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Plan your visit

The Vasa museum offers daily tours in English and Swedish. We have audio guides in English, French, Polish ... Polish, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese and several other laguages.

Visit the Vasa Museum

What do you think of our website? Help us make it even better by taking this year's web survey. Thank you for your time and have a great summer! To the survey

Timeline for the Preservation of Vasa

From the raising 1961 ... to today - come along and see highlights of the work with preserving Vasa and how it has developed.

The Sculptures of Vasa

Painted in bright colours and with several hundred sculptures, Vasa was a colossal work of art that would make the rest of Europe admire and fear King Gustav II Adolf. An advertising campaign from seventeenth-century

Guided Tours

Join a guided tour around the ship and learn more about the history of the ship including the construction, the maiden voyage, the sinking, the salvage – and much more.

Processing of Personal Data

The Vasa Museum is a part of the Swedish National Maritime and Transport Museums. 

Research

Conservators and scientists from many countries are collaborating in order for Vasa to continue to fascinate and spread knowledge about her time. The vision is to keep her preserved for a thousand years years. What do you think of our website? Help us make it even better by taking this year's web survey. Thank you for your time and have a great summer! To the survey

Travel Trade

Practical information about the Vasa Museum for tour operators and the tourism industry. 

Skeletons from Vasa

Studies of the skeletal remains that were found during the excavation of Vasa give us more knowledge of the people who died on board and thereby a deeper understanding of Vasa and her time.

Loss of life force

impact on local Iwi (tribes). They were worried about the effects of the oil spill and debris on the environment, especially the health of the kaimoana (the Māori word for seafood).
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