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8 museums selected in this guide.
Casa Manila is a reconstructed 19th-century Filipino colonial house museum inside the Plaza San Luis Complex in Intramuros. It offers the most vivid glimpse of how wealthy Filipino-Spanish mestizo families lived during the late Spanish period.
Malacañang Palace is the official residence and workplace of the President of the Philippines, situated on the banks of the Pasig River. The adjacent Malacañang Museum houses a collection of presidential memorabilia, art, and historical artifacts spanning over a century of Philippine leadership.
The Ayala Museum in Makati is one of the Philippines' premier private museums, housing an exceptional collection of Philippine art, history, and ethnography. Named after the Ayala family — one of the country's oldest business dynasties — the museum is known for its immersive dioramas and gold artifact collection.

The National Museum of Fine Arts occupies the former Legislative Building on Padre Burgos Avenue, a grand neoclassical structure that once housed the Philippine Congress. Since 1998, it has been the country's premier art museum, home to the most important collection of Filipino visual art spanning the 17th century to the present.

The National Museum of Natural History reopened in 2018 inside the beautifully restored former Department of Tourism building on Rizal Park. Its centerpiece is the Tree of Life — a towering DNA-helix-shaped spiral ramp under a spectacular glass dome — around which exhibits on Philippine biodiversity are organized.

The National Museum of Anthropology is housed in the former Department of Finance building on P. Burgos Drive, facing Rizal Park. It preserves the most significant archaeological and ethnographic collections in the Philippines, tracing the islands' cultural heritage from prehistoric times to the present.
Bahay Tsinoy (House of the Chinese Filipino) is a museum inside Intramuros dedicated to documenting the contributions of Chinese Filipinos to the nation's history, economy, and culture. Housed in a reconstructed colonial building, it presents the story of Chinese immigration to the Philippines from the pre-colonial period to the present.
The Mind Museum is the Philippines' premier science museum, located in Bonifacio Global City. Opened in 2012, it features over 250 interactive exhibits spread across five galleries — the Atom, Life, Universe, Technology, and Earth galleries — designed to make science accessible and exciting for all ages.