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Oklahoma City National Memorial Museum Tickets

Overview
The Memorial Museum is an interactive learning experience that takes you on a chronological self-guided tour through the story of April 19, 1995, and the days, weeks and years that followed the bombing of Oklahoma City’s Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. The story tracks the remarkable journey of loss, resilience, justice and hope.
City: Oklahoma City
Sun 20 Oct
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You can choose the date already on the booking website
Starting at $19.24
Sun 20 Oct
Starting at $19.24
Make a reservation
What's Included
TripAdvisor Experiences brokerage fee
Parking Fees
Route and map
Meeting point
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Oklahoma City
620 N Harvey Ave,
This ticket provides direct entry into the attraction
End point
This activity ends back at the meeting point.
Additional Info
  • Wheelchair accessible
  • Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
  • Service animals allowed
  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Transportation options are wheelchair accessible
  • All areas and surfaces are wheelchair accessible
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
  • Hand sanitiser available to travellers and staff
  • Regularly sanitised high-traffic areas
  • Gear/equipment sanitised between use
  • Guides required to regularly wash hands
  • Paid stay-at-home policy for staff with symptoms
  • Contactless payments for gratuities and add-ons
What To Expect
1
Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum
This is a self-guided tour. Parking is available around the site in lots and with meters on the street. Be sure to download the App for tours and more information. The Museum is open Monday through Saturday from 9AM to 6PM and on Sunday from noon to 6PM. The Museum is closed Easter, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. The Outdoor Symbolic Memorial is a place of quiet reflection and is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Designed by Butzer Design Partnership, this Memorial honors the victims, survivors, rescuers, and all who were changed forever on April 19, 1995. It encompasses the now-sacred soil where the Murrah Building once stood, as well as the surrounding area devastated during the attack.
Cancellation Policy
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
Traveler Photos
Reviews (211)
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kathleenhD6429OU
May 2022
we drove from tulsa to oklahoma city specifically to go to the oklahoma city national memorial museum. what a moving experience! it’s always difficult to design memorials that have arisen from unspeakable tragedies, but i think oklahoma city got it just right. it brought the events on april 19 to life - the raw emotions, the utterly senseless loss of 164 lives, and the incredible rallying of the people of oklahoma city to help in the midst of chaos. what a worthwhile experience!
Trish W
May 2022
I loved the way the museum is laid out. It walks you through the time, from the explosion of the bomb through the trials, execution of Timothy McVeigh and the life sentence of Terry Nichols. First you visit the 2nd floor and learn so much of what happened in those first minutes and hours. The stories of the families is front and center. There are numerous videos and pictures to break up the reading parts. Then you go down to the 1st floor and view the gallery of the 168 lives lost, including 19 children from the daycare center. You exit the building and go to the memorial of chairs which sits inside the remaining foundation of the building—a chair for each victim in rows of 9 for the 9 floors and spaced where in the building they were. Highly recommend visiting!
Michell Y
May 2022
My favorite part was the entire museum. What stood out most though were the chairs on the lawn that represented the lives lost. The detail of the significance of the rows representing the floors they worked/were on. The water project meeting that was held that morning when you go into that part and you hear the actual bomb explosion on the recording during that meeting, the lights flickered which caught me off guard but to hear exactly what they heard put this horrific event into a different perspective. I'm glad we made this a choice of places to visit when we came to OK!

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