Museo Arqueológico de Sevilla
Sevilla's archaeological museum houses Spain's most important collection of Roman artifacts, anchored by treasures from nearby Italica where emperors Trajan and Hadrian were born.
About Museo Arqueológico de Sevilla
Sevilla's archaeological museum houses Spain's most important collection of Roman artifacts, anchored by treasures from nearby Italica where emperors Trajan and Hadrian were born. You'll see intricate mosaics, marble sculptures, and the show-stopping Carambolo Treasure: 21 pieces of Tartessian gold jewelry that predate the Romans by centuries. The collection spans 3,000 years, from Iberian stone carvings through Islamic ceramics, all displayed in a beautiful 1929 pavilion.
The experience flows chronologically across two floors, starting with prehistoric flint tools and ending with Moorish pottery. The Roman galleries steal the show: life-sized marble statues, detailed floor mosaics from villa dining rooms, and bronze household objects that feel surprisingly modern. The building itself adds atmosphere with its Neo-Renaissance architecture and natural lighting that makes the marble sculptures glow. The basement treasure room feels like a bank vault, which fits the priceless gold work inside.
At €1.50 for EU citizens (€3 for others), it's Sevilla's best museum value, but most guidebooks barely mention it. Skip the prehistoric section unless you're genuinely interested in stone axes. The Islamic collection feels thin compared to the Alcázar's displays. Focus your 90 minutes on the Roman galleries and that basement treasure room, which too many visitors miss entirely because the signage is poor.
Skip the Queue
Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.
Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.







