REVIEW · BOLOGNA
Lamborghini and Ferruccio Lamborghini Museums Entry Tickets
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One car brand. Two very different museum worlds.
With this Lamborghini + Ferruccio Lamborghini combo, you get the slick supercar story and the founder’s full industrial life in one outing. I love how the Lamborghini Museum frames decades of engineering through real cars and modern highlights, and I love how the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum shows the founder behind the brand through tractors, office relics, and unusual prototypes. One drawback to plan for: you’re set for about 3 hours total, so if you’re the type to stop at every display for a long time, you may want to prioritize the models you care about most.
This is a good choice if you want something more specific than a generic car museum stop. You’re visiting in Emilia-Romagna, near Bologna, and the ticket is designed as a same-day 2-in-1. Also, it’s wheelchair accessible, and it uses a timed “valid 3 hours” window, so you’ll want to arrive ready.
You’ll see everything from hybrid-era Lamborghinis like the Sian and Countach LPI 800-4 to earlier, personality-filled machines tied to the Lamborghini family. On the Ferruccio side, the museum spreads across a huge 9000 square meters, mixing personal artifacts with vehicles that go way beyond what most people expect when they hear the word Lamborghini.
In This Review
- Key points you’ll actually care about
- Two museums, one timed window near Bologna
- Lamborghini Museum: how the brand’s timeline clicks into place
- Production line tours: what “inside access” really means
- Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum: the founder’s industrial world in 9000 square meters
- The specific cars and machines you should prioritize
- Price and value: is $37 fair for a two-museum day?
- Who this combo suits best
- Timing tips: making the most of your 3 hours
- Should you book this Lamborghini and Ferruccio museum combo?
- FAQ
- How long is the museum visit window?
- What’s included in the $37 combo?
- Where do I meet for the experience?
- Is the activity wheelchair accessible?
- Is food included?
- Can minors attend without an adult?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
Key points you’ll actually care about

- One combo, two museums: Lamborghini Museum plus Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum, same day.
- Hybrid and modern supercars: Expect cars such as Huracán Performante, Aventador SVJ, Sian, and Countach LPI 800-4.
- A founder-focused museum: Ferruccio’s world includes industrial production and personal documents.
- Surprising machines: Think tractor history, prototype aircraft, and the Fast 45 Diablo Class 1 offshore boat.
- You control your pace: Your entry works inside a 3-hour valid window tied to available starting times.
Two museums, one timed window near Bologna

This combo is built around one practical idea: you don’t need to choose between the brand’s supercar spotlight and the human story behind it. You book entry for both the Lamborghini Museum and the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum, and the ticket is valid on the same day. Your access window is 3 hours, based on starting times you can select.
The meeting point is at the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum address: Strada provinciale 4 Galliera Sud, 319, 40050 Casette di Funo (BO). The activity ends back at the meeting point, so you’re not hunting down a second pickup spot later. Just note that transfer isn’t included, so you’ll need your own way to get there from Bologna or wherever you’re staying.
If you like car museums that feel like a guided storyline (not just rows of vehicles), this setup can work nicely. You’ll move from Lamborghini’s evolution toward Ferruccio’s industrial universe, and the contrast helps you remember what you saw.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Bologna
Lamborghini Museum: how the brand’s timeline clicks into place

The Lamborghini Museum is where the famous models start doing their job. The displays are set up to show the brand’s history, iconic models, and the direction of the company’s innovation across roughly 60 years. Instead of treating cars like trophies, the museum frames them as steps in a technical and cultural story.
I like that you don’t only get the early “Lamborghini legend” stuff. You also get the more recent, exclusive names that feel current and sharp. The museum calls out cars including the Huracán Performante and Aventador SVJ, plus limited-run standouts like the Centenario, Sesto Elemento, and Veneno. If those names mean anything to you, you’ll likely enjoy seeing them in the same place rather than chasing them across different events or collections.
One of the most useful parts is the focus on “where Lamborghini is going next.” The museum includes first Lamborghinis with hybrid technology, specifically the Sian and Countach LPI 800-4. That matters because it gives you a modern reference point: you can connect the brand’s past design language to the way the technology mix is changing now.
A quick practical thought: if you come expecting a deep technical workshop vibe, you might be a little surprised by the pacing. Museums like this often balance explanation and spectacle. That’s not a bad thing, just know you’re here for visual storytelling, not a hands-on engineering lab.
Production line tours: what “inside access” really means

Along with the cars and timelines, the Lamborghini Museum includes tours of the production lines inside Automobili Lamborghini. Even without getting into detailed mechanics here, this element is a big deal for first-timers because it shifts the experience from viewing finished vehicles to seeing how the brand operates.
Here’s how to use this time well. When the production-line portion happens, watch for two things:
- Process over design: You’ll learn how the museum connects engineering choices to real manufacturing.
- Why certain models matter: If a display mentions innovation for a specific era, the production setting helps you feel the reason behind that leap.
In short, this is the part that turns Lamborghini from a poster-brand into an actual industry. It also helps you fill time productively if you’re visiting outside peak museum hours and want something more than just standing in front of cars.
Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum: the founder’s industrial world in 9000 square meters

Then you switch gears—hard. The Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum is not just a second building of the same experience. It’s built around the founder’s industrial work and the breadth of what Ferruccio Lamborghini did before Lamborghini became synonymous with supercars.
The museum covers 9000 square meters, and the scale matters because the displays aren’t all one “car room.” You’re walking through industrial production history, including Ferruccio’s first Carioca tractor, which connects to the company he founded in 1947. That single detail is a reality check for many visitors: Lamborghini didn’t start as a supercar fairy tale.
What I like most is the way the route connects vehicles and artifacts to the broader Italian economic story of the 50s–60s. The museum includes a reconstruction of Ferruccio’s first office at Lamborghini Trattori, complete with personal items, official documents, and photos from the time. That turns the museum from automotive nostalgia into something closer to history you can picture.
This part is especially valuable if you’re curious about how brands are made. You get to see how family, work culture, and manufacturing shaped the company. If you only care about modern Lamborghini models, you might feel the founder section takes time away from your favorite names—but if you like understanding the why, this museum rewards that interest.
The specific cars and machines you should prioritize

If your time is limited (and your ticket is built for 3 hours), don’t treat both museums as an everything-everywhere crawl. Pick a few “anchor displays” so you leave with memories that stick.
Here are standout items the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum is known for, based on what’s highlighted there:
- Honoris causa Lamborghini models, including the Miura SV
- A Fiat Barchetta Sport modified for the Mille Miglia of 1948
- The Countach presence in a more futuristic context (alongside other Lamborghini eras)
- The Jarama, Urraco, and Espada (including seagull-wing styling on the Espada)
- A strong pop-culture link: the museum notes that the Espada with seagull wings inspired the vehicle design in the movie Back to the Future
- A prototype helicopter history
- The offshore Fast 45 Diablo Class 1 (about 13.5 meters) with an engine noted as 11 times world champion Lamborghini engine
Those last two are your “wait, what?” moments. Most people walk into a Lamborghini museum thinking they’ll see cars only. Here, you’ll see how far Ferruccio’s ambitions reached into aviation prototypes and offshore boating engineering. Even if you’re not an engine nerd, those displays are great for getting conversations going afterward.
On the Lamborghini Museum side, your anchors can be the modern and hybrid highlights:
- Sian
- Countach LPI 800-4
- Huracán Performante
- Aventador SVJ
- and limited-run icons like Veneno, Sesto Elemento, and Centenario
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Bologna
Price and value: is $37 fair for a two-museum day?
At $37 per person for a 2-in-1 combo that covers both the Lamborghini Museum and the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum, the value is pretty solid—if you’re actually going to use both sides of the story.
The key is that you’re not paying for just one building or one theme. You’re getting:
- a brand-forward supercar museum experience, plus
- a founder-forward industrial history museum experience
That mix can be more valuable than you’d think because it answers two different visitor questions. “What makes Lamborghini Lamborghini?” is one question. “How did the founder and company evolve into this?” is another. This ticket tackles both, and both are included.
Where the value can drop is travel logistics. Food and beverage aren’t included, and transfer isn’t included, so you’ll likely spend extra depending on how you get there and whether you bring snacks. If you’re driving, factor in parking. If you’re taking public transport, factor in time to/from Bologna so you’re not eating into your 3-hour window.
But if you live in the world of car museums and want the best chance of seeing both eras and personalities, this price lands in a reasonable spot.
Who this combo suits best

This is a smart fit for:
- Lamborghini fans who want both the big-name cars and the brand origin context
- visitors who like museums that mix vehicles with documents, office reconstructions, and era framing
- people who want a focused 2-museum visit without turning the day into a full-day production
It may not be ideal if:
- you only care about a single modern model and could get distracted by founder-era displays
- you prefer a long, slow museum day with lots of unhurried time at every exhibit (your ticket is built around a tight 3-hour access window)
Also check the family rules. Unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed, and guests under 18 must be accompanied by an adult family member.
Timing tips: making the most of your 3 hours

Because your ticket is valid for 3 hours (with starting times you’ll choose based on availability), you’ll want to arrive ready to go. Plan your day so you aren’t rushing from Bologna at the last minute. Once you’re on-site, the museums are designed to flow, but you still control your pace.
My practical approach:
- Pick your top 3 to 5 cars before you arrive.
- Use the hybrid and limited-run displays in the Lamborghini Museum as your fast “modern anchors.”
- In the Ferruccio Museum, aim for office reconstruction, a handful of classic-era cars, and then the helicopter/boat items to finish strong.
This combo works best when you treat it like a curated sprint, not a wandering tour. If you’re the type who loves reading every label, you can still do it, but be ready to choose what matters most.
Should you book this Lamborghini and Ferruccio museum combo?

If you want one ticket that covers both the Lamborghini brand story and Ferruccio Lamborghini’s personal industrial world, this is an easy yes. The standout advantage is the balance: you get iconic modern supercars plus a founder-focused museum that includes tractors, office artifacts, and even a helicopter prototype and offshore boat.
Book it if:
- Lamborghini is a real interest for you, not just a passing photo stop
- you want a same-day, two-museum plan near Bologna
- you like museums that connect cars to the people and industry behind them
Consider skipping or switching to something else if:
- you only want cars from one short era (like strictly modern models) and hate the idea of spending time on industrial origins
- you don’t want to plan around the 3-hour access window and the fact that you’ll need to arrange your own transport and food
FAQ
How long is the museum visit window?
Your ticket is valid for 3 hours. Starting times depend on availability.
What’s included in the $37 combo?
You get entry tickets to both the Lamborghini Museum and the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum. The 2-in-1 combo is valid on the same day.
Where do I meet for the experience?
The meeting point is at the Ferruccio Lamborghini Museum: Strada provinciale 4 Galliera Sud, 319, 40050 Casette di Funo BO. The activity ends back at the meeting point.
Is the activity wheelchair accessible?
Yes, it’s wheelchair accessible.
Is food included?
No. Food and beverage are not included.
Can minors attend without an adult?
No. Unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed. Guests under 18 must be accompanied by an adult family member.
Can I cancel and get a refund?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






























