The Museum der Natur Hamburg Zoologie is part of the Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change, which sounds like the kind of place where you need a PhD to get through the door. You don’t. It’s free, it’s on Bundesstraße near the university, and it holds one of the largest zoological collections in Germany. Over 10 million specimens in total. You won’t see all of them, but what’s on display is enough for a solid hour with a curious child.
The permanent exhibition covers biodiversity across the animal kingdom with taxidermied animals, skeletons, mounted insects, shells, corals, and specimens from every corner of the world. The format rewards curiosity. There are drawers to pull open, objects to look at up close, and exhibits that invite questions rather than just supply answers. A child who is into animals, bugs, bones, or anything that looks like it belongs in a natural history film will find something to fixate on. The current exhibition theme is Präpariert: Stein, Tier, Zeit, exploring how specimens are preserved and what they tell us about the natural world.
What’s Actually There
The highlight for most children is the whale skeleton suspended from the ceiling of the main hall, which is the kind of thing that stops even phone-scrolling adults mid-scroll. Beyond that there are full taxidermy displays of mammals, birds, and reptiles from around the world, insect drawers with thousands of pinned specimens, shells and marine life, and a section on biodiversity and species extinction that is aimed at children as much as adults.
It’s not enormous. The layout is calm and manageable. Expect 45 minutes to an hour on a normal visit, longer if someone gets absorbed in the insect drawers, which is a real possibility. Special exhibitions rotate alongside the permanent collection so there’s sometimes something different to see on a return visit.
The Practical Bit
Free entry for everyone. But it is recommended to leave a donation. So not exactly free. Though we do encourage you to support them by leaving something. No booking required for individual family visits. Groups of seven or more need to book in advance by phone or email. Guided tours can be booked through Museumsdienst Hamburg.
Open Tuesday to Sunday 10:00-17:00. Closed Mondays and public holidays. No café on site. No dedicated parking. The nearest stops are Bus X35 to Zoologisches Museum (right outside), Bus 4 or 5 to Grindelhof, S2/S5 to Dammtor, or U2/U3 to Schlump. The whole museum is step-free and wheelchair accessible including the entrance, ground floor, and toilets.
Why Parents Love It:
- Free entry, no booking, no pressure
- Calm and manageable size, doesn’t eat the whole day
- Fully accessible throughout
- Easy public transport access, multiple stops nearby
Why Kids Love It:
- A whale skeleton suspended from the ceiling of the main hall
- Insect drawers with thousands of pinned specimens to examine
- Full taxidermy animals from around the world up close
- An exhibition format that invites touching, opening, and investigating