Colonial Williamsburg Admission: Immersive American History Experience
3.9
348 Ratings
Williamsburg
Step into history at Colonial Williamsburg, the world's largest living history museum. Immerse yourself in the revolutionary stories of American history and experience the past come to life through live performances, expert insights, and period-specific crafts.
Duration: 3 hours
Cancellation: 1 day learn more
Highlights
  • Colonial Williamsburg - Costume-interpreter-guided tours of the Governor’s Palace, Capitol, and Courthouse
    Admission to trade sites, to see and speak with expert masters, journeymen and apprentices practicing 18th-century trades
    Admission to daily staged performances on the Charlton Stage and in the Hennage Auditorium
    Admission to our two world-class art museums
    Free parking at the Visitors Center
    Complimentary shuttle service
What's Included
  • All taxes, fees and handling charges included
What's Not Included
  • Hotel pickup and drop-off
  • Food and drinks
Additional Information

Each stride unfolds a tale! Engage in the transformative narratives of U.S. history. Covering more than 300 acres of symbolic locations, historic inns, and first-rate art galleries, history is vibrantly alive in the world’s biggest open-air history museum. Interact with our specialists who are unraveling history to more accurately shape our future, witness live shows, connect with skilled artisans executing era-specific trades, and discover our 18th-century town on the cusp of revolt. Every visit to Colonial Williamsburg contributes to our purpose — to enable the future to gain insights from the past.

  • Operates in all weather conditions, please dress appropriately
  • Evening programs include tours, plays, dances, concerts, and reenactments
  • Evening meals in colonial taverns include strolling musicians and 18th-century fare
Location
Colonial Williamsburg
101 Visitor Center Drive
Cancellation Policy

For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.

Customer Ratings
3.9
(348 Ratings)
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Travelingbender
Feb 21, 2024
A visit to the past - The price might seem high but you get everything included and can basically walk into whatever you want! The educational aspect is terrific so definitely take the tours. This really brought me back to the good old days, it felt like I was in colonial Williamsburg! The staff was terrific and honestly it was exactly how my great great grandfather used to describe how his grandfather use to live. It was a fun day! Make sure to give two days to see everything and experience it all!
Review provided by Tripadvisor
W332ioteresan
Feb 12, 2024
Unique experience!! - They did an excellent job of rebuilding and recreating the colonial town. The governor’s palace was my favorite. It was truly an amazing experience!!
Review provided by Tripadvisor
Dlmoore305
Jan 27, 2024
Nice visit! - We throughly enjoyed walking around Colonial Williamsburg. Very quiet time in January, not many buildings open but plenty of walkers taking advantage of the streets.
Review provided by Tripadvisor
H5152pvrobertd
Jan 6, 2024
Best living history museum - Colonial Williamsburg is a huge living history museum. You need several days to see it all. In addition to the historic buildings, there are tours and performances to enjoy. You can spend several hours in the Art Museums alone. Christmas is a good time to come because there are many special programs that show how the colonists celebrated Christmas. There are 89 original buildings. The newest was the re-discovered Bray School. This school for enslaved and free Black children was built in 1760 and the building was moved to its current location earlier this year. (BTW, in the 18th century, some enslaved people were taught to read and write so they could perform their jobs better and become more useful to their owners. It wasn't until the 19th century that it became illegal to teach an enslaved person how to read and write.) They plan to have it ready to open to the public next September. One of my favorite buildings is Charlton's Coffeehouse. When I first visited Williamsburg in 1985, a huge Victorian building sat next to the Capitol. After the last resident died, the family agreed to give the land to Colonial Williamsburg provided they moved the house to another location. They put the house on a truck and moved it to the other side of town, just outside the historic area. (It is now a B&B.) The Mars family (of candy fame) funded the reconstruction of Charlton's Coffeehouse and it opened in 2009. After touring the ground floor rooms, you descend into the original kitchen, where you are given a small cup of either dark drinking chocolate or dark roasted coffee. Every day you can visit the Play House Stage and watch the various entertainments. I took a tour that was led by a person of the past. We followed him as he went about his daily activities. You can watch nation builders such as Washington, Jefferson, Patrick Henry, and the Marquis de Lafayette talk about their lives and answer questions from the audience. I have learned so much from my visits here.
Review provided by Tripadvisor
Angierobrts
Dec 23, 2023
Outstanding!!! - Excellent! Get the 3-day pass! Park at the Visitor Center and use the free shuttle bus. See as many of the tradesmen, street/stage performances, and indoor building tours as possible. Eat at the King’s Arms Tavern (soups) and the Art Museum Cafe for a delicious, reasonably priced lunch. Skip the commercialized Merchants Square area unless you like modern-day shopping and and like to spend. Stay at the excellent Comfort Inn 10 minutes away. Outstanding full breakfast, indoor pool, clean and comfortable room and courteous staff.
Review provided by Tripadvisor
F8064xmtaram
Dec 18, 2023
a piece of history - Excellent overall. Toured the governor's palace, the court house and a few other stops. Didn't get a carriage ride, heard they fill up quickly. Will return!
Review provided by Tripadvisor
Jeffrey_s
Mar 19, 2024
Weekend trip to Williamsburg - We had fun and learned a lot of history! Be prepared to walk a lot. There are a lot of great places to eat in town. If you want to get the most of out of your visit to the art museum, plan on 3 hours minimum.
Review provided by Viator
Val_m
Mar 13, 2024
More info what ticket covers. - It was a lovely historical site. I did find that the info on your site was short on info. I also thought the ticket covered the carriage ride as that was the pic that was above the purchase info. Again more info would be nice on your ticket coverage info.
Review provided by Viator
Krickens2
Mar 26, 2024
Spring Break bummer - We visited on a Tuesday and after a lengthy wait in the ticket office we ended up purchasing our tickets online. We purchased the admission not realizing the majority of the buildings were not open. The food and beverage options were mainly closed and the few retailers that had snacks & beverages were picked over. The only place where everything was open was Merchants Square which isn’t even part of the historical area. The most frustrating was the inconsistent opening/closing times. When we entered the visitors center the sign said 9am-7pm. Then on the maps some of the locations had specific hours and others only had tours every 30 minimum. We didn’t want to waste time waiting 30 mins for a tour of the Governors Palace so the guide suggested we come back after 4pm for self guided tours. We arrived at 5:15, not realizing it closed at 5pm. In total we saw the Capitol and the Courthouse as well as a handful of retailers. We did not see any trades. A total bummer considering how busy the place was for spring break. Make sure to check all of the times and available sights before you go. $200 and we left disappointed.
Review provided by Tripadvisor
Adamay1925ea
Feb 12, 2024
Believe the Bad Reviews - Believe the bad reviews if for no other reason than to realize that guest experiences are either hit or miss. My visit was a near complete miss. There were a few positives; I'll share those at the end. My family and I spent three days in Colonial Williamsburg. We purchased our tickets in advance but needed to pick them up at the visitors' center on the first day. We arrived early before the doors opened and still had to wait in line for 45 minutes behind two other couples before we could get our pre-ordered tickets. We counted six employees standing around talking to each other. There was one person taking care of customers. We almost missed our 9:00 ticketed entry tour. We took the bus to the nearest stop per the suggestion of the visitor's center clerk but still had to run to meet our tour. They were leaving just as we arrived. Most of the buildings were not open. There is a paper map with a schedule printed of the buildings that are supposed to be open on certain days. We were there for three days, and the paper map was never accurate. There is supposed to be an app or a schedule on the website, but it didn't work when we were there. We wanted to visit the cooper, who was supposed to be open according to the schedule, but he never was. We checked every day we were there, both morning and afternoon. The buildings that are open hang a flag out front, but of course, you can't know if a building on one end of CW is open if you are on the opposite end without walking there. Some "Open Today" signage at intersections would be helpful. Some of the people who work there were not all that great. We were walking down Duke of Gloucester St. and saw the courthouse was open -- the first building that was actually open. We started up the stairs, and an older lady in costume came barreling out of the building with her arms flailing, yelling at us that we weren't allowed to come in. We were only on the first step. Everyone in our group leaned backwards out of instinct as she yelled at us. I guess she realized how harsh she appeared, so she turned sickeningly sweet and told us we were to wait in the area to the side of the building. We arrived from the opposite side of the building and hadn't seen it. As guests, how were we to know? We decided not to stay. We didn't want to be around someone so thoughtless and rude to guests. We took a tour of the Governor's Palace. There was a costumed person at the gate to the left side of the house. We asked if we were allowed to look around outside before the tour started; we were quite early. She said, yes, but we were ABSOLUTELY NOT allowed to join the tour late. We felt like we were being reprimanded by a nasty school marm. We hadn't mentioned joining late and had no intention of doing so. She prejudged the situation inaccurately. There were several other tours scheduled for the day, so even if we had missed the start of the next one, we could easily have waited for another one. There are nicer, more hospitable ways of speaking to guests. The tour was a disaster. We all sat in the first room that has a large map on the wall. The tour guide came in -- never mentioned the map -- and started what sounded like practice for her one-woman show at a third-rate comedy club. Throughout the tour, she seemed to have been trained by Disney Cruise lines instead of an intellectual place of learning and research. I was pretty sure before the tour ended she was going to turn to us, wink with a cheesy grin, and say, "Rich white men are the worst, amiright? Don't forget to tip your waitress." We went room to room, but she didn't really tell us anything that we couldn't have found on the back of a brochure. There was so much she could have said -- like how were the wallpaper colors and patterns determined? In the entrance hall, were the weapons made by artisans at CW (a cross promotional opportunity, too)? How about that harpsichord? A nice story about Robert Carter playing it while Thomas Jefferson played the violin would really bring the place to life (and it's another cross promotional opportunity). A little boy asked the tour guide a question, as she just looked at him like a deer in headlights. She never did give him an answer. One of the guests on the tour answered him. A couple of adults asked questions, too, and she didn't answer them either. Thank goodness for other guests who knew the answers. We thought she might be a one-off situation, but we had similar experiences at the carpenter shop and at the Robert Carter house. One of the things all three of those guides did was insult the audience right away. All three started off their talk with something to the effect of -- "You don't know anything. The people who work here are smarter than you are, but don't worry, I, the tour guide, know how to translate their intellectual speak so that you, stupidest of all stupid people, will understand." When the tour guide at the Robert Carter house said her version of that statement, one of the guests looked at her companion and said, "you've got to be kidding me." A group of three guests looked at each other with raised eyebrows and stifled laughter. The tour itself was pointless. The guide didn't really tell us anything. She didn't seem to have any knowledge of architecture, building trades, restoration, landscape history, or interior design history. There is more information available for free with a simple internet search than she shared on the tour. The Benjamin Moore paint website shares more information than she did. There was no information about how the house was constructed or what interesting things have been found during restoration. Nothing. About the family, she really seemed to hate them. It was another, "Rich white men are the worst, amiright?" situation. I mean, I know RC, III, wasn't perfect, but he did set in motion the document that freed more than 500 people. Isn't there SOMETHING in that act that makes him worthy of a little respect? She was just another person who came across as ill-informed and incredibly rude. We're pretty sure the carpenter was high. He started off his speech by telling us all how he was smarter than all of us and then just talked gibberish for several minutes. He said a lot of words, but none of them formed complete sentences of substance. He kept looking back at a guy in the workshop who was working on something, and they just giggled at each other over and over again. Thank goodness for guests again, because without the guests who were there, we never would have learned anything about carpentry. The costumed guy was too busy giggling. He was not the only person we suspected of being high. As we walked along DoG St., we saw a young woman in costume sitting out front of one of the buildings. She was bent over, and we thought she was ill -- maybe sunstroke or something. We were going to help her, until she looked up at us with a drunk grin and then flopped over. Then, we realized she was either hungover, high, or still drunk from the night before. One of guests in the area who approached her when we did made light of it and said, "CW is really going for authenticity. They've even included the town wench." I don't care what people do on their own time, but at a family museum, there should be a certain level of professionalism and maturity from the staff. We ate dinner at Christiana Campbell's Tavern. The food was excellent, and our server was great. The dinner show, though, left much to be desired. A minstrel is supposed to enhance the meal -- not forcefully take it over. Our food arrived while he was singing "Yankee Doodle," and you would have thought our server smelled of dung and kicked puppies for fun by the look he gave her. What was she supposed to do? Let our food get cold while the attention-hungry middle-aged man who chooses to where a costume during the day went on and on about nonsense? And he kept saying, "no, no" to guests who weren't paying attention to him. I mean, read the room, dude. There were three redeeming moments on our three-day visit. 1. The gunsmith really knew his stuff. He engaged the audience of mixed ages, told us a lot of really detailed and interesting information about how guns were made and who made them, and really made the experience one to remember. He was top notch! 2. The Master Gardeners who volunteer there also knew their stuff. We went to a talk with two gardeners. They brought pictures, so we could see what they were talking about, and they answered questions from the audience. They were the best part of our visit -- and they don't even get paid. 3. One of the men at the Greenhow gift shop was more than helpful. He anticipated our needs. We heard his interactions with other guests, and he was helpful to them also. He was the ONLY PERSON in three days to tell us where to find water and where to go to cool down on the hot summer days. (As an additional note, the cellar at the Governor's Palace is a cool 50 or so degrees, so you can go there to cool down. You access it from the outside. The door is open. We did ask the cranky school marm when we were at the GP if there was a cool spot, and she said no. Guess she didn't want us in the cellar.) It was all disappointing. We have a fourth grader, and this was supposed to be the right place for the right age, but instead it was unprofessional, poorly run, and full of more opinions than facts. One of my family members remarked at the end of the trip that it's almost like they are failing on purpose. After all, all of that real estate would make somebody a pretty penny if they just had to close their doors and sell to the highest bidder.
Review provided by Tripadvisor
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up to 9 guests
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May 2024
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