Budapest: Travelling Galaxy Star Wars Interactive Exhibition

A Star Wars universe in two floors.

Travelling Galaxy is an interactive, story-led Star Wars exhibition in Budapest where movie scenes get turned into real rooms, complete with working droids and hands-on props. You’ll walk through a private-collection style display that focuses on details you can actually see, plus a full set of interactive touches that make it feel like part of the story.

What I like most is the big-picture scope and the small details at the same time. You get 200+ never-before-seen models and life-size figures, plus photo-friendly moments with helmets and lightsabers. The one drawback to plan around: at about an hour, it moves quickly, so if you want to linger on every single model, you may leave wishing for more time.

Key things to notice before you go

Budapest: Travelling Galaxy Star Wars Interactive Exhibition - Key things to notice before you go

  • Two-floor walkthrough that’s designed as one consistent Star Wars experience
  • 200+ models, miniatures, maquettes, and life-sized figures from across the universe
  • Working droids and set-like lighting meant to mimic what you’d recognize from film locations
  • Hands-on props like lightsabers, attachable stormtrooper helmets, and Jedi cloaks
  • A life-sized main villain figure that anchors the whole show
  • An hour-long guided format that keeps the pacing friendly for first-timers

Entering Travelling Galaxy in Budapest: tickets, staff, and the vibe

Budapest: Travelling Galaxy Star Wars Interactive Exhibition - Entering Travelling Galaxy in Budapest: tickets, staff, and the vibe
Your experience starts at the entrance to the Travelling Galaxy Interactive Live Exhibition. Show your ticket at the door and you’ll get pulled into the flow of a guided, story-driven visit that lasts about one hour. The staff are part of the fun here. The tone is excited and upbeat, and the guides help you get good photo angles and understand what you’re looking at, not just where to stand.

One practical note: plan to arrive a little early. The event has a fixed schedule (opening hours run Monday to Sunday, 10:00 AM to 7:00 PM), and the one-hour experience means you don’t want to miss the start. If you’re trying to fit it between other sights in central Budapest, it’s smart to treat this like a time-slot stop rather than a casual wander.

You’ll also want to know the rules before you get there. No baby strollers, no food or drinks, and no flash photography. That last one matters because the exhibition is visual and photo-friendly, just not with flash.

You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Budapest

Two-floor Star Wars settings: where the movie locations feel real

Budapest: Travelling Galaxy Star Wars Interactive Exhibition - Two-floor Star Wars settings: where the movie locations feel real
What makes Travelling Galaxy work isn’t only the props. It’s the way the exhibition builds space. You move through two floors that each feel like a themed Star Wars environment, with decorations and lighting meant to resemble recognizable on-screen locations. The rooms don’t feel random. The installation uses custom-made elements so the whole place follows a single, well-thought-out concept.

This matters because Star Wars displays can go two ways. They can be a pile of items, or they can tell a story. Here, the layout helps you connect things as you go. You’ll spend time in scene-like spaces where the details are there for a reason. That makes it easier to stay engaged, even if you’re a casual fan who doesn’t know every ship, character, or model by name.

Another plus is variety. The show doesn’t only stick to movies. You’ll see characters and elements that connect to video games, the latest movie series, and book universe material. That keeps it from feeling like a single-moment museum display.

The main villain moment and the scale of the collection

Budapest: Travelling Galaxy Star Wars Interactive Exhibition - The main villain moment and the scale of the collection
One of the headline features is a life-sized main villain figure. It’s the kind of moment that stops you cold, because it changes the whole “this is cool” feeling into “wait, this is huge.” It also gives you a visual anchor: you understand quickly that the exhibit is going for impact, not just background decoration.

After that, the collection keeps stacking. You’ll see over 200 never-before-seen models, miniatures, and life-sized figures, including authentic maquettes and other display pieces familiar from the Star Wars universe. This is where you start noticing the exhibition’s approach: it’s not trying to cover everything with a mile-wide sweep. Instead, it shows you enough models and figures that the characters and worlds feel complete.

For people who love the craft behind props and production design, the display hits the sweet spot. It’s made to look like the movie worlds, but it’s also practical as a walk-through. You can get close enough to appreciate shapes and detailing without it turning into a you-cannot-touch situation where you feel shut out.

Working droids, attachable helmets, and Jedi cloaks

Budapest: Travelling Galaxy Star Wars Interactive Exhibition - Working droids, attachable helmets, and Jedi cloaks
This is the part that turns a Star Wars exhibition into something you actually do. The show includes working droids and interactive pieces that let you step into the scene. You’re not stuck photographing cases from far away.

Here are the hands-on elements you should look forward to:

  • Lightsabers you can try
  • Jedi cloaks for a more real costume-style look
  • Attachable stormtrooper helmets for instant character transformation
  • Authentic helmet encounters with staff guidance on where and how to pose for photos

This stuff matters because it changes your role. Instead of only observing, you participate. That’s especially good for families and for fans who want more than a browse-and-leave museum experience.

And it’s not just for kids. If you’re an adult fan, the interactive props give you permission to have fun without feeling awkward. The staff are set up to help you, including timing your photo moments so you don’t spend the whole hour waiting your turn.

What the guided hour feels like (and how to not rush yourself)

The total visit time is about one hour, and that creates a specific rhythm. You’ll move through themed sections over the two floors, with a guide or instructor speaking Hungarian and English. The best way to handle the pacing is to decide early what you want most:

  • Do you want maximum photo time with the helmets and lightsabers?
  • Do you want to focus on the biggest figures and the most detailed models?
  • Do you like stories and want the guide’s context so it all clicks?

Because the exhibition is designed for a guided flow, you’ll get time in each area rather than feeling dragged through at high speed. The show is paced to keep you engaged, not to trap you in line after line. Still, you should be honest with yourself: if you’re the type who can stare at miniatures for 20 minutes at a time, you might feel the hour limits your top-favorite section.

If you’re trying to fit it into a day of sightseeing, I suggest giving it one clean hour plus a little buffer for arrival and photos. Build your day so you’re not sprinting from this to the next thing.

Foto moments: stormtrooper helmets and lightsaber play

Budapest: Travelling Galaxy Star Wars Interactive Exhibition - Foto moments: stormtrooper helmets and lightsaber play
There’s a reason people leave happy from this kind of exhibit: they leave with proof. Travelling Galaxy is built for photo opportunities with iconic characters and props. The stormtrooper helmets (attachable) and the lightsabers are the obvious standouts, but what makes your photos look better is staff help and set-like lighting.

You can expect the staff to be friendly and actively around the space, ready to assist with photos and hands-on play. That’s also why it works for mixed groups. If one person is more into models and another person wants hands-on lightsaber time, the exhibition layout and staff attention help both sides enjoy it.

One more rule to remember: no flash photography. Your photos still work, but plan to use the light in the rooms rather than relying on flash.

Price and value: why $15 makes sense for most fans

At about $15 per person, Travelling Galaxy is priced like an attraction, not like a long museum day. For the money, you’re buying three things at once:

  1. A guided, story-led hour (not just walking through alone)
  2. Two floors of set-like displays and a huge number of figures
  3. Real interactive moments with lightsabers, cloaks, and helmets

That combination is the value equation. If it were only a static display, the price would be harder to justify. But because you get hands-on time and a strong guided element, it’s closer to an experience than a collection.

Also, the reviews score well because people typically get what they came for: a proper Star Wars themed walkthrough with more than a handful of props. The show has scale, and it’s not just two or three rooms.

Who should go, and who might skip it

You’ll likely love this if you:

  • Are a Star Wars fan who likes seeing characters and props from across movies, games, and books
  • Want a guided experience with a playful, hands-on edge
  • Prefer an attraction you can complete in about an hour

It’s also a solid choice if you’re visiting Budapest and want something different from the usual churches-and-coffee routine. This is central, easy to schedule, and built for staying power without needing half a day.

You might not love it as much if:

  • You need lots of time to slow down and read everything for long periods
  • You hate photo rules (especially no flash)
  • You’re coming with a baby stroller, since strollers aren’t allowed

And if you’re going with a group, it’s one of those places where both kids and adults can have fun, even if their “favorite Star Wars thing” is totally different.

Should you book Travelling Galaxy in Budapest?

If you’re in Budapest with at least a little Star Wars love, I’d book this. For around one hour and about $15, you get a guided story format, a big display with 200+ models and life-size figures, and the interactive props that make it more than just looking.

Book it when you’ll have time for photos and when you’re not rushing to the next stop. Then treat it like a themed walkthrough you actively join, not a checklist of objects. You’ll walk out with a better sense of the Star Wars universe as a whole, plus a few really fun character moments you can actually recreate later.

FAQ

How long does the Travelling Galaxy exhibition take?

The experience lasts about one hour to explore.

How much are tickets?

Tickets are listed at $15 per person.

Where do I show my ticket?

Show your ticket at the entrance to the Travelling Galaxy Interactive Live Exhibition.

What languages are offered?

The instructor/guides are available in Hungarian and English.

Is the exhibition wheelchair accessible?

Yes, the exhibition is wheelchair accessible.

Are baby strollers allowed?

No, baby strollers are not allowed.

Can I take photos with flash?

No, flash photography is not allowed.

What are the opening hours in Budapest?

Opening hours are Monday through Sunday, from 10:00 AM to 7:00 PM.

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