Skip to main content
Bath · City Centre & Roman Baths

Victoria Art Gallery

A public art gallery established in 1900 to commemorate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, housed in a Grade II listed building on Pulteney Bridge.

Victoria Art Gallery, Bath · City Centre & Roman Baths
Category
Museum
Duration
1h 15m
Best Time
Any time
Entry
Rating
4.3 (1,070)
The place

About Victoria Art Gallery

A public art gallery established in 1900 to commemorate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, housed in a Grade II listed building on Pulteney Bridge. The permanent collection includes British and European art from the 15th century to the present day, with a particularly strong selection of works by artists connected to Bath. Entry is free, with occasional charges for special exhibitions.

Get Ticketsvia GetYourGuide · prices may vary
Book ahead

Skip the Queue

Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.

Search on Viator →Search on GetYourGuide →

Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.

The details

Practical bits

WalkingMinimal walking
The place

Getting there

Address
Bridge St, Bath BA2 4AT, UK
Neighborhood
City Centre & Roman Baths
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

The top floor gallery has large windows overlooking Pulteney Bridge and the weir, offering a unique elevated perspective of Bath's most photographed view.

Plan for about 1h 15m.

Victoria Art Gallery is in the City Centre & Roman Baths neighborhood of Bath. The address is Bridge St, Bath BA2 4AT, UK. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Closed on Monday. Check the official website for holiday closures and special hours.

Around the corner

Nearby in City Centre & Roman Baths

Explore all →
Roman Baths
Museum

Roman Baths

The Roman Baths are the best-preserved Roman bathing complex in northern Europe. The Romans built their first structure here around 70 AD after discovering the hot spring (the only naturally occurring hot spring in Britain, releasing 1.17 million litres of water per day at 46 degrees Celsius). The complex expanded over three centuries into a full thermae: a sacred spring, a bathing hall, and a series of rooms ranging from hot to cold. The green water in the Great Bath is fed by the same spring today, and the steam rising from the surface is the detail that photographs cannot fully prepare you for. The museum around the complex is one of the best Roman collections in Britain: the gilded bronze head of Minerva, the carved stone altar pediment, the curse tablets thrown into the spring by supplicants (a form of petition to the goddess Sulis Minerva that produced extraordinarily personal inscriptions, including requests for the goddess to punish specific people who had stolen specific items). Entry is GBP 26 for adults. The site is busy year-round and extremely busy in summer: book skip-the-line tickets in advance. The evening tours (running in high season from 7 PM, when the site is lit by torchlight) are significantly less crowded than daytime and worth the effort of planning around.

1.5-2 hoursExplore
Thermae Bath Spa
Experience

Thermae Bath Spa

Thermae Bath Spa gives you the only chance in Britain to bathe in natural hot springs open to the public, using the same geothermal waters that attracted the Romans 2,000 years ago. The rooftop pool is what you're really here for: floating in 35-degree mineral water while looking directly at Bath Abbey's towers and the Georgian crescents rolling across the hills. You'll also get the indoor Minerva Bath, multiple steam rooms with different aromatherapy treatments, and a dramatic waterfall shower that feels like standing under Niagara. The experience flows from changing rooms through various pools and steam chambers, but everyone gravitates to that rooftop terrace. The water temperature stays perfect year round, so you can comfortably float even when it's snowing outside. The building itself is surprisingly elegant glass and Bath stone that somehow doesn't clash with the 18th-century streets around it. At sunset, when the Abbey lights come on and steam rises from the water, you'll understand why people have been coming here for millennia. At £42 for two hours, it's expensive but worth it for the uniqueness factor alone. Most people waste time in the steam rooms when they should maximize rooftop pool time, especially at dusk. The spa caps numbers and sells out regularly, so book at least a week ahead in summer. Skip the overpriced cafe and eat elsewhere, but don't rush the experience itself.

2-4 hoursExplore
Pulteney Bridge
Landmark

Pulteney Bridge

Pulteney Bridge spans the River Avon with shops built directly into its Georgian arches, making it one of only four such bridges worldwide. Designed by Robert Adam in 1774, it connects the city center to Bathwick across three elegant stone arches. You'll find small independent shops selling everything from vintage prints to handmade jewelry tucked inside the bridge structure itself. The real draw is the view downstream: the horseshoe weir creates Bath's most photographed scene, especially when water levels are high. Walking across feels more like strolling down a narrow shopping street than crossing a bridge. The shops are genuinely small, some barely wider than a corridor, and you might not even realize you're above water until you peek through the gaps. The bridge gets busy during peak hours, but the flow keeps moving. From the bridge itself, you can't see the famous weir view that everyone photographs, so you'll need to walk down to river level afterward. Most guides oversell the shopping experience. The shops are charming but limited, and prices reflect the tourist location. The real value is the 10 minutes you'll spend down at Parade Gardens photographing the bridge and weir together. Skip the bridge shops if you're pressed for time, but don't miss the view from below. Early morning gives you the best light and fewer crowds blocking your shots.

15-20 minutesExplore
Bath Abbey Tower Tour
Tour

Bath Abbey Tower Tour

The Bath Abbey Tower Tour takes you up 212 steps through the actual working parts of this 500-year-old church, including the bell chamber where eight bells still ring for services. You'll climb narrow stone spiral staircases, duck through medieval doorways, and emerge onto the tower platform 162 feet above Bath's streets. The panoramic views stretch across the Georgian crescents, the River Avon, and the surrounding Somerset hills. Your guide explains how the fan vaulting was constructed and points out architectural details you'd never notice from ground level. The climb feels like exploring a vertical maze of ancient stone passages and chambers. You'll hear the clock mechanism ticking as you pass through, see massive wooden bell frames up close, and catch glimpses of the nave far below through interior windows. The final push to the rooftop platform is steep, but the 360-degree views make it worthwhile. The space at the top is small, so groups naturally spread around the perimeter to take photos without crowding. Most tower tours in Britain feel touristy and rushed, but this one maintains an authentic working church atmosphere. The £8 adult ticket is reasonable compared to similar climbs in other cities. Skip this if you're claustrophobic or have mobility issues, the medieval staircases are genuinely tight and uneven. The morning tours offer the best light for photography and smaller crowds.

50 minutesExplore
Sally Lunn's Historic Eating House & Museum
Museum

Sally Lunn's Historic Eating House & Museum

Sally Lunn's operates from Bath's oldest house, dating to 1482, where you'll find both a working tearoom upstairs and a small museum in the basement. The famous Sally Lunn bun is essentially a large, enriched bread roll that's bigger than your fist, served warm with sweet or savoury toppings like cheese, salmon, or jam. The basement museum reveals Roman foundations, medieval ovens, and the original Georgian kitchen range where these buns were first baked in the 1680s. The experience feels like eating in someone's centuries-old home because that's exactly what you're doing. Upstairs, the tearoom spreads across low-ceilinged rooms with uneven floors and tiny windows. Downstairs, the museum part takes about 15 minutes to explore: you'll peer at excavated Roman stones, see the massive bread ovens built into medieval walls, and read about Sally Lunn herself (though historians debate whether she actually existed). Honestly, it's touristy but genuinely atmospheric. The buns cost around £8-12 depending on toppings and they're filling enough to share, though most people don't realize this and order one each. The museum entry is free with any food purchase, otherwise it's £3. Skip the full afternoon tea (overpriced at £25) and just get a bun with butter or cheese. The queue moves faster than it looks because turnover is quick.

1 hourExplore
Parade Gardens
Park & Garden

Parade Gardens

Parade Gardens delivers Bath's postcard shot: Pulteney Bridge framed by riverside lawns and seasonal flower beds. You're paying £1.50 in summer (free October to March) for manicured gardens that sit directly below the famous bridge, with the River Avon flowing past weeping willows and well-maintained borders. The terraced layout gives you multiple angles of the bridge, plus decent spots to sit and watch river traffic. The gardens feel pleasantly compact rather than grand. You'll find yourself on gravel paths winding between rose beds and herbaceous borders, with plenty of benches facing the water. In summer, hired deckchairs (£3 for two hours) dot the main lawn area. The atmosphere stays relaxed even when busy: families picnic, couples pose for photos, and regulars read newspapers by the riverside. The sound of the weir creates constant background noise. Most guides oversell this as essential Bath viewing, but it's really about that one bridge perspective. The gardens themselves are pleasant but unremarkable: standard municipal planting that looks best May through September. Winter visits make more sense financially (free entry, same views), though you'll miss the flower displays. Skip the expensive deckchairs unless you're planning to stay over an hour.

30-60 minutesExplore
More on Bath

From the blog

View all →
Ready for Bath?

Let DAIZ plan your Bath days

Tell us how long you've got and what you're into. We'll build a day-by-day plan, with the bookable bits ready to lock in.

Plan my Bath tripFree · no signup to start
Plan your Bath trip