On a recent business trip to Los Angeles, I stopped by the Natural History Museum between work commitments. I was completely bowled over: LA’s Natural History Museum is hands-down the most kid-friendly museum I’ve ever seen. Although it was amazing for adults, too, I couldn’t help but think of how much my own girls would love this kid-friendly museum. I can’t wait to stop by LA’s Natural History Museum with kids—and here’s why.
Yes, it includes family favorites like plenty of dinosaur bones (including a baby T. rex!!!) and dioramas displaying preserved animals. Beyond the slam-dunks, though, is a museum curated and crafted with every age in mind. Families will find hands-on activities to bring natural history to life, interactive displays, friendly museum staff and outdoor spaces that incorporate nature into the learning experience.
[soliloquy id=”596″]LA’s Natural History Museum with kids
My kids weren’t with me on this trip, but now I want to plan a trip to California just so we can visit LA’s Natural History Museum with my kids. You guys, I just can’t stop raving about this kid-friendly museum, and I can’t recommend it highly enough.
Here are the highlights for when you visit LA’s Natural History Museum with kids.
Dinosaurs: The star attractions
Dinos are the A-list celebrities of the Natural History Museum, and for good reason: It is absolutely awe-inspiring to stand beneath the fossilized skeletons of these behemoths.
You’ll see two right off the bat in the central foyer of LA’s Natural History Museum. Here, curators recreated a fight between a Tyrannosaurus rex and a Triceratops. (Who do you think would have won? Definitely not me—that T. rex is about to nom my head!)
Continue on to the Dinosaur Hall and you’ll see two rooms on two floors—after all, these dinosaurs are so big they need the room.
Level 10 travel tip: Look for the wall of fossilized bones—it has a touch screen display in front of it where kids can “filter” the pictures (e.g. by meat-eaters or species). You can play I Spy or a scavenger hunt: Let your kids challenge you to find a predator’s tooth or vertebrae!
Make sure to scope out the area where you can watch scientists working on actual fossils. When I visited, one was using a tiny drill to clean a 24.8 million year old bone from an Ichthyosaur. Watching these experts at work is even better than career day at your kids’ school!
Animals here and animals gone: Halls of diversity
LA’s Natural History Museum has several enormous rooms filled with scenes depicting animal life in the wild. Your family will see preserved animals that live among us today (for example the hawks in the Bird Room) and those that are, sadly, extinct.
Your kids may recognize some of the animals from the zoo, but chances are they’ve never seen them this close. Of course the animals at this kid-friendly museum aren’t alive, but your kids will notice details—how feathers lay flat on top of one another, the unique patterns on an antelope’s stripes—they’d never spot from afar.
Level 10 travel tip: Read the informational displays at every animal to yourself: Many of them have remarkable trivia about the animals depicted. (Did you know, for example, that the ostrich has the largest eyes of any land animal, and that a group of hippos is called a bloat? Neither did I, until I visited the Natural History Museum!)
Even more exhibits!
If I’m honest, to me, everything besides dinosaur bones is secondary in a natural history museum. But LA’s Natural History Museum made me rethink my dino-focused zeal.
The reason for my epiphany? The Gem and Mineral Hall.
I never thought this section of LA’s Natural History Museum would be so fascinating, but I marveled at the colors, textures and shapes of minerals found deep underground and inside rocks. And the bling contained inside the gems room made my eyes pop (and the security guard keep his eyes on everyone inside).
In addition, you’ll find permanent exhibits on shells, ancient Latin American art and fetish carvings.
Make sure to look for rotating exhibits, too. When I visited the Natural History Museum, they hosted an exhibit on tattoos throughout time (though entry costs an additional $8, unless you’re a member).
Exploring actual nature at LA’s Natural History Museum with kids
LA’s Natural History Museum is the only one of its kind that does a remarkable job incorporating, well, the outside natural world (at least that I’ve ever seen).
Step outside the museum and you’ll find a half-dozen different habitats and many more opportunities to learn. Keep an eye out for LA’s wildlife that visits the museum not to stare goggle-eyed at dinosaur bones but to take a bath in the pond, sip nectar from blooms or nest in a tree.
Level 10 travel tip: Bring a change of clothes for your kids. On a hot day, your kids will want to splash and play in the water feature. They’ll be amazed that they can splash around at a museum!
Visiting LA’s Natural History Museum with kids
LA’s Natural History Museum has kid-friendly activities and features throughout the museum. They do an exceptional job getting kids interested—and excited!—about science and the natural world. If you’re visiting the Natural History Museum with kids, don’t miss these highlights.
Nature walks
Every day at 3:30, Natural History Museum staff lead a group of kids throughout the outdoor section of the museum. Kids might have a chance to spot finches or mourning doves on the bird viewing platform, harvest snap peas from the edible garden or look for wildlife in the pond. The museum’s nature walks are free with admission.
Critter Club
This monthly meet-up introduces kids 3 to 5 years old to different kinds of animals through art, song, stories and other hands-on activities throughout the museum. The sessions are on a break now but will begin again in Summer 2018.
The Discovery Center: Hands-on central
In the Natural History Museum’s Insect Zoo and Discovery Center, kids can play and explore to their hearts’ content. They can dig for casts of dinosaur bones, pretend to camp out and peek across the museum grounds in a spyglass.
Then get close and personal with creepy crawlies. You’ll find cockroaches, pill bugs, gigantic spiders, millipedes and more in the habitats at the center of the room.
“Ask me” buttons
If your kids are anything like mine, they don’t have the patience to read (or listen to) many of the plaques that explain the displays. But when given the chance to learn from a real-live expert, they’ll surprise you at how much information they soak in. The Natural History Museum in Los Angeles offers plenty of opportunities for kids to express their curiosity and get details from experts.
Level 10 travel tip: Challenge your kids to find a staff member with a yellow “Ask me” button—it’ll be like a scavenger hunt. Then listen to your kids’ questions. They’re so open-minded that they ask about things you’d never consider. (“Do baby Triceratops have teeth?”)
Find the rats
Rats—in a museum?! You bet, if it’s the LA Natural History Museum! Downstairs on the ground level families will find an interactive Nature Lab, where kids are invited to ask questions about how humans interact with the natural world. Part of our coexistence with animals and plants is living alongside rats.
There is a structure with see-through walls where kids can try to spot rats scurrying here and there—and even overhead!
The nitty gritty: Visiting LA’s Natural History Museum with kids
Here are the details you need when planning a visit to LA’s Natural History Museum.
- Admission is $15 for adults, $12 for youth 13-17, $7 for children 3-12 and free for kids under 3. If you go more than twice a the year, it’s actually more economical to buy a membership.
Level 10 travel tip: If you do buy a membership, make sure to use it to get free admission at the La Brea Tar Pits and The William S Hart Museum (which has a herd of bison on the property!). They have reciprocal memberships, which means even more natural history fun!
- Family restrooms and nursing rooms are located throughout the museum.
- A cafe offers kid-friendly food downstairs. There’s plentiful seating outdoors and, if it’s raining (or too blazing hot), in a solarium. You can also bring your own food for a picnic.
- This kid-friendly museum is right next to the Exposition Park Rose Garden and is a short walk from several aircraft on display outdoors. If your kids are antsy after being relatively quiet and contained in the museum, let them run their yayas out in the Rose Garden or challenge them to find the planes.
I can’t wait to return to LA’s Natural History museum with my kids. If you’re looking for kid-friendly activities in LA, make sure to put this museum on your itinerary!
And if you’re looking for even more ideas, check out my friend Melissa’s guide to fun things to do with kids in LA over on her Thrifty Family Travels blog.
What is your favorite part of visiting a natural history museum?
What a super cool museum – for kids AND adults! This one definitely very interactive and fun, and I love the outdoor areas.
It really was! I can’t wait to go back.
Wow, that museum looks amazing! Love the dinosaurs, so cool they take up two stories.
Well dinosaurs are so awesome and huge that it makes sense they take up so much real estate. 😉
How wonderful that the museum is so full of different activities and is labeled well but also includes trivia and other nuggets informatively to get learning in too!
There’s absolutely a ton to discover at the museum!
This looks like a great place for kids and adults. I haven’t heard about that museum before but will visit on my next LA trip. Thanks for sharing!
I think that’s a mark of a great museum: There’s something for anyone to enjoy, no matter their age.
What a great museum for kids! As an adult, I still get a kick out of looking at animals in formaldehyde-filled jars from the 1800s, but if you’re traveling with kids then it’s obviously so much better to visit a museum like this one, that is so hands-on!
That’s hilarious—those jars always gave me the heebie jeebies!
Lol who says these activities just have to be for kids! I would love to do all of these! Nature walks and finding scurrying rats? Right up my alley lol.
Me and you both!!! I didn’t get to participate in the nature walks—they might have raised an eyebrow at an adult in a preschooler’s activity—but watching the rats was fascinating!
Oh my boys would LOVE this museum!! We have to go!!
I hope you and your sons make it—there’s so much to explore, do and see there.
Wow, I love dinosaurs and ancient creatures. It’s so neat to learn about them when they were living on Earth first. Definitely dragging my brother here!
Me too, Amy! I hope you and your brother enjoy the museum!
Interactive museums are the best! It’s like a book come to life and one of the best ways to learn about the world, I think. As a child, I was fascinated with dinosaurs. Now, not so much, but I’d still enjoy exploring this one! Bet your kids will too!
Absolutely—kids need to be engaged to learn. It shows them the world is actually exciting and not some set of dry facts to memorize.
Looks amazing and soo affordable! I did the Museum of Natural History in New York and I loved it too and I also did it without my daughter. She would have loved it. Fascinating the things you learn in thsse museums and am always so blown away with how they do the dinasaur bones in its actual size.
I adore the Natural History in NY, too—I used to dream about being locked in there so I could actually get the time I wanted to explore. 🙂
I totally agree that everything besides dinosaur bones at natural history museums is skippable :). This seems like a pretty fun way to spend an evening on work travel whether you have kids or not — I’m often in la for work so will have to check this out!
Carrie, we are totally kindred museum spirits! I hope you find the LA Natural History Museum in your next stop in LA—it really is a treasure.
I’m not a kid but I’d thoroughly enjoy exploring this museum like one!
It’s such a great museum, and it has something for everybody!
Oh man, I was such a dinosaur nut as a kid. I would have loved to have come here. I haven’t had much chance to explore LA, but this is now on my list!
I loved them too—but having kids of my own gives me yet another chance to indulge my passion for dinos!