See & Do

Lithuanian Railway Museum

A modern, hands-on railway museum beside Vilnius station, with model train layouts, a train-driving simulator and a free outdoor park of historic locomotives — a hit with families.

Updated Jun 20262 min read·2 sections
A vertical view of the Neris River in Vilnius on a sunny day, with a paved bicycle path on the left, green trees, and modern buildings in the distance under a blue sky with white clouds.
The short version
  • Interactive, modern exhibits that work well for children
  • A popular train-driving simulator with a real control panel
  • Impressive model train layouts indoors
  • An open-air park of historic locomotives and rolling stock
  • Right by Vilnius station — an easy stop before or after a train

What to expect

The Lithuanian Railway Museum is a surprisingly engaging, family-friendly museum tucked beside Vilnius's main railway station. The indoor section is bright and hands-on, with detailed model train layouts and a train-driving simulator that lets kids and adults take the controls — usually the highlight of a visit. Exhibits trace the country's railway history through documents, artefacts and interactive displays.

Rumsiskes — Vilnius, Lithuania
Pudelek (Marcin Szala) · CC BY-SA 3.0

The fun continues outdoors in a large open-air exhibition area filled with historic locomotives, wagons and assorted railway machinery — including older steam-era equipment. It's a relaxed place to wander, and its location next to the station makes it an ideal way to fill an hour or two if you're waiting for a train. Note that many indoor labels are in Lithuanian, and the occasional interactive element may be out of order, but staff are friendly and the value is excellent.

Best for
families, train enthusiasts, and travellers with time before a train
Note
many exhibits are labelled in Lithuanian
  • Indoor highlights: model train layouts, train-driving simulator, railway history exhibits
  • Outdoors: open-air park of historic locomotives and rolling stock

Good to know

The outdoor locomotive park is typically open in the warmer months (roughly April to November), while the indoor museum runs year-round; the museum is generally closed on Mondays. Hours and ticket prices can change, so check the museum's current information before visiting rather than relying on a fixed schedule. As a rough guide, recent listings put standard adult admission around €7 with reduced rates for students, pupils and pensioners.

Because it sits at the station, the museum pairs naturally with arrival or departure plans — see our station tips — and slots easily into a museum-focused day in Vilnius.

Guide notes· Last reviewed

We keep big-picture advice stable (routes, neighborhoods, pacing). For time-sensitive details like opening hours or ticket rules, double-check official sources close to your travel dates.