Art you can’t ignore starts here.
If you like modern and contemporary art but hate the guessing game, this ticket is a smart way in. Moco Museum London packs original works by big-name artists into a compact, easy-to-walk layout, with three floors plus a dedicated digital-art section. I like how the museum pairs famous pieces with short context so you’re not left asking what you’re supposed to feel.
Two big wins for me are the original Banksy works (with authorization details) and the Robbie Williams exhibition, Radical Honesty, which is billed as a UK first for his new sculpture work. One thing to keep in mind: this museum is focused on modern/contemporary styles, so if you need classic masterpieces like you’d see in older galleries, you may not connect with everything on the walls.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- First stop: your ticketed entry at Moco Museum
- The museum layout: how the floors are organized
- Moco Masters: the anchor collection under one roof
- Moco Contemporary Masters: pop energy meets street influence
- Banksy at Moco: three notable originals and the authorization detail
- Robbie Williams: Radical Honesty (2025) and why it’s a smart add-on
- The digital art floor: what changes when it’s not on paper
- Audio guide and plaques: how to get more from every room
- Timing your visit in London: how to fit 1.5 hours well
- Value for money: is $22.76 a good deal?
- Who should book this ticket?
- Should you book Moco Museum London?
- FAQ
- How long does the Moco Museum ticket experience take?
- What is included with the ticket?
- Do I need to bring headphones for the audio guide?
- What exhibitions can I access with this entry ticket?
- Is Moco Museum wheelchair accessible?
- Are pets or food allowed inside?
Key things to know before you go

- Three floors of original art with clear themed areas, so you can pace yourself
- Moco Masters + street-to-pop crossover featuring artists like Basquiat, Warhol, Haring, Picasso, and Banksy
- Robbie Williams: Radical Honesty (2025) as a headline solo exhibition with sculpture works shown first time in the UK
- Digital artworks section on the lower level, where the art experience changes from wall-hanging pieces
- Free audio guide included, but you must bring your own headphones
First stop: your ticketed entry at Moco Museum

Your visit starts at the ticket desk inside Moco Museum. Once you’re in, you’re basically free to move at your own pace. The ticket covers entry to the museum and access to all exhibitions, so you can pick a route that matches your attention span.
The museum is set up so you can see a lot without committing to a whole day. The stated visit length is around 1.5 hours, which is a good target if you want to move briskly and still read a few information plaques.
One practical tip: plan to bring small headphones, since the museum includes a free audio guide but headphones are not included. If your phone’s battery is questionable, it’s worth charging before you go so you’re not hunting for power mid-visit.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in London
The museum layout: how the floors are organized

Moco Museum is designed with zones that make sense even if you’re not an art specialist. Expect three floors of exhibition space, plus a lower-level area dedicated to digital works. That means you’ll shift from classic wall displays to more tech-and-media style art without needing to walk long distances across the city.
Here’s the core breakdown you’ll see as you move through the building:
On the main exhibition floors, you’ll find themed groupings that the museum calls Moco Masters and Moco Contemporary Masters, along with a headline temporary exhibition slot that’s currently Robbie Williams. On the lower level, you’ll enter the space for Moco Immersive Digital Artworks (the name used by the museum), which changes the tempo of your visit.
This layout is a big part of why the experience works well for non-experts. Even if modern art isn’t your everyday comfort zone, the museum’s structure helps you stay oriented.
Moco Masters: the anchor collection under one roof

Moco Masters is the part of the visit that helps you connect the dots between major 20th-century and contemporary voices. The museum presents work by world-renowned artists under one roof, including Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Yayoi Kusama, Keith Haring, Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, Tom Wesselman, and Pablo Picasso.
What I like about this section is that it feels like a guided sampler without being boring. If you know a few of these names, it’s satisfying to see how their styles differ in the same building. If you don’t, this is the easiest place to start, because it’s a strong “who’s who” wall.
Also pay attention to the way the museum frames influence and storytelling. The experience is built around ideas: what the artwork says, how it relates to culture and society, and how pop, street art, and symbolism travel across decades.
If you only have time for one area and you’re unsure what you’ll like, start here. It gives you the widest artist range and the best chance of finding a connection fast.
Moco Contemporary Masters: pop energy meets street influence

As you move up into Moco Contemporary Masters, the tone shifts toward artists who reflect today’s visual language. You’ll see work associated with names like Tracey Emin and street-art connected artists, including KAWS.
This part matters because contemporary art is often about context. You’re not just looking at a piece; you’re reading how it fits into modern culture. If you’ve ever thought, I like the vibe but I don’t get the message, this section is where the explanations help most.
The museum’s emphasis on story shows up in the information plaques, which can make famous names feel less abstract. In the reviews I read, people specifically praised the plaques for adding insight and making it easier to see the bigger influence.
If you’re short on time, don’t try to read every label. Pick a few and slow down for those. You’ll get more out of five good reads than thirty rushed glances.
Banksy at Moco: three notable originals and the authorization detail

One of the most talked-about draws here is the Banksy display. The museum presents an homage featuring original works including Girl with balloon, Love is in the air, and Battle at Beanfield.
The important detail is that these works are said to be authorized by Pest Control, described as the only official entity that authorizes Banksy’s work. That’s not just trivia. It gives you a clearer sense of why these pieces are being presented here at all.
If you’re a fan, this is the section where you’ll feel the quickest “hit” of recognition. If you’re not a Banksy person, it can still be worth stopping because it’s a direct entry point into modern street-based art—something that often spills into museums only after it has cultural weight.
Also, go close. The museum’s setup and the way the information is presented make it easier to spot details you might miss from a distance.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in London
Robbie Williams: Radical Honesty (2025) and why it’s a smart add-on

The headline experience right now is Robbie Williams: Radical Honesty. It’s described as a brand-new, never-before-seen museum exhibition, and it’s part of his third chapter with Moco.
The museum frames Radical Honesty as connected to his personal journey, including work from his collection Pride and Self-Prejudice, which aims to address his mental health. That context matters, because it changes how you read the art. You’re not just seeing celebrity-branded visuals—you’re seeing a narrative about identity and honesty.
What really sells this for me is the museum’s claim that it debuts his latest sculpture works for the very first time on UK soil. So even if you’ve seen Robbie Williams media, this is the kind of art encounter you can only really get in this setting.
If you’re traveling with someone who likes music more than art, this exhibition is a strong bridge. It brings a contemporary audience into an art museum without feeling like you’re forcing anyone to look at something unfamiliar.
One heads-up: the museum store is a common stopping point, and a review I read called out that souvenir shop prices can be high. If you want something specific, decide your budget before you enter the shop.
The digital art floor: what changes when it’s not on paper

Down on the lower level, you’ll find digital artworks credited to artists including Pilar Zeta, Andrés Reisinger, and Six N. Five. The museum also lists work by Anthony James, whose work was mentioned as appearing in Netflix hit Glass Onion starring Daniel Craig.
This is the section where the visit becomes more sensory and less traditional. You’ll spend time looking at how the art plays with media, form, and presentation—very different from paintings or classic sculpture.
Because the museum’s visit length is around 1.5 hours, I’d treat the digital floor as your “slow down” area. Even if you usually skim, give yourself a little extra time here. It’s often the part that surprises people who expected everything to be standard gallery pieces.
If digital art is not your thing, you can still enjoy the visuals, but you might not linger as long. The good news is the rest of the museum gives you enough variety to keep the overall experience satisfying.
Audio guide and plaques: how to get more from every room
The ticket includes a free audio guide in multiple languages: English, Dutch, Spanish, German, French, and Italian. The museum notes you should bring your own headphones.
I’d use the audio guide strategically. Don’t try to listen to everything. Instead, match it to the artists you recognize first—Warhol, Haring, Basquiat, Kusama, Picasso, Banksy, and Hirst are all name anchors for most people. Then let the plaques fill in what you miss with the audio.
The information plaques are a big reason people rate this museum highly. Many visitors like that they add context about influence and cultural impact, not just basic label data.
If you’re the type who worries about feeling lost in contemporary spaces, this is one of the strongest features here. It helps you understand what you’re seeing, without turning the visit into a lecture.
Timing your visit in London: how to fit 1.5 hours well

The museum lists a duration of about 1.5 hours. That’s realistic if you want to see the main exhibitions and still read key info without rushing.
In practice, I’d plan your pace like this:
- Spend the first part with Moco Masters so you set your baseline
- Move into Moco Contemporary Masters next, where context shifts and styles broaden
- Reserve a little time for Robbie Williams Radical Honesty even if it’s not your top priority
- Finish with the digital floor if you like your last impression to be different
If you’re sensitive to crowds, consider going at a time when you can move comfortably. The museum also runs scheduled starting times, so check availability before you lock in your day.
London days can get packed fast. A 1.5-hour museum stop is a good tool for balancing sightseeing with something calmer indoors.
Value for money: is $22.76 a good deal?
At $22.76 per person, Moco Museum sits in a mid-range bracket for London attractions. The value comes from two things: the original art lineup and the fact that your ticket covers multiple themed spaces under one roof.
You’re paying to see major artists like Warhol, Basquiat, Kusama, Haring, Hirst, Koons, and Picasso, plus the museum’s current headline exhibition with Robbie Williams, and a separate digital-art section. That’s a lot of variety for one admission price.
If your goal is only to check off one familiar name, it might feel like overkill. But if you’re open to exploring modern and contemporary art through pop culture, street influence, and digital formats, it’s a strong use of time and money.
The one cost you should mentally factor in is headphones. Since they’re not included, plan to bring a cheap pair or use what you already travel with.
Who should book this ticket?
I think this ticket is a great fit if you want:
- A compact museum experience with big name artists
- Art that connects to culture, music, street visuals, and modern ideas
- A visit that’s about seeing and interpreting, not just reading
It’s also a solid choice for mixed groups. One person can geek out on Banksy and Warhol, while another spends extra time on Robbie Williams Radical Honesty. The building format makes it easier for different interests to coexist.
If you only want classic art from older centuries or you dislike contemporary style work in general, you might still find moments you enjoy. But I’d go in with flexible expectations and give yourself permission to love only parts of the show.
Should you book Moco Museum London?
Yes, if you want a one-ticket way to see original modern and contemporary art with serious cultural names attached, plus a headline exhibition tied to Robbie Williams. It’s one of the easier London museum choices for people who want variety without committing to a full half-day.
Book it if you’re the type who likes to compare styles—pop art next to street influence, and traditional art next to digital media. And bring headphones so you actually use the included audio guide.
Pass if you hate contemporary art completely or if you only care about one artist and don’t want to spend time exploring other sections.
FAQ
How long does the Moco Museum ticket experience take?
The ticket experience is listed as about 1.5 hours, depending on the starting time you choose.
What is included with the ticket?
The ticket includes museum entrance, access to all exhibitions, and a free audio guide in several languages.
Do I need to bring headphones for the audio guide?
Yes. The audio guide is included, but headphones are not provided, so you’ll need your own.
What exhibitions can I access with this entry ticket?
You can access all exhibitions in the museum, including the Moco Masters, Moco Contemporary Masters, the Digital artworks area on the lower level, and the headline temporary exhibition.
Is Moco Museum wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the museum is listed as wheelchair accessible.
Are pets or food allowed inside?
No. Pets are not allowed, and food and drinks are not allowed either.
































