REVIEW · LONDON
Official tickets: Moco Modern & Contemporary Art Museum
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Modern art in London can feel either huge or confusing. Moco Museum is a smart reset: pop culture art plus contemporary names, all in one focused visit. Prebooking helps you get in without the stress, and you can take the galleries at your own pace.
I especially like the way the museum packages big names into clear themes, from Moco Masters to street-and-contemporary artists. The collection also feels very intentional for different tastes, since you’re not stuck in one lane (Warhol and Picasso energy sits next to Banksy and KAWS). The main downside is that if you’re coming mainly for one target artist, like Banksy, the display may not match your wish list.
Plan for about 1 hour 30 minutes, since it’s built for a satisfying loop rather than a multi-hour museum day. If you’re the kind of visitor who wants to linger on every room for a long time, you might feel a bit rushed in peak periods.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Moco Museum in London: a modern-art shortcut that still feels personal
- The Moco Masters rooms: Warhol to Picasso, with stories you can follow
- Moco Contemporary Masters: street energy meets contemporary voices
- Robbie Williams at Moco: pop culture turns personal
- Lower ground floor: immersive digital artworks (included)
- Audio guide and museum guide to keep: how to use them without getting stuck
- Price and value: $36.06 for a focused art hit
- Timing in London: when to book and how to make 90 minutes work
- Who this is for (and who might want a different plan)
- Should you book Moco Museum tickets?
- FAQ
- Is admission to Moco Museum guaranteed if I prebook?
- How long does the Moco Museum visit take?
- What language is the experience offered in?
- Do I get a mobile ticket?
- Is an audio guide included?
- Are lockers provided?
- What parts of the museum are included?
- Where is the museum located?
- What’s the cancellation policy?
- Is this experience suitable for most travelers?
Key things to know before you go

- Prebooking = smoother entry: admission is guaranteed when you reserve ahead.
- Go at your own pace: no set route pressure; you can slow down or speed up.
- Major artist line-up in one venue: Warhol, Basquiat, Kusama, Haring, Damien Hirst, Koons, Picasso, plus Banksy and KAWS.
- A dedicated digital stop: lower ground floor immersive digital artworks are part of the included experience.
- Free extras help your visit: personal lockers, an audio guide (6 languages), and a museum guide you keep.
- Good overall satisfaction: rated 4.7 with 93% recommending the experience.
Moco Museum in London: a modern-art shortcut that still feels personal

If you want modern and contemporary art without turning your day into a research project, Moco is a practical choice. The museum’s strength is its range: you can move from pop art and expression to street-inspired work and then into digital experiences, all in one trip.
The format also makes it easy to travel light and stay flexible. You get a mobile ticket, so there’s nothing bulky to manage. You also get personal lockers, which is a surprisingly useful add-on in London, where your bag can become the main character in your day. With lockers handled, you can focus on the art.
One more thing: the museum supports an English experience and includes an audio guide in six languages. Even if you don’t want to use it constantly, having it available helps you spend less time guessing and more time looking.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in London
The Moco Masters rooms: Warhol to Picasso, with stories you can follow

The main gallery arc starts with Moco Masters, a lineup that’s built for recognition. You’ll see work from big international names like Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Yayoi Kusama, Keith Haring, Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, Tom Wesselman, and Pablo Picasso.
What I like about this approach is that it gives you familiar anchors fast. If you’ve only seen these artists in books or online, the museum helps you connect name to style and mood without needing a long lesson first. You’re not walking through art history like a textbook; you’re walking through a set of ideas that shaped modern culture.
It’s also a good room choice if you’re traveling with mixed interests. Some people want celebrity-like recognition (Warhol, Picasso). Others want bold modern graphic styles (Basquiat, Haring). You’re likely to find something to react to within minutes.
Potential drawback: if you’re expecting huge amounts of one genre, you may find the display changes your expectations. It’s designed as a concentrated show, not an endless encyclopedia.
Moco Contemporary Masters: street energy meets contemporary voices

After the classics, you shift into Moco Contemporary Masters, where the museum leans into street and contemporary art connections. This is where you’ll encounter names like Tracey Emin, street artists KAWS and Banksy, plus British photographer Chris Levine, Julian Opie, JR, Takashi Murakami, and Hayden Kays.
This section matters because it shows how today’s art conversations borrow from yesterday’s pop imagery and public messaging. Street art sits next to fine-art personalities and photographers, so you start to notice themes like identity, fame, protest, and storytelling.
From the viewpoint of a practical visitor: this is where the museum can feel more emotionally direct. Warhol-style pop can be fun and cool, but Banksy/KAWS-type visuals tend to hit you with a sharper message. Emin’s presence also adds a raw, personal angle that breaks the pop pattern.
One word of advice: if Banksy is your one must-see, come with flexibility. The museum does feature Banksy, but the amount and prominence can still surprise you depending on the specific displays on your day. If you’re open to multiple contemporary styles, you’ll leave happier.
Robbie Williams at Moco: pop culture turns personal

One of the most talked-about parts of the museum experience is Robbie Williams’ artwork, tied to his collection Pride and Self-Prejudice. The works aim to reflect his personal journey with mental health and, according to the museum information provided, are meant to be new to the UK.
Why this is valuable for you as a visitor: it reframes what pop celebrity work can be. Instead of treating the artist as a name, you’re invited to look at the art as a way of working through real experiences. Even if you’re not a hardcore fan, the presence of this collection can make the museum feel more connected to modern life.
There’s also a practical bonus. A pop-culture anchor can help you move through rooms faster, because you already have curiosity built in. If you’re the type who gets tired of art that feels distant, this section can bring it back to something human.
Lower ground floor: immersive digital artworks (included)

On the lower ground floor, you’ll find Moco Immersive Digital Artworks included with your admission. This part is a key reason to book Moco rather than treat it like a quick photo stop.
Digital art changes the pace. It often encourages shorter, repeated glances rather than long staring. You may find yourself looking for details like motion, color shifts, and how the digital layers respond to your viewpoint. If you prefer hands-on or sensory experiences, this floor can be the most fun part.
It’s also helpful for mixed-age groups. A digital section can be easier for kids or non-art-folk adults to engage with, especially compared with art you feel you need to decode.
No matter your style, don’t let the digital stop shrink your overall visit. The museum’s best trick is that it gives you a complete journey: big-name art, then contemporary voices, then a technology-forward finish.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in London
Audio guide and museum guide to keep: how to use them without getting stuck

The museum gives you a complimentary audio guide in six languages, plus a complimentary museum guide to keep. That combination is ideal because it supports both deep focus and casual wandering.
Here’s how I’d use it: pick a few works you actually want to understand, then let the audio guide handle the rest. This avoids the common problem where you spend your whole visit reading labels but still feel unsure what you’re looking for.
If you want the best flow, time it like this:
- Spend the first portion of your visit looking freely for what grabs you.
- Use the audio guide for selected pieces you keep returning to.
- Use the museum guide to keep notes on artists or sections you want to revisit later.
And because lockers are included, you won’t need to juggle a jacket or backpack while you’re listening. It’s small, but it keeps your visit smooth.
Price and value: $36.06 for a focused art hit

At $36.06 per person for about 1 hour 30 minutes, the big question is value: what exactly are you paying for?
In your favor:
- The ticket includes entry to multiple themed galleries, not just a single exhibit.
- You also get the lower ground floor immersive digital artworks as part of admission.
- Extras are included: personal lockers and an audio guide, plus a museum guide you keep.
So you’re not just paying to walk into one room and leave. You’re paying for a curated-feeling route across modern, contemporary, and digital art formats in one ticket.
When it might feel expensive:
- If you’re only interested in one artist and you end up wanting more of that single name, the visit length can feel limiting.
- If you prefer slow museum days with long reading breaks, 1.5 hours may not match your style.
My advice: treat it as a strong London art stop that fits into a day plan, not as your entire museum itinerary.
Timing in London: when to book and how to make 90 minutes work

Your ticket includes mobile admission, and it’s typically booked around 11 days in advance on average. That matters because prebooking is the key to avoiding friction. If you try to wing it last minute, you can increase the odds of delays or sold-out time slots.
Duration is listed as about 1 hour 30 minutes, and that’s a realistic target for a satisfying loop. To make it feel longer (without actually extending time), use a simple strategy: choose one room to linger in more than the others. The museum’s structure makes that easy—you can slow down in the Contemporary Masters section, then keep moving through the digital.
It’s also described as near public transportation, so you can treat it like a reliable stop between neighborhoods rather than a distant detour.
Who this is for (and who might want a different plan)
This museum fits best if you want:
- Modern and contemporary art with big-name recognition (Warhol, Picasso, Kusama, Haring).
- Contemporary street and gallery crossover work (KAWS and Banksy).
- A visit that won’t require a whole afternoon.
- Included tools that help you connect ideas faster (audio guide and museum guide to keep).
It may be less ideal if:
- You need deep specialist coverage on one narrow artist or movement.
- You dislike pop-culture references in art and prefer purely historical academic work.
- You’re determined to spend 3+ hours in a single museum space.
For families, the vibe tends to work well because the range of art styles and the digital floor can keep different ages engaged.
Should you book Moco Museum tickets?
Yes, if you want a high-density modern and contemporary art experience that stays approachable. The combination of Moco Masters, Moco Contemporary Masters, and the included lower ground floor immersive digital artworks makes this a good value way to sample a lot in a short visit.
I’d especially book if:
- You care about seeing Banksy/KAWS-type work alongside major modern masters.
- You like pop art and want contemporary voices in the same building.
- You appreciate having an audio guide and lockers included.
Skip the hype and go in with a smart mindset: this is a concentrated, 90-minute art loop. If you do that, you’ll likely come away with real favorites rather than feeling like you raced through something important.
FAQ
Is admission to Moco Museum guaranteed if I prebook?
Prebooking tickets helps guarantee admission, so it’s a good way to avoid getting stuck without entry.
How long does the Moco Museum visit take?
The experience is about 1 hour 30 minutes (approximately).
What language is the experience offered in?
The experience is offered in English.
Do I get a mobile ticket?
Yes, the ticket is a mobile ticket.
Is an audio guide included?
Yes. A complimentary audio guide is included, available in 6 languages.
Are lockers provided?
Yes. Complimentary personal lockers are included.
What parts of the museum are included?
Your admission includes the museum galleries, including the lower ground floor digital artworks.
Where is the museum located?
The experience is in London, England, and it is near public transportation.
What’s the cancellation policy?
Free cancellation is available. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is this experience suitable for most travelers?
The experience is listed as Most travelers can participate.
































