
Casa Milan Museum charges a €20 dated-ticket for adults, while children under 14 and visitors over 65 pay €12; youngsters under 7 and guests with certified disabilities enter free. Families can snap up a handy €30 combo (two adults + one child), and football-mad groups of 40 or more drop the cost to €10 per person. Open every day from 10:00 to 19:00 (last admission 18:00), the museum keeps the same timetable year-round, though a match-day supplement nudges the adult rate to €23. We walked through the revolving door on 6 June 2025, so all figures above reflect that day’s tariff.
A Walk Through 125 Years of Rossoneri Legend
Step past the ticket desk and an entire century of triumph seems to unfold like a well-orchestrated counter-attack. Have you ever imagined holding a Champions League trophy? Interactive vitrines let visitors zoom in on delicate engravings, while an immersive LED corridor replays Shevchenko’s decisive penalties at life-size scale. We’re often asked how long to stay; allow at least 90 minutes—the first half for silverware, the second for the multimedia “Hall of Fame”, where Maldini’s boots rest beside modern analytics dashboards. Its panorama of club culture makes other team museums feel kinda modest.

Casa Milan Museum
Casa Milan Museum
From Founding Charter to Future Vision
Opened in 2014 alongside the new headquarters on Via Aldo Rossi, the gallery stitches together early-1900s membership cards with the latest Serie A jerseys, a narrative arc UEFA once praised as “a textbook of European football memory”. A suspended glass ribbon displays every major cup, whilst archival footage—digitised with help from the Cineteca di Milano—rolls in a loop, whispering stories of tactical revolutions. We’re particularly fond of the 1963 Wembley corner flag: brittle yet defiant, it mirrors the club’s resilience through economic booms and boardroom turbulence.
Feeling peckish? The in-house Bistrot Fourteen serves espresso strong enough to rival San Siro’s roar, and the adjacent AC Milan Store stocks limited-edition kits (we’ve definately overspent there once or twice).
Beyond the Turnstiles: Handy Tips
- Bags larger than 25 × 15 cm aren’t allowed—travel light.
- Audio guides come in six languages; we recommend grabbing one to catch the nuanced anecdotes about Rivera’s fabled “golden left foot”.
- Match-day? Swing by before lunch; crowds swell fast after 15:00.
Nearby Highlights & Bite-Size Breaks
- San Siro Stadium sits a quick 15-minute taxi ride west; pairing both venues in one afternoon turns Milan into a giant open-air chronicle of calcio.
- Stroll to the modern CityLife District for an architectural palate-cleanser—Isozaki Tower’s glass shards contrast neatly with Casa Milan’s angular façade.
- Hungry again? Iyo (Via Piero della Francesca) plates Michelin-starred sushi, while C’era Una Volta Una Piada around the corner flips Romagna-style flatbreads—its basil pesto variant is pure bliss.
- Shoppers can unwind at the CityLife Shopping District, where the AC Milan pop-up sells match-worn memorabilia.
Catching the metro back? The Portello stop on Line 5 is right across Piazza Gino Valle, so you’re outta the museum and onto the train in under five minutes. Its a breeze even on rainy evenings.