REVIEW · MIAMI
Miami: Museum of Sex Entry Ticket
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Sex, served with a wink. The Museum of Sex in Miami is a rare mix of serious ideas and playful provocation. I love the multi-media exhibits that connect sex to art, science, and design, and I especially like the way it funnels you into Super Funland, a tongue-in-cheek erotic carnival with games that actually feel fun. One drawback: everything is for adults only (18+), so if sexual content makes you uncomfortable, you may want to skip this.
This isn’t a quiet museum where you tiptoe and whisper. You’ll move through four floors of exhibits and programs, including major temporary shows like Modern Sex: 100 Years Of Design And Decency and Hajime Sorayama: Desire Machines, before you land at the museum’s permanent headline installation, Super Funland: Journey into the Erotic Carnival. If you like learning with a little chaos on the side, this works.
Logistics are simple. Exchange your voucher at the admissions counter, then go in during opening hours (last entry is earlier than closing). Plan your visit around those last-entry times so you’re not rushing at the end.
In This Review
- Key things worth knowing before you go
- Museum of Sex Miami: What the $29 ticket really includes
- Picking the right time: Thursday to Sunday last-entry planning
- Modern Sex and design-led learning across “decency”
- Hajime Sorayama: Desire Machines and the art-to-science vibe
- Super Funland: the erotic carnival with games you can actually play
- Super Funland Bar and store access: how to plan your spending
- Who should book this Museum of Sex ticket (and who should skip it)
- Is the Museum of Sex Miami ticket worth $29?
- Should you book the Museum of Sex Miami entry ticket?
- FAQ
- What’s included with the Museum of Sex Miami entry ticket?
- How long is the experience?
- Where do I exchange my voucher for a ticket?
- What are the opening hours and last entry times?
- Is the experience suitable for children?
- Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
- Can I cancel for a refund?
- Is there a reserve and pay later option?
- Is a small group option available?
Key things worth knowing before you go

- Four floors of adult-focused exhibits, mixing design, art, and education
- Two big show stops you can prioritize: Modern Sex and Hajime Sorayama
- Super Funland’s hands-on carnival with over 15 amusements and rides
- Fun examples to watch for: La Matadora (mechanical bull) and Jump for Joy (bouncy castle)
- Adult party energy, not a kids’ activity, with rides and games built on sexual humor
- Bar access included, plus museum store access, but purchases are not included
Museum of Sex Miami: What the $29 ticket really includes

For $29 per person, you’re buying a straightforward entry ticket to the Museum of Sex in Miami, plus access to the Super Funland Bar and the museum store area. What’s not included: any food, drinks, and store items you choose to buy.
That matters for value. If you’re the type who usually spends extra once you’re inside a museum (drinks, snacks, small souvenirs), this ticket still keeps the base cost reasonable because admission is doing the heavy lifting. But if you come hoping food and drinks are covered, you’ll need to budget separately.
Your visit is also flexible in a practical way: you can go any day it’s open, as long as you’re entering during the museum’s hours and before last entry. It’s listed as a 1-day experience, but the real constraint is the time window for entry.
One more “value” note from how the experience plays: the most talked-about part tends to be the interactive games and rides in Super Funland. If you’re only looking for a quick photo stop, the museum could feel like it’s more work than payoff. If you actually like playing games, it’s a better match.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Miami
Picking the right time: Thursday to Sunday last-entry planning

The museum’s hours vary by day, so your safest move is to arrive with enough time that you won’t feel chased.
- Thursday: 1 PM–10 PM, last entry 8:30 PM
- Friday: 1 PM–12 AM, last entry 10:30 PM
- Saturday: 1 PM–12 AM, last entry 10:30 PM
- Sunday: 1 PM–10 PM, last entry 8:30 PM
Why this matters: you’ll want time to see the exhibit floors in order, then shift into Super Funland for the rides and games. If you roll in too late, you’ll likely end up choosing between exhibitions and the carnival, and you’ll feel that.
My practical suggestion: treat this like an afternoon-to-evening stop. Start with exhibits while the museum energy is calmer, then save Super Funland for later when you’re in a more playful mood.
Modern Sex and design-led learning across “decency”

If you only remember one thing from your time in the museum, make it this: sexuality is presented not just as taboo, but as design, messaging, and culture. The exhibit you’ll likely want to target early is Modern Sex: 100 Years Of Design And Decency.
This show frames sex through the lens of how society packages it—through visuals, styling, and public attitudes. You’re not just reading about bodies. You’re looking at how people have tried to communicate desire, rules, and boundaries over time, and how those rules get bent, ignored, or repackaged.
What I like about this approach is that it gives you something to talk about while you walk. If you’re traveling with a friend, it’s easier to share a reaction when you’re seeing how the ideas were built, not just displayed.
Potential drawback for some people: if you’re seeking pure shock value, this section may feel more thoughtful than you expect. But if you enjoy learning with your humor turned up a notch, it’s a strong first act.
Hajime Sorayama: Desire Machines and the art-to-science vibe
After Modern Sex, you can move on to Hajime Sorayama: Desire Machines. This stop leans more into the art side while still keeping a science-adjacent feel—an angle that fits well with the museum’s broader goal of connecting sexuality to different ways of seeing.
What makes this useful for your visit is pacing. One exhibit gives you historical framing through design and social tone. The next nudges you toward questions about bodies, fantasy, and how “machine” ideas can show up in desire.
If you’re the kind of traveler who likes museums where the visuals do the storytelling, Sorayama is likely to land well. Just be ready for works that are clearly meant to provoke reactions, not only admiration.
Super Funland: the erotic carnival with games you can actually play
Now for the part many people come for. Super Funland: Journey into the Erotic Carnival is the museum’s permanent blockbuster installation, and it’s where the experience shifts from museum mode to carnival mode.
The big idea here is playful irreverence. You’ll find over 15 amusements and games that use sexual thrills and humor as part of the entertainment. It’s not presented as a lecture. It’s built like a weird night out where the jokes are part of the point.
A few specific attractions you can look out for include:
- La Matadora, the mechanical bull
- Jump for Joy, a bouncy castle of breasts
- RuPaul Speaks, where RuPaul will read you your sexual fortune
Why this section is such good value: it turns time into participation. You’re not just moving your eyes across displays—you’re making choices, playing, and reacting. It’s also easier to remember than purely educational exhibits because your brain tags it as an event.
The only real consideration: some of the humor is blunt. If you’re sensitive to explicit themes, the carnival portion may feel too direct. On the flip side, if you want your museum visit to feel like a night worth telling people about, Super Funland is the heart of that.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Miami
Super Funland Bar and store access: how to plan your spending
Your ticket includes access to the Super Funland Bar. That’s a simple perk, but it changes how you can shape the day. If you’d like to keep your energy going while you play games, having a bar on-site means you don’t have to leave to grab a drink elsewhere.
Just remember: drinks are not included. This is one of those “good to have” inclusions—so budget like it’s a normal bar stop.
The museum store is also accessible with your ticket, but store items are not included. If you’re hoping for a take-home souvenir, don’t assume it’s part of your basic admission. Some people wish there were a small extra included, but as sold here, your entry gets you the museum and bar access, not freebies.
My practical tip: if you want something from the store, set a small limit before you browse. You’ll avoid the “I might as well” spending that happens when you’re mid-carnival hype.
Who should book this Museum of Sex ticket (and who should skip it)

This is designed for adults. All visitors must be over 18 to enter, and it’s explicitly not suitable for children under 18. That alone makes it a hard pass for families with teens who are looking for something age-appropriate.
So who does it fit?
- Adults who like museums that mix art with conversation
- People who enjoy interactive exhibits and don’t mind sexual humor
- Visitors who want a destination that feels more playful than standard galleries
- Anyone who likes a clear “theme shift” from exhibits to a full carnival installation
Who might not love it:
- Anyone who dislikes explicit sexual themes or jokes based on sex
- People who want a calm, quiet museum walk
- Visitors who are low on time and want only a quick highlight—because Super Funland is the main event, but the exhibit floors help the whole story click
On logistics: it’s wheelchair accessible, and the listing notes small group availability. That’s a good sign for comfort and navigation inside.
Is the Museum of Sex Miami ticket worth $29?
At $29, this is priced like a classic museum admission with a built-in bonus: Super Funland is a major interactive centerpiece with rides and games. If you’re the type who enjoys hands-on attractions, this price makes sense because you’re getting entertainment plus exhibit content, not just one or the other.
If you’re more of a “read-only exhibits” visitor, the price could feel higher than a traditional museum—because you’ll only fully benefit if you engage with Super Funland. The ticket also doesn’t cover food or drinks, so your total day cost can rise if you plan to hang out at the bar.
Still, the biggest value argument is simple: you get a full museum experience across four floors plus the carnival-style permanent installation in one admission ticket. That’s the kind of package that tends to work best when you plan to stay long enough to actually do both.
Should you book the Museum of Sex Miami entry ticket?
Book it if you want an adult-only museum day that turns learning into an event. Prioritize it if you’re curious about how sexuality shows up through design, art, and culture, and if the idea of playful carnival games appeals to you. The Super Funland section—especially attractions like La Matadora, Jump for Joy, and RuPaul Speaks—is the main reason this visit feels different from a typical museum.
Skip it if you’re uncomfortable with explicit themes or if you’re looking for something family-friendly and gentle. Also consider your timing: because last entry is set each day, you’ll want to arrive with breathing room so you can see both the exhibit floors and the carnival without feeling rushed.
If you’re deciding right now, here’s the easiest test: are you okay with sex-themed content, and do you want to play as part of the museum experience? If yes, $29 is a fair bet for a memorable, adult-only stop in Miami.
FAQ
What’s included with the Museum of Sex Miami entry ticket?
Your ticket includes entry to the museum plus access to the Super Funland Bar and the museum store. Food, drinks, and store items are not included.
How long is the experience?
It’s listed as a 1-day experience. You can visit during the museum’s opening hours and enter before the last entry time.
Where do I exchange my voucher for a ticket?
Please exchange your voucher for a ticket at the admissions counter.
What are the opening hours and last entry times?
Thursday is 1 PM–10 PM with last entry at 8:30 PM. Friday and Saturday are 1 PM–12 AM with last entry at 10:30 PM. Sunday is 1 PM–10 PM with last entry at 8:30 PM.
Is the experience suitable for children?
No. All visitors must be over 18 years old to enter, and it’s not suitable for children under 18.
Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the experience is wheelchair accessible.
Can I cancel for a refund?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is there a reserve and pay later option?
Yes. The listing offers reserve now & pay later, so you can book your spot and pay nothing today.
Is a small group option available?
Yes. Small group availability is listed for this activity.



























