day where sound and participation play a bigger role, the combo is the better value.

Photo and Video Rules: Plan for No Photos Inside

Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide - Photo and Video Rules: Plan for No Photos Inside

One straightforward rule: no photography inside and no video recording. That affects how you remember the visit later. Many travelers keep a small notebook or save key audio moments by taking notes instead of screenshots.

If you’re someone who likes to document every room, you may leave feeling like you didn’t capture enough visuals. But the upside is that you’ll also experience it more quietly, with fewer people filming the entire time.

Crowd Levels and Small-Group Timing

This experience is listed as a small group with a limit of 10 participants. Even though it’s audio-led and self-paced, smaller groups usually mean:

  • easier check-in,
  • less bottlenecking around ticket/audio retrieval,
  • and a calmer start as you enter the building.

One review also praised how smooth voucher/ticket exchange was. So if you booked ahead, the practical logistics sound pretty painless.

Vienna Weather Reality: You’ll Spend Time Indoors Listening

Vienna can be hot, cold, or sticky depending on the season, and several visitors mentioned comfort issues—like high heating making them sleepy. That’s not exactly a “tour problem,” but it is a heads-up.

What I’d do:

  • Dress in layers so you can adjust indoors.
  • Bring a small water bottle even though food and drinks aren’t included.
  • If you’re sensitive to heat, plan breaks outside after a couple of rooms.

Because yes, there’s a lot of listening. If you’re comfortable and alert, you’ll get more out of the narrative.

Who This Visit Is Best For (and Who Might Want to Skip)

This ticket is a strong fit for:

  • Mozart fans who want the specific Vienna setting behind his most famous works.
  • Families with kids who can handle a guided audio track and prefer structured learning over wandering.
  • Travelers who like cultural depth, especially when it’s connected to a real address and real rooms.

It may be less ideal for:

  • People who want lots of visible, original objects and interactive displays in every room.
  • Visitors who dislike standing still while reading panels and listening sequentially.

Still, even some visitors who weren’t “hardcore Mozart people” found it worthwhile—mainly because the apartment setting gives you a different kind of connection than a standard museum.

Price and Logistics: A Day That Costs Less Than One Big Dinner

The pricing is clear: around $18 per person for admission with the audio guide. Then the combo option adds Haus der Musik if you want it.

Is it worth it? In my view, yes—because you’re paying for:

  • a unique preserved apartment space,
  • a multi-level exhibition focused on a narrow, meaningful theme,
  • and a free audio guide in many languages (adults and kids tracks).

Food isn’t included, so you’ll still need to plan meals. But that also means you don’t pay “museum meal prices,” which can be a trap in tourist areas.

Bottom line: if you want one Mozart-focused stop that’s not over-priced and not just a photo op, this is a solid buy.

Final Thoughts: Should You Book Mozarthaus Vienna?

If you’re asking me for the “yes or no,” here it is.

Book Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide if you want a focused, historically grounded Mozart experience in the actual apartment space, with narration designed for different ages. The included audio guide and the structured three-level exhibition make it easy to get something out of the visit, even if you don’t know every Mozart work.

Skip it or think twice if you’re expecting lots of interactive activities, heavy object displays, or a mostly visually driven museum. Some visitors found parts of it text-heavy and more “listen and stand” than “wow with objects.”

One more practical tip: pair it with Haus der Musik if your group wants a more hands-on audio/sound day. If everyone in your party is truly Mozart-first, you can keep it simple and just do Mozarthaus.

Ready to Book?

Vienna: Tickets for Mozarthaus Vienna with Audio Guide



4.2

(2344 reviews)

FAQ

How long is the Mozarthaus Vienna visit?

The ticket is valid for 1 day, and you can check availability to see starting times.

What’s included with the ticket?

Admission to Mozarthaus Vienna plus an audio guide. The ticket also includes a cloakroom. If you choose the combo option, Haus der Musik admission is included too.

Are there audio guides for children?

Yes. Adults get an audio guide in 13 languages, and children get a children’s audio guide in 8 languages.

Which languages are available for the audio guide?

The audio guide languages listed are English, German, Slovak, Spanish, French, Hungarian, Italian, Polish, Russian, Chinese, Czech, Japanese, and Korean.

Is this wheelchair accessible?

Yes, it is wheelchair accessible.

Can I take photos or record video inside?

No. Video recording and photography inside are not allowed.

Where do I meet for the tour?

The meeting point may vary depending on the option booked, so check your specific booking details.

Can I cancel for a refund?

Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Do I need to bring identification?

You should bring a passport or ID card. A student card is also mentioned.

What’s not included in the ticket price?

Transfers and food and drinks are not included.

Is Haus der Musik included automatically?

Not automatically. Haus der Musik admission is included only if you select the option for the combo ticket (Mozarthaus Vienna and Haus der Musik).

You can check availability for your dates here:

Not for you? Here's more nearby things to do in Vienna we have reviewed