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Museums

New York Transit Museum

πŸ“ Brooklyn, NY

β˜…4.7(6,320 Google reviews)πŸ’°$$πŸ‘Ά7 and up

New York Transit Museum occupies a real 1936 subway station in Brooklyn Heights, letting families walk through vintage subway and elevated cars dating to 1907 alongside interactive transit history exhibits spanning a full city block.

βœ“ Vintage subway carsβœ“ 1936 subway stationβœ“ Hands-on train accessβœ“ NYC transit historyβœ“ Signal towerβœ“ Weekday visit recommended
β€œ
β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…Featured review by Jemlnlx

Lovely visit to the New York Transit Museum (Downtown Brooklyn) on a Saturday morning in the winter. $10 Adults/$5 Children/Seniors. Although street parking can be tough, it is manageable , especially on weekends in the Cobble Hill and Manhattan Bridge areas. Entrance via the "subway" steps on Boerum Place and Schermerhorn Street. Once down there, you can buy tickets at the ticketbooth although they recommend ticket purchase in advance online. You then navigate through the museum which includes lots of interesting and fun facts about New York Subway System...its origin, design, construction, and updates and maintenance over the last 120+ years. There are lots of interesting exhibits such as the evolution of the subway payment methods and turnstiles. A lovely exhibit pays tribute to the Metrocard and how it reolutionized the payment process. There are different machines on display as well as all of the "Special Edition" Metrocards throughout the years. Downstairs, on the tracks, there various train cars dating back 100+ years. You can see how each update fit the purpose of their time...given technological limitations of course. It was interesting reading a bit about each one. Finally, there is the Gift Shop with all kinds of interesting gift options...maps, magnets, toys, shirts, posters and other collectibles. Overall, I had a great time at the New York Transit Museum. Despite being a native New Yorker who has used its public transportation system since the 90's...it was very interesting learning all about it. I gained a new appreciation not of the system itself...but the employees who work hard to keep the system up and running. It was busy but not overcrowded....likely more crowds when the temperature warms up. I took about two (2) hours and was able to read most of the exhibits...I would allow around three (3) hours if you want to read everything. If you are ONLY interested in seeing the displays without reading...you can likely get through it in an hour. All staff throughout the museum were very friendly and helpful.

πŸ† Family Action Verdict

Best for families with train-obsessed children aged 5 and up and school-age kids interested in NYC history. The hands-on access to century-old subway cars is a genuinely rare experience β€” kids can sit in the driver's cab and walk between cars. Weekday mornings offer the quietest conditions; weekend afternoons bring school groups and noisier crowds.

ℹ️ What to Know Before You Go

πŸ’‘Book tickets online in advance β€” on-site booth sales are available and online is faster
⏰Visit on a weekday morning for the quietest experience and best access to popular cars
🎟️Allow two to three hours if you plan to read exhibit text thoroughly; one hour covers the train collection
πŸš—Arrive via subway β€” parking in Brooklyn Heights on weekends is manageable and the transit connection is thematic

πŸ’¬ What Families Are Saying

View all reviews β†’
4.7
β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

6,320 Google reviews

Unique vintage train collection45%
Authentic underground station setting30%
Educational and engaging for all ages15%
Crowded on weekends10%
J

Jemlnlx

a month ago

β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

β€œLovely visit to the New York Transit Museum (Downtown Brooklyn) on a Saturday morning in the winter. $10 Adults/$5 Children/Seniors. Although street parking can be tough, it is manageable , especially on weekends in the Cobble Hill and Manhattan Bridge areas. Entrance via the "subway" steps on Boerum Place and Schermerhorn Street. Once down there, you can buy tickets at the ticketbooth although they recommend ticket purchase in advance online. You then navigate through the museum which includes lots of interesting and fun facts about New York Subway System...its origin, design, construction, and updates and maintenance over the last 120+ years. There are lots of interesting exhibits such as the evolution of the subway payment methods and turnstiles. A lovely exhibit pays tribute to the Metrocard and how it reolutionized the payment process. There are different machines on display as well as all of the "Special Edition" Metrocards throughout the years. Downstairs, on the tracks, there various train cars dating back 100+ years. You can see how each update fit the purpose of their time...given technological limitations of course. It was interesting reading a bit about each one. Finally, there is the Gift Shop with all kinds of interesting gift options...maps, magnets, toys, shirts, posters and other collectibles. Overall, I had a great time at the New York Transit Museum. Despite being a native New Yorker who has used its public transportation system since the 90's...it was very interesting learning all about it. I gained a new appreciation not of the system itself...but the employees who work hard to keep the system up and running. It was busy but not overcrowded....likely more crowds when the temperature warms up. I took about two (2) hours and was able to read most of the exhibits...I would allow around three (3) hours if you want to read everything. If you are ONLY interested in seeing the displays without reading...you can likely get through it in an hour. All staff throughout the museum were very friendly and helpful.”

M

Molly Myers

2 months ago

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β€œThe New York Transit Museum is a cleverly designed and beautifully curated museum. Set in an old subway station, you start your journey in a small cramped hallway dedicated to the history of how the subway was constructed. You can begin to imagine how cramped and strenuous the conditions the men who built the subway system were under. The museum does a great job to honor the workers and tell their stories. It is unbelievable what they accomplished. Next the museum opens up into a grand large room (that looks just like your subway stop) dedicated to the history, art, people, technology, and engineering of the New York Transportation Authority. It celebrates all of the wins of the last century; showcases art, advertisements, and psas that have graced past subway cars; displays vintage turnstiles, ticket machines, buses, and more… I especially loved the room dedicated to the metro card, may she rest in peace. Take a walk downstairs to the train platform to see the highlight of the museum, the collection of vintage train cars. You can explore train cars from the early 1900s all the way to the present day. Climb aboard, take a seat, giggle at the vintage advertisements. It is a true journey through time! I highly recommend spending 2+ hours here to have enough time to soak everything in. What a beautiful love letter to New York! Best public transportation in the country :)”

A

Antonio

6 months ago

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β€œAbsolutely fantastic! This museum is a nostalgic journey through NYC's transit history. Seeing the collection of vintage subway cars and buses on the lower level is the highlightβ€”you can walk right through them! It’s a beautifully preserved piece of New York’s backbone. Strongly recommend for anyone interested in urban history or cool engineering. Pro Tip: Go on a weekday morning to avoid the crowds and have more time to explore the old train interiors!”

D

Darren Harrison

4 weeks ago

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β€œA wonderful museum in an old subway station. Lots of very interesting old carriages as well as multiple timelines showing the evolution of public transport in NY over the past 200 years. Was only $10 USD for adult tickets. Spent about 75 minutes here. Would recommend early on a weekday if possible as Sunday had lots of kids with noisy parents πŸ˜‚β€

Reviews from Google

Overview

This museum operates inside a decommissioned 1936 IND subway station in Brooklyn Heights, accessed via working subway-style entrance steps. The lower platforms display vintage subway and elevated rail cars from 1907 onward β€” all accessible for boarding and exploration. Upper levels cover NYC's transit evolution from trolleys to the modern system via timeline exhibits and a working signal tower.

πŸ• Opening Hours

Monday10:00 – 16:00
Thursday10:00 – 16:00
Friday10:00 – 16:00
Saturday10:00 – 16:00
Sunday10:00 – 16:00

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