A horror stop in Hollywood that moves fast. You’re getting a fully audio-guided visit to the Hollywood Medieval Torture Museum plus a ghost hunting experience using an app. I like that it gives you a guided way through the instruments and execution history, and I also like that it frames torture practices across different parts of the world and eras. One possible drawback: if you’re expecting a long, slow, maze-like attraction, the visit can feel short for the price.
This ticket runs about 45 minutes to 1.5 hours (or more), and it’s priced at $31.99 per person. It’s offered in English, and the audio tour is available in English and Spanish, so you can choose what you’ll actually follow. If you’re visiting with kids, note that it’s not recommended for children under 18 without an adult, while children under 10 are admitted free when paired with a dedicated adult.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Ticket Price and Timing in Hollywood
- Walking Into the Hollywood Medieval Torture Museum: How the Audio Guide Helps
- Ghost Hunting With the App: Turning the Dark Museum Into a Game
- How Long You Should Plan: 45 Minutes to 90 Minutes (and Beyond)
- Age and Sensitivity: Who Should Go, and Who Might Skip It
- Getting the Best Value From a $31.99 Ticket
- Should You Book This Hollywood Medieval Torture Museum Ticket With Ghost Hunting?
- FAQ
- How long does the Hollywood Medieval Torture Museum ticket take?
- What languages are available for the audio tour?
- What are the opening hours?
- Is the ticket delivered to my phone?
- Can kids attend?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Key things to know before you go

- Audio-guided pacing helps you understand what you’re looking at instead of just drifting room to room
- Ghost hunting via an app adds a game-like layer to a dark, history-focused museum
- Short-to-mid visit length usually fits well into a day, but don’t expect hours and hours
- Adult supervision matters for teens and under-18 visitors since the subject is disturbing
- Language options (English and Spanish) make the experience more workable for mixed groups
- It’s popular enough to book ahead (about 5 days on average) if your dates are tight
Ticket Price and Timing in Hollywood

For $31.99, you’re buying an all-in entry that includes the museum experience and the ghost hunting add-on. That price feels fair if you’re the type who enjoys guided storytelling and doesn’t mind creepy subject matter. It feels harder to justify if you wanted a long attraction or a bigger-than-life walkthrough, because this is essentially a ticketed tour that usually lands in the 45-minute to 1.5-hour range.
The museum is open Monday through Thursday, 11:00 AM to 9:00 PM, for the date range listed. There are also holiday hours on Thanksgiving (12 PM–8 PM), Christmas Eve (11 AM–8 PM), and Christmas Day (11 AM–8 PM). If you’re planning around a specific day, I’d check the exact time window first and aim to arrive with a little buffer so you don’t feel rushed.
You’ll receive a mobile ticket, and it’s confirmed at booking time. That’s handy in a city where everyone’s juggling transit, parking, and timing—no paper ticket hunt, just show up when it’s time.
One practical note: it’s near public transportation, which makes it easier to fold into a Hollywood day without making it your entire travel mission. Still, this is the kind of stop where you’ll enjoy it more if you can arrive calm, because the content can set a tense mood fast.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Los Angeles
Walking Into the Hollywood Medieval Torture Museum: How the Audio Guide Helps
The Hollywood Medieval Torture Museum is built around a collection of instruments of torture and execution, presented in a way that’s meant to be experienced with guidance. Your ticket includes a fully audio-guided tour, available in English and Spanish, which matters more than you might think. Without a guide, you might skim the displays as shock value. With audio, you get context that turns the experience from random horror props into a more coherent story.
The audio format also solves a real visitor problem: knowing where to look next. Instead of wandering or guessing, you’re nudged along through the experience, which makes it easier to actually absorb what you’re seeing. If you’re into dark history, that’s one of the best ways to get value from a museum like this.
Because the subject matter is disturbing, I’d think of this as a “watch and listen, then react” experience. You’re not just looking at objects; you’re hearing why they were used and how people understood them in their time. That’s exactly why fans of medieval and early-era history tend to get a lot out of it—there’s a sense of learning, even while it’s hard to look at.
A language tip if you’re traveling as a group: if you’re comfortable in English but your party prefers Spanish, choose the audio track that everyone will actually follow. Splitting attention makes the experience feel jumpy, and the museum experience works best when you stay locked into the narration.
Ghost Hunting With the App: Turning the Dark Museum Into a Game

The ghost hunting part is what gives this ticket its name and its extra personality. You use the ghost hunting app during your visit, and it turns a museum stop into something more interactive. Even if you’re not a full-on paranormal person, the app component adds a layer of anticipation and makes the visit feel less like a one-way walk-through.
This is where timing and mood matter. The museum content is already intense, and the app makes you pay attention in a different way—like you’re searching for something. That’s why it can feel more fun if you go with a friend rather than tackling it alone. The experience can be creepy on purpose, so companionship can make the scare feel like part of the entertainment instead of just stress.
If you’re bringing a phone for the app (you’ll need to use it for ghost hunting), I’d treat your device like part of your ticket. Keep it accessible, and you might want to have a charged battery so nothing interrupts the experience. Also, consider headphones or volume needs based on your comfort—because the whole place is audio-driven, you’ll want to be able to hear what’s happening.
The big “value” point here is simple: you’re not paying extra for just a label. You’re paying because the ghost hunting app adds a second mode—guided history plus an interactive, spooky element.
How Long You Should Plan: 45 Minutes to 90 Minutes (and Beyond)

The stated time window is 45 minutes to 1.5 hours, with the note that you may spend 45–90 minutes or more. In real life, that means you should schedule this like a focused activity, not like a half-day wandering event.
If you’re trying to fit it between meals or before evening plans, this is one of the easier attractions to schedule. It’s also a good choice if you don’t want to commit to something that eats your whole day. On the flip side, if you’re the type who expects a huge, multi-room attraction that stretches on for hours, you might feel like the experience is over too soon.
My advice: treat it as a guided, compact museum visit. Arrive ready to listen, then let the audio lead the pace. If you spend too much time trying to read every label or take every photo, you can accidentally shorten the ghost hunting portion of your experience. Aim for a steady pace and you’ll feel like you got your money’s worth more often.
Also, because it’s a museum experience with audio, you’ll likely enjoy it more when you don’t rush. Rushing turns dark history into just a quick scare, and the tour is better when you actually follow the story as you move.
Age and Sensitivity: Who Should Go, and Who Might Skip It

This isn’t a kid-friendly theme. The exhibition is not recommended for children under 18 without an adult, and the subject matter involves torture and execution. If you’re bringing teens, the safest approach is to go as an adult-child team and be prepared for the content to feel intense.
The rules do allow children under 10 for free, as long as they’re with a dedicated adult (one adult per child). That doesn’t automatically make it a good idea. If you do bring younger kids, you’ll need to judge comfort level quickly once you see what the exhibits present, because the theme is serious and unsettling.
For families, I’d frame it as an “adult-guided history outing” rather than a casual sightseeing stop. If your group is sensitive to gore or disturbing imagery, consider skipping or coming at a time when you can step out and cool down easily if needed—don’t trap yourself in a situation that stresses you out.
On the practical side, the tour notes that service animals are allowed, and the experience is described as suitable for most travelers. If you have mobility concerns, it’s still worth thinking about whether you’ll be comfortable moving through a museum at an indoor pace while focusing on audio.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Los Angeles
Getting the Best Value From a $31.99 Ticket

You’re paying for two things: the museum’s audio-guided story and the ghost hunting app experience. So your best value comes from doing both without multitasking. If you only half-follow the audio because you’re distracted, the learning value disappears. If you ignore the ghost hunting app component, you lose the extra reason this ticket costs more than a basic museum entry would.
Here’s how to make it click:
- Arrive on time so you’re not rushing the audio segments
- Pick the audio language you’ll actually understand
- Keep your phone ready for the ghost hunting app experience
- Don’t expect a long, sprawling production; expect a focused, guided hour
One more reality check: because it’s a ticketed, guided museum experience, there’s a chance you’ll feel it’s a smaller number of rooms than you imagined. If your personal style is “I need a full-day attraction,” you might be disappointed. If your style is “I want a guided, creepy experience that fits my schedule,” this is exactly that.
Should You Book This Hollywood Medieval Torture Museum Ticket With Ghost Hunting?

Book it if you want a guided horror-history experience in Los Angeles with an added interactive twist. This works best for history fans who like their learning paired with a creepy atmosphere, and for groups who don’t mind that the subject is disturbing. I especially think it’s a strong choice if you like structured audio experiences—because the tour is built to be followed, not just stared at.
Skip it if you know you hate gore themes, or if you’re expecting a long, movie-style attraction that drags on for hours. The format is compact and timing-friendly, so it’s not designed as a full-day event.
If you want my simple decision rule: if you can picture yourself enjoying a guided museum experience plus a ghost-hunting app game for about an hour, you’re likely to leave happy. If you’re hunting for a mega-attraction, plan something else for your day.
FAQ

How long does the Hollywood Medieval Torture Museum ticket take?
The experience typically lasts 45 minutes to 1 hour 30 minutes (approx.), with the possibility of spending 45–90 minutes or more depending on your pace.
What languages are available for the audio tour?
The experience includes a fully audio-guided tour available in English and Spanish, and the ticket is offered in English.
What are the opening hours?
The listed hours are Monday through Thursday, 11:00 AM to 9:00 PM.
Is the ticket delivered to my phone?
Yes. It’s a mobile ticket, and you receive confirmation at the time of booking.
Can kids attend?
Children under 10 are admitted free if accompanied by a dedicated adult (one adult to one child). The exhibition is not recommended for children under 18 without an adult.
What is the cancellation policy?
You can cancel for a full refund if you cancel at least 24 hours in advance. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.































