Walk into street art and pop art in one stop. Moco Museum London is a tight, three-floor museum visit built around original modern and contemporary works. I like how easy it is to move room to room, and I like that the displays stay readable with helpful audio-guide storytelling.
The big win for most people is the mix: Banksy, Warhol, Basquiat, Haring, Picasso, plus Robbie Williams’ Radical Honesty show. One possible drawback: it’s a 1.5-hour ticket, so you’ll want a plan if you’re the type who reads every plaque.
In This Review
- Key things I’d zero in on
- Entering Moco Museum London: what a 90-minute visit really means
- The upper floors: Moco Masters and Moco Contemporary Masters
- Banksy at Moco: iconic originals and the Pest Control detail
- Robbie Williams: Radical Honesty and why it works in a museum
- The lower ground floor: Moco Immersive Digital Artworks
- Your visit game plan: audio guide, bag storage, and sight-line tips
- Price and value: is the MOCO ticket worth $22.76?
- What to know before you go: rules, headphones, and the store reality
- Who this museum suits best
- Should you book Moco Museum London?
- FAQ
- How long does the Moco Museum London entry ticket last?
- What exhibitions can I access with the ticket?
- Is the audio guide included, and do I need headphones?
- Are pets or food and drinks allowed inside the museum?
- Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
- What is the meeting point for the ticket?
Key things I’d zero in on

- Three floors, one smooth route that keeps you moving without feeling rushed
- Moco Masters pairing pop, conceptual, and modern icons under one roof
- Banksy works authorized by Pest Control, with famous pieces you can see up close
- Robbie Williams’ Radical Honesty tying music fame to a new sculpture-focused chapter
- Digital art on the lower ground floor, using immersive-format displays rather than quiet galleries
- Free multi-language audio guide included, just remember to bring headphones
Entering Moco Museum London: what a 90-minute visit really means

Moco Museum London is set up for an efficient visit. You start at the ticket desk inside the museum, then you’re free to explore the exhibition floors in your own order. The entry ticket is timed as a 1.5-hour experience, which means the museum is designed to be enjoyed without turning into an all-day project.
If you like museums where you can still think, not just sprint, this timing works well. I’d treat the 1.5 hours as a warm-up for deeper interest: you’ll see the headline names, then you can slow down where your eyes keep returning. And because the art is spread across distinct sections, you won’t feel stuck waiting for other people.
Wheelchair access is available, which matters for planning your movement. The museum also has rules that keep the galleries comfortable: no pets, no oversize luggage, and no food or drinks. If you’re carrying a bigger bag or coat, plan on using whatever free bag/jacket option the museum offers on-site.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in London
The upper floors: Moco Masters and Moco Contemporary Masters

The core of the museum is split into sections that help you make sense of modern and contemporary art fast. On the upper levels, you’ll find the Moco Masters concept—world-renowned names gathered in one place. Think Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Yayoi Kusama, Keith Haring, Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, Tom Wesselman, and Pablo Picasso.
What’s useful for you here is not just the star list. It’s the way these artists represent different lanes of modern art. Pop art (Warhol), street-energy work (Haring), bold conceptual ideas (Hirst), and expressive styles (Basquiat, Kusama) all sit side by side. For a first visit, that mix can be a shortcut to learning what you personally react to.
You’ll also run into Moco Contemporary Masters, which shifts from the biggest canon to contemporary voices and street-art crossover. This is where the museum connects the dots between fine art and the street. Tracey Emin is included here, and you’ll see street-leaning names such as KAWS as part of the contemporary emphasis.
A practical consideration: this part of the museum is where you can easily spend too long. The artworks are original and close enough to study, but the plaques add detail. If you’re trying to fit everything into the 1.5 hours, I recommend doing a quick scan first, then rereading only what you truly care about.
Banksy at Moco: iconic originals and the Pest Control detail

Banksy is the magnet for many people, and Moco London leans into that hard—but with an important footnote. The museum displays Banksy works including Girl with Balloon, Love is in the Air, and Battle at Beanfield. These pieces are described as authorized by Pest Control, the only official entity that authorizes Banksy’s work.
That Pest Control detail is more than trivia. It’s the kind of small verification that can change how seriously you feel about seeing the work in person. If you’ve ever wondered how museums handle street-art legitimacy, this is one of the cleaner explanations you’ll get.
When you stand in front of the Banksy works, you can approach them like pop culture posters with layers. Notice how they’re bold from a distance, but also readable up close. Even if you only catch the main idea at first, the museum’s supporting information helps you understand why these images became cultural shorthand.
One drawback to flag: Banksy can pull you into a single-artist loop. If you only chase the headlines, you’ll miss the rest of the museum’s point—modern art’s links to design, advertising, activism, and mass media. Set a rule for yourself: see the Banksy section, then go back to another floor and find at least one artist you didn’t plan on.
Robbie Williams: Radical Honesty and why it works in a museum

Robbie Williams might not be your usual museum stop, but that’s exactly why his Moco exhibition is worth considering. The headline show is Radical Honesty, described as a brand-new, never-before-seen exhibition for 2025. It’s part of his third chapter at the museum and features his latest collection of sculpture works making their first UK appearance at Moco.
For you, the value isn’t just celebrity. It’s the chance to see how a creative persona shifts format. Music fans often think in songs and performance, but sculpture forces you to slow down and interpret with your eyes and space awareness. If you tend to judge art by what you already like, this is a good test—and the museum is set up so that the artworks are approachable.
The exhibition is also tied to a personal journey with mental health, and the museum frames it through the collection Pride and Self-Prejudice. That connection can give you a lens if you’re in a reflective mood. And if you’re not, you can still enjoy the visual presence of the sculptures without getting stuck in biography.
Practical note: if this exhibition is your top priority, don’t treat it as an afterthought. In a 1.5-hour window, you can lose time if you wander first. A smart approach is to decide: either start with Radical Honesty and then explore the Masters sections, or do the Banksy section first and save Robbie Williams for the end when you’ll already be warmed up.
The lower ground floor: Moco Immersive Digital Artworks

Downstairs is where the museum changes its rhythm. The lower ground floor is dedicated to Moco Immersive Digital Artworks, and this is where the format leans more toward multimedia and visual experience rather than traditional gallery viewing.
You’ll see featured artists listed as Pilar Zeta, Andrés Reisinger, and Six N. Five. There’s also work by British sculptor Anthony James, and the museum notes that his work recently appeared in the Netflix hit Glass Onion starring Daniel Craig.
What I like about this section for practical visitors is that it balances the art-heavy upstairs rooms. If your brain gets overloaded by names and styles, the digital artworks let you reset. You can also interact with the experience in a way that feels more immediate than reading about an artwork’s history.
A consideration: immersive digital displays can be more time-variable than paintings. If you’re someone who gets motion or lighting fatigue, take breaks and keep your pace steady. And since the experience is still within a 1.5-hour ticket, you’ll want to make sure this downstairs block doesn’t expand and eat your time on the masterpieces upstairs.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in London
Your visit game plan: audio guide, bag storage, and sight-line tips

The ticket includes a free audio guide in English, Dutch, Spanish, German, French, and Italian. You’ll need your own headphones, because headphones are not included. If you forget, you’ll spend time solving that problem on-site when you could be in front of the art.
This audio guide matters because it helps you connect what you’re seeing to why it matters culturally and socially. You can read quickly, then let the guide fill in the gaps. For me, that’s the sweet spot: you don’t need to be an art scholar, and you still get real meaning.
Also pay attention to how the museum is laid out. It’s described as three floors of exhibition space, with Moco Masters, Moco Contemporary, Digital, and the headline temporary exhibition. That structure is helpful because it gives you natural decision points. I suggest you walk through each section once, then come back for a second look only in the places where you felt something.
One more practical detail from real-world experience at this museum: the staff is welcoming, and there’s a place to leave your bag or jacket for free. That’s a big deal in London, where a coat and bag can easily turn a short museum into a heavy one.
If you want a smoother route, go in with one goal per floor. For example:
- Upper floors: pick one or two artists you want to understand better
- Banksy section: read the support info and look for small visual cues
- Digital floor: choose a few highlights and don’t linger forever
- Robbie Williams: give it dedicated time so it doesn’t get squeezed out
Price and value: is the MOCO ticket worth $22.76?
At $22.76 per person, this ticket can be a strong value if you’re the kind of visitor who likes art with recognizable names. You’re paying for access to the museum’s multiple exhibition areas, including original works across different styles and mediums. In other words, you’re not just buying a single exhibit—you’re buying a variety of modern art lenses in one ticket.
The value gets even better because the audio guide is included across multiple languages. For many people, that turns the visit from seeing art as decoration into understanding it as conversation—how these artists influenced culture and society.
Is it worth it if you only like one artist? It might feel steep if you’re not going to engage with more than the headline works. But if you’re curious—or you want to be surprised—Moco is built for that. The museum’s mix of pop art, street-adjacent art, formal modern icons, and a contemporary star exhibition gives you multiple ways to connect.
Also, the museum is wheelchair accessible, which is not nothing when you’re comparing London ticket options. And since the visit is designed for about 1.5 hours, you’re not committing to a full day to justify the price.
What to know before you go: rules, headphones, and the store reality

A few visitor rules are clearly stated. No pets, no oversize luggage, and no food or drinks. If you’re planning a day around Moco, you’ll want to eat before you arrive or after you leave. Also, think light on bags so you’re not spending time figuring out how your luggage fits museum rules.
Headphones are the biggest “bring-your-own” item. The audio guide is free, but headphones are not included. A simple wired pair or even a basic personal headset saves you stress and keeps you on your schedule.
Then there’s the store. The museum has a vibrant shop with memorabilia, prints, and limited editions. One downside to note: the souvenir shop can feel overpriced compared with what you might expect. If you’re the type who usually buys a postcard or small print, set a budget before you go in—so you don’t feel pressured by first impressions.
My practical advice: spend your money on one meaningful item only if it genuinely matches your taste. Otherwise, you might enjoy the art more by leaving the store empty-handed, then grabbing a cheaper print later in London’s broader market.
Who this museum suits best

Moco Museum London fits a specific kind of visitor. You’ll probably love it if you:
- Want a short, high-impact art visit
- Like modern icons but also want contemporary surprises
- Enjoy street art influence in a museum context
- Are curious about how a music star translates into visual art
You might be less happy if you need long, quiet viewing time with deep specialization. The 1.5-hour structure means the museum is designed for momentum. You can still slow down, but you’ll need to choose what matters most to you.
If you’re visiting with mixed-interest people—someone who loves Banksy, someone who likes Warhol, someone who just wants something different from churches and palaces—this museum is a good middle ground. The exhibits are built around recognizable names, but the sections are distinct enough that each person can find their own angle.
Should you book Moco Museum London?
If your goal is a meaningful modern and contemporary art hit in a manageable time window, I’d book Moco. The combination of original works, a free multi-language audio guide (with your own headphones), and a headline exhibition like Robbie Williams’ Radical Honesty makes the visit feel worth your time even at a busy London schedule.
I’d skip it only if you’re strictly uninterested in contemporary art or you already know you’ll ignore everything except one artist. Otherwise, go with a simple plan: pick one Banksy look, pick two artists upstairs, then give Radical Honesty and the digital floor a fair shot. Do that, and the museum’s variety is exactly what you’ll walk out feeling you got.
FAQ
How long does the Moco Museum London entry ticket last?
The experience is listed as 1.5 hours. You can use that time to explore the exhibition spaces at your own pace.
What exhibitions can I access with the ticket?
The ticket includes access to Moco Masters, Moco Contemporary, Digital & a headline temporary exhibition. The information also highlights Banksy works and Robbie Williams’ Radical Honesty.
Is the audio guide included, and do I need headphones?
A free audio guide in English, Dutch, Spanish, German, French, and Italian is included. Headphones are not included, so you’ll need to bring your own.
Are pets or food and drinks allowed inside the museum?
No. Pets are not allowed, and food and drinks are also not allowed.
Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the museum is described as wheelchair accessible.
What is the meeting point for the ticket?
The experience starts at the ticket desk inside Moco Museum, and it ends back at the same meeting point.































