UK best museums outside London | 23 top museums


London is undisputedly home to some of the world’s best museums. This includes iconic institutions such as the V&A and the Natural History Museum, as well as hidden gems like the Postal Museum. There are also many newer venues, for example, the Vagina Museum and the Migration Museum. But to only focus on the best museums of the capital city is to miss out on a huge range of fascinating museums from across the United Kingdom.

From leading art galleries and stunning period buildings to living history museums, historic ships and fascinating science museums, here is our list of the best museums outside of London that the UK has to offer, in no particular order.

1. The Burrell Collection, Glasgow

The Burrell Collection consists of nearly 9000 objects and it was a gift to the city of Glasgow in 1944 from Sir William Burrell & his wife Lady Constance. It spans 50 countries and 6000 years of history, from 4000 BC to the turn of the 20th century.

The collection features medieval art, furniture, Islamic art and artefacts from ancient Egypt and China, as well as Impressionist works by Degas and Cézanne, modern sculpture and more.

Burrell Collection UK best museums outside London

The museum is located in an award-winning modernist building in Pollock Country Park. In 2022, it reopened to the public following a six-year, £68 million refurbishment project, cementing its position as one of the UK’s best museums outside London. This work increased the size of the museum by 35%. A key goal was to preserve The Burrell Collection for future generations by enhancing the site’s accessibility and sustainability.

Companies that worked on the project include Event, Leach and BECK.

The Burrell Collection was named the Art Fund’s 2023 Museum of the Year.

2. The Beatles Story, Liverpool

Liverpool’s The Beatles Story is located on the city’s Royal Albert Dock. It tells the story of the much-loved band as well as exploring its connection with the city.

Visitors can enjoy recreations of locations and scenes that played a pivotal part in the band’s journey. For example, the Casbah Coffee Club, Mathew Street, The Cavern Club and Abbey Road Studios. The museum also holds a number of Beatles artefacts, like John Lennon‘s glasses and George Harrison‘s first guitar.

beatles story liverpool replica cavern

The Beatles Story attracts an international audience and also offers multimedia ‘Living History’ guides with every ticket purchased. These are available in twelve different languages: English, French, Spanish, German, Italian, Russian, Polish, Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese, Brazilian Portuguese and Korean.

As one of the UK’s best museums outside of London, it has won several awards in recent years. This includes receiving the ‘People’s Choice’ award in both 2017 and 2018 at the Liverpool City Region Tourism Awards, the award for ‘Best Pop Culture Visitor Attraction’ at the LUXlife 2022 Hospitality Awards, and ‘Individual Attraction of the Year’ at the UKInbound’s Annual Awards for Excellence 2022.

3. The Museum of Making, Derby

In May 2021, Derby Silk Mill reopened to the public as the Museum of Making following an £18 million redevelopment and has already cemented its place as one of the UK’s best museums outside of London. The museum is located within the Derwent Valley Mills UNESCO World Heritage Site and is operated by Derby Museums. 

The Museum of Making’s displays were created in partnership with local residents. These showcase Derby’s 300 years of innovation, design and manufacturing.

Handling-session-for-schools-Museum-of-Making

Tony Butler, executive director of Derby Museums, says: “The Museum of Making tells the story of our industrial and creative past, but it is also a hub for modern makers through the facilities and support on offer.”

The visitor experience, he adds, is “designed to encourage people to understand how things are made, think about materials and their uses, have access to skills, knowledge and equipment that might otherwise be unavailable.”

The Creative Core worked alongside the team at Derby Museums to design and co-produce the new museum with local communities. The new design uses the museum’s huge collection of over 30,000 objects to spark curiosity and creativity in visitors. This gives them a space to develop new skills through direct interaction with made objects.

The Museum of Making was a finalist for the Art Fund Museum of the Year 2022.

4. Jorvik Viking Centre, York

The Jorvik Viking Centre is located on the site of one of the most famous discoveries of modern archaeology. Between the years 1976 and 1981, archaeologists from York Archaeological Trust revealed the houses, workshops and backyards of the Viking-age city of Jorvik as it stood nearly 1,000 years ago.

The museum transports visitors to Viking-era Britain, as they explore the reconstructed streets and experience life in 10th-century York. Smell also plays an important part in this immersive experience, as Rachel Mackay explains:

“Smell conveys an atmosphere none of us has ever experienced: the York of over 1000 years ago. As the visitor travels through a recreation of Jorvik, they experience the smells of a Viking settlement; both foul and fragrant.”

Last of the Vikings Jorvik

The Jorvik Viking Centre also triggered a shift change in the way cultural attractions approached the visitor experience, according to Continuum Attractions’ Juliana Delaney, who was part of the team that worked on the development of the museum’s visitor experience:

“This was a museum that never presented itself as a museum. It always was somewhere where everybody felt comfortable coming and enjoyed themselves. As the very best teachers know, when you enjoy your lesson, you learn so much more…Soon people were saying, ‘We want a Jorvik here’.”

5. The Royal Pavilion, Brighton

Visitors to the seaside city of Brighton and Hove can’t miss the Royal Pavilion, an ostentatious building located close to the Palace Pier. The historic house from 1823 was initially a seaside pleasure palace for King George IV. Its style combines the grandeur of the Regency era with a design that takes inspiration from both India and China, resulting in something truly unique.

In June 1850, the Royal Pavilion became the property of the people of Brighton, after the city paid £53,000 for the former palace.

Royal Pavilion Brighton

Upon taking possession, however, the locals found that the Pavilion had been stripped of all of its furnishings, which remained the property of the Crown. Over the next 100 years, it was used as a venue for balls and celebrations, as an early iteration of Brighton Museum, as the offices of the local Mayor, and even as a hospital during WWI.

Original items from the royal collection have gradually been returned over the years. By the late 1960s, the building was being presented as a restored palace, but restoration work continues to this day.

6. Black Country Living Museum, Dudley

Covering 26 acres, the Black Country Living Museum is the largest open-air museum in the UK. The collection of rebuilt historic buildings is located in the centre of the Black Country, 10 miles west of Birmingham.

As they explore the reconstructed shops, pubs and houses, visitors interact with historic characters. These actors help to show what it was like to live and work in one of Britain’s first industrialised landscapes. The Black Country Living Museum was also used to film parts of the hit TV show Peaky Blinders.

Black country living museum street view UK best museums outside London

The museum is currently constructing 22 historic buildings and structures in the first phase of its Forging Ahead project. The centrepiece is a 1940s to 1960s town, which also includes a reconstructed pub called the Elephant & Castle. It has asked for donations of 1960s furnishings and objects to decorate the pub, which was built in 1905 in Wolverhampton and demolished in 2001.

Speaking about the Forging Ahead project, Andrew Lovett, the museum’s chief executive said:

“It was about taking us back into living memory; that was a big thing. Until we did Forging Ahead, you had to be in your eighties to have a living memory of the later things that we’d got on site. I’m sitting above a motorbike shop here, and outside my window is a great row of buildings set in the 1930s. That was the latest bit. You’d have to be in your eighties-plus to remember that era. We wanted to get closer to more people’s living memory.

“We have been developing buildings, shops, and stories that go through into the forties, the fifties, and the sixties, coming a little closer to contemporary modern life, to make the joining up of dots of history a bit easier.”

7. The Royal Albert Memorial Museum & Art Gallery, Exeter

The Royal Albert Memorial Museum & Art Gallery (RAMM) in Exeter, Devon, is home to a diverse collection. This covers archaeology, zoology and anthropology, as well as fine art, geology, and more. It dates back to 1868.

In December 2011, it reopened after a £24 million redevelopment project that took four years to complete. During this time, the museum made repairs to the building and completely redesigned the exhibits. This project also saw the addition of a new entrance, as well as the construction of a purpose-built off-site collections store. Following the refurbishment, the Art Fund named RAMM the United Kingdom’s Museum of the Year in 2012.

Royal Albert Memorial Museum Exeter RAMM

“RAMM’s world-class collections and ambitious programming ensure that the museum is a place of discovery which encourages everyone to be curious, and inspires us to shape a better future,” says a statement on the museum’s website.

RAMM also runs a wide range of community outreach programmes. These include artistic workshops, culture cafes, family activities, learning courses, discussions, object-handling sessions, performance events and more.

8. National Maritime Museum Cornwall, Falmouth

The National Maritime Museum Cornwall sits next to the harbour in Falmouth. RIBA held a competition for the building’s design, and this was won by architect M. J. Long who went on to design the museum, which opened in 2003. The design echoes the boat builders’ sheds which used to sit by the harbour.

The new museum is a result of a collaboration between the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich and the former Cornwall Maritime Museum in Falmouth. It manages the National Small Boat Collection, which came from the National Maritime Museum in London. The museum also holds its own collection of Cornish and other boats.

The National Maritime Museum Cornwall says it is “A place to enrich your understanding of the sea and Cornwall.

“Through our exhibitions programme, we aspire to bring new and diverse perspectives to maritime issues, and highlight their relevance to the present day. We also bring rare objects from around the world to Cornwall to tell local, national and international stories.”

It has won several awards, such as a Silver Award for Best UK Heritage Attraction at the British Travel Awards, Silver in the Cornwall Tourism Awards, and The Telegraph Family Friendly Museum Award.

9. St Fagans National Museum of History, Cardiff

Another living museum on our list of the UK’s best museums outside of London, this site is operated by Amgueddfa Cymru – Museum Wales and is dedicated to chronicling the historical lifestyle, culture, and architecture of the Welsh people.

st fagans museum wales UK best museums outside London

Since 1948, St Fagans has re-erected more than forty original buildings from a variety of different historical periods. This includes houses, a farm, a school, a chapel and a Workmen’s Institute. Visitors can also discover traditional crafts and activities in the site’s workshops, where craftsmen demonstrate their skills and sell their produce.

In 2018, St Fagans completed its £30 million Making History redevelopment, which involved opening new galleries, enhancing the visitor experience, and restoring and recreating buildings. Then, in 2019, the Art Fund named it Museum of the Year.

Speaking after the announcement in 2019, Stephen Deuchar, Art Fund Director, said St Fagans “lives, breathes and embodies the culture and identity of Wales…This magical place was made by the people of Wales for people everywhere. [It] stands as one of the most welcoming and engaging museums anywhere in the UK.”

10. M Shed, Bristol

Next up on our list of the best UK museums outside of London is M Shed, a museum all about Bristol. M Shed invites visitors to explore the city’s places, its people and their stories. It is housed in a 1950s transit shed on Bristol’s historic wharf.

M Shed’s exhibits look at the history of Bristol from prehistoric times to the modern-day. It is curated in partnership with communities from across the city, who have shared their stories and experiences. The museum also holds collections of objects, art and archives that help to bring these stories to life.

There are three main galleries: Bristol Places, Bristol People, and Bristol Life. Outside, there are also Working Exhibits. The neighbouring L Shed store is home to thousands of items from the industrial, maritime and social history collections.

colston statue m shed museum bristol

In summer 2021, people could visit M Shed to see the toppled statue of Bristol slave trader Edward Colston. This was on display during the We Are Bristol History Commission’s public engagement about the future of the statue and plinth. Nearly 14,000 people shared their views.

11. W5, Belfast

Next on our list of the UK’s best museums outside London is W5 (whowhatwherewhenwhy). This is an award-winning Science & Discovery Centre located in the Titanic Quarter in Belfast, Northern Ireland. It first opened in 2001, and two decades later it underwent a transformational £4.5 million redevelopment, starting in April 2019 with the doors reopening in October 2021.

Mather & Co worked in partnership with interactive design specialist Aivaf on the project. W5 is now home to eight new interactive zones, and Mather & Co and Aivaf developed two new gallery floors of exhibits, interactives, and engaging audio-visuals to stimulate science learning. Mather & Co also introduced theatrical theming and graphics, alongside the cutting-edge interactives.

Energise zone W5 Mather & Co

The Access Group provides its Access Gamma solution to the museum.

Celebrating the reopening, Catherine O’Mullan, Chair of W5 said: “This is a momentous moment for W5 and our staff. Our transformative re-development has delivered a truly world-class visitor attraction that Belfast can be proud of. Science has never had a more important role in our society.

“Inspiring the next generation of great minds is at the heart of our vision for W5. Our new, immersive experiences will help us to capture imaginations and ignite interest in science and discovery for many more years to come.”

12. The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge

The Fitzwilliam Museum is home to an internationally renowned collection of over 500,000 works of art, masterpiece paintings and historical artefacts.