Cars and family history, all in one stop. This 2-in-1 Lamborghini Museums ticket lets you visit both the Lamborghini Museum and the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum in Bologna, with a focus on the cars and the people behind them. I especially like how the experience links big-name supercars with the brand’s origin story.
What I also liked is the way you’re guided through the founder’s world at the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum—tractors, prototypes, and even personal-office details that make the history feel human, not textbook. One thing to plan around: the entry is valid for a limited 3-hour window, so you’ll want to move with purpose rather than wander slowly.
In This Review
- Key highlights worth your time
- Lamborghini and Ferruccio Museums in Bologna: Two Tickets, One Smart Plan
- Lamborghini Museum: Supercars Plus the Production-Line Angle
- A practical tip for the museum
- Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum: Tractors, Office Details, and Seagull-Wing Weirdness
- The “office” section is the secret sauce
- How the 3-Hour Entry Window Changes Your Strategy
- Price and Value: Is $37 Fair for Both Museums?
- Meeting Point in Bologna: Know Where You’re Going
- Who Should Book This (and Who Might Skip)
- Before You Go: Small Moves That Make a Big Difference
- Should You Book the Lamborghini and Ferruccio Museums Tickets?
- FAQ
- How much do the Lamborghini and Ferruccio Lamborghini Museums entry tickets cost?
- How long is the ticket valid?
- Does the combo ticket include both museums?
- Where is the meeting point?
- Is food or beverage included?
- Is transfer included?
- Is this experience wheelchair accessible?
- Are unaccompanied minors allowed?
Key highlights worth your time

- Two museums in one day with a combo ticket (same-day access to both)
- Founder-focused storytelling at the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum, including early Lamborghini industrial work
- Iconic Lamborghini models and innovation across decades, from classic era cars to more recent tech
- Automobili Lamborghini Museum experience that includes tours of production lines (when operating)
- A broad range of vehicles beyond cars, including a prototype helicopter and a large offshore vessel powered by Lamborghini engines
- Well-paced for enthusiasts in about 3 hours, assuming you don’t get stuck reading every label for an hour
Lamborghini and Ferruccio Museums in Bologna: Two Tickets, One Smart Plan

If you’re the kind of person who can’t stop thinking about mid-engine shapes and dramatic silhouettes, Bologna is a very good place to spend a few hours. With this entry ticket combo, you’re not choosing between two separate visits—you’re stacking them. That means you get the Lamborghini legend from two angles: the Lamborghini Museum side (models, evolution, and innovation) and the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum side (the man, the family, and the early industrial work that set the tone).
The ticket is priced at $37 per person, and the value comes from the combo. Paying for one museum is reasonable. Paying for both is the real win, because you’re seeing the brand’s story from founder to future in one go. It’s also wheelchair accessible, so it’s built for a wider range of visitors than a lot of small museum setups.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Bologna
Lamborghini Museum: Supercars Plus the Production-Line Angle

The Lamborghini Museum is where you’ll likely feel the “wow” first. The vibe here is classic car-museum energy—clean displays, clear context, and lots of iconic shapes staring back at you—but it’s also tied to how the company evolved over time.
A few things to look for as you move through:
- Sixty years of innovation laid out as an evolution, not just a pile of trophies
- Modern and exclusive super sports cars, including examples like the Huracán Performante, Aventador SVJ, and limited “few-offs” models such as the Centenario, Sesto Elemento, and Veneno
- Hybrid-era arrivals, including the Sian and Countach LPI 800-4, which help you connect Lamborghini’s future-tech direction to its design language
Why I think this works for you: Lamborghini fans often know the cars by name, but the museum does a better job of showing why those models matter. You’re not just spotting famous vehicles—you’re seeing the thread between design drama and engineering progress.
There’s also a production component. The museum experience includes tours of production lines inside the Automobili Lamborghini Museum. The big caution is simple: production-line access can depend on how the site is running that day, and your time window is limited. So treat this as a bonus if it’s operating smoothly, not as the only thing you’re banking on.
A practical tip for the museum
Don’t try to read every label. Pick your favorites, then use the information signs to understand the timeline. You’ll get more satisfaction in less time.
Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum: Tractors, Office Details, and Seagull-Wing Weirdness

If the Lamborghini Museum gives you the brand’s car highlights, the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum is where the story gets personal. This museum covers an enormous space—9,000 square meters—and it focuses on Ferruccio Lamborghini’s industrial path and the vehicles tied to different eras.
Here’s what you’ll likely notice quickly:
- The collection includes Ferruccio’s early work, starting with the first Carioca tractor from 1947, the launch point of his first company. This is not what most people expect from a Lamborghini-branded museum, and it’s a big part of the appeal.
- You’ll see key models from the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, along with an exciting route that highlights both his personal collection and major Lamborghini productions.
- Several standout exhibits are described as legendary or famous for their design ideas and era significance. Examples include a legendary Miura SV, a Fiat Barchetta Sport modified for the Mille Miglia in 1948, and futuristic Countach examples.
One of the more memorable “wait, what?” moments is the range of unusual concepts linked to real design influence. The museum includes the Urraco and the Espada with seagull wings opening—an element that inspired the car used in Back to the Future. Even if you’re not thinking about movie cars, this is a smart way to show how car design becomes pop culture.
Then the museum takes the idea of “Lamborghini” beyond cars. You can also encounter:
- the history of a prototype helicopter
- the offshore Fast 45 Diablo Class 1 (about 13.5 meters) powered by Lamborghini engines, described alongside a championship pedigree
Why this matters to you: many car museums stay stuck in glossy pasts. Ferruccio’s museum connects the Lamborghini name to manufacturing ambition, experimentation, and even machinery that doesn’t look like the usual supercar. If you want more than photo ops, this is the museum that delivers the deeper context.
The “office” section is the secret sauce
One of the most human details mentioned is a reconstruction of Ferruccio’s first office at Lamborghini Trattori, including personal items, official documents, and photos from the time. That kind of exhibit turns a founder biography into something you can actually picture—Italy’s economic boom era, the family behind the brand, and the thousands of people involved in the companies.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Bologna
How the 3-Hour Entry Window Changes Your Strategy

Your ticket is valid for 3 hours, and starting times depend on availability. That means you should think like a visitor, not like a scholar. If you try to do everything at a museum pace, you’ll feel rushed.
Here’s a simple way to plan your flow:
- Spend the first part of your window on the Lamborghini Museum if you’re mostly here for the big supercar names.
- Shift to the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum second, because it has the deeper narrative stops and “surprise” items (tractors, office reconstruction, helicopter/prototype history).
Also note: this is a combo where you’re visiting both museums, but your time is still one continuous window. So don’t assume you can take a long lunch break or browse unrelated areas. Focus on the story arc.
And yes—there’s a reason this matters. When time is tight, you either choose highlights wisely or you end up staring at the same section for 45 minutes trying to absorb everything. A little prioritizing makes this visit feel bigger than it is.
Price and Value: Is $37 Fair for Both Museums?

At $37 per person, this ticket is priced like a typical museum entry—but the value changes because it’s a 2-in-1 combo for the Lamborghini Museum and the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum, valid for the same day.
Here’s how I’d judge the value for you:
- If you only wanted one museum, $37 might feel “okay.”
- If you’re car-obsessed (or you just want to make the most of a single Bologna outing), the combo is where you feel the payoff.
- The Ferruccio side adds something many car enthusiasts love: founder context, industrial roots, and examples that go beyond the usual supercar lineup.
One possible drawback is that the included experiences still have limits. Food and beverage aren’t included, and you won’t have a private driver or transfer. So budget your day with that in mind. Also, production-line tours can be a great add-on, but you’re not in control of how operational that will be at the exact moment you arrive.
Still, for most visitors, the combination of two museums plus the timeline coverage makes this a strong deal.
Meeting Point in Bologna: Know Where You’re Going
This activity starts at the second meeting point: Museo Ferruccio Lamborghini, Strada provinciale 4 Galliera Sud, 319, 40050 Casette di Funo BO. The activity ends back at the meeting point.
Practical advice: confirm how you’ll reach Casette di Funo (and build in buffer time). Rural outskirts can be straightforward, but traffic and transit timing can make you late if you wing it. If you’re booking a specific time slot based on availability, show up early enough to get your bearings and avoid stress.
Since no transfer is included, you’ll want to plan your own local transport.
Who Should Book This (and Who Might Skip)

This combo is a great fit for:
- Lamborghini fans who want both the car lineup and the founder story
- People who like more than supercars, especially the industrial roots and the “bigger than cars” exhibits
- Travelers with a short schedule who still want a meaningful museum stop (3 hours is realistic)
It may not be ideal if:
- You hate time limits and only enjoy slow, wandering visits
- You’re looking for a fully guided, instructor-heavy experience (your ticket is entry-focused, not described as a long narrative tour)
- You’re visiting with kids who need constant entertainment beyond car displays—note that unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed, and under 18s must be accompanied by an adult family member
Also, the museum content is very hands-on with vehicles and engineering ideas. If that’s your thing, you’ll be happy you picked this over a generic stop.
Before You Go: Small Moves That Make a Big Difference

A few tips that will help you enjoy this more, especially with a fixed 3-hour window:
- Pick your “must-see” list before you arrive: e.g., one classic highlight and one modern hybrid-era car.
- Start with your priorities—don’t save your favorites for the end because time can slip.
- Bring water or plan a snack nearby, since food and beverage aren’t included.
- Wear shoes you can stand in. Museums covering this much space mean you’ll be on your feet.
- If you’re using a wheelchair, you’re in good shape because the experience is listed as wheelchair accessible, but still arrive prepared for normal museum navigation.
Should You Book the Lamborghini and Ferruccio Museums Tickets?

I’d book it if you want a compact day in Emilia-Romagna that feels more substantial than a single-photo stop. The combo format is the key: you get Lamborghini’s evolution through famous models at one museum, then you get Ferruccio’s story—tractors, office details, odd prototypes, and even non-car Lamborghini-powered history—at the other.
Book it if you’re an enthusiast or if you just like understanding how an iconic brand really started. Skip it only if you’re unsure about car history and you need a lighter, more casual experience. For many visitors, $37 for both museums is one of those “easy yes” deals in the area.
FAQ
How much do the Lamborghini and Ferruccio Lamborghini Museums entry tickets cost?
The price is listed as $37 per person.
How long is the ticket valid?
The ticket is valid for 3 hours. Starting times depend on availability.
Does the combo ticket include both museums?
Yes. It includes entry tickets to both the Lamborghini Museum and the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum, valid on the same day.
Where is the meeting point?
The meeting point (second meeting point) is Museo Ferruccio Lamborghini, Strada provinciale 4 Galliera Sud, 319, 40050 Casette di Funo BO. The activity ends back at the meeting point.
Is food or beverage included?
No. Food and beverage are not included.
Is transfer included?
No. Transfer is not included.
Is this experience wheelchair accessible?
Yes, it’s listed as wheelchair accessible.
Are unaccompanied minors allowed?
Unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed. Guests under 18 must be accompanied by an adult family member.
If you want, tell me your travel dates and whether you’re more into classic models or modern supercars—I can suggest a smarter way to split your 3 hours between the two museums.






























