Search for stays in Vasa Museum (Vasamuseet)Search in Vasa Museum (Vasamuseet)Apr 18 - Apr 19 • 2 guests
Find Hotels near Vasa Museum (Vasamuseet)
The Vasa Museum on Djurgården island houses the only almost fully intact 17th-century ship ever salvaged. The warship Vasa sank 1,300 metres into her maiden voyage on 10 August 1628, watched by a crowd of thousands in Stockholm harbour. She sat on the seabed for 333 years before a complex salvage operation raised her in 1961. Today, over 98% of the ship is original oak timber, and the 700+ carved sculptures decorating the hull are among the finest examples of baroque woodwork in existence.
The museum wraps around the ship on multiple levels, so you can study the hull from the waterline to the top deck. Eleven permanent exhibitions cover the building of the ship, why she sank (too narrow for her height, insufficient ballast), the 30 skeletons found on board, and the painstaking chemical preservation that keeps the timber stable. Vasa Museum draws roughly 1.5 million visitors per year, making it the most visited museum in Scandinavia.
Pro Tip: Arrive when the museum opens at 10:00 or after 15:00 to avoid the densest crowds. The free English-language guided tours (roughly every 30 minutes) add context that the exhibits alone do not cover - especially the story of the salvage itself.