10 Must-Visit Museums in Portland

The torpedo launch tube at OMSI
If there's a theme among our favorite museums within city limits, it's DIY: Portland's scrappy, individualistic ethos is alive and well here. Beyond our tentpole institutions, most in-town museums are built on the collections of individuals who have transformed often small spaces into windows straight to their eccentric passions.

Image: Brian Breneman
Movie Madness
Sunnyside
The beloved Belmont video store is known for its extensive inventory, but mere movie renters may not grasp the extent of its memorabilia archive. In glass cases and amid DVD shelves, Movie Madness displays a stunning array of props, costumes, and ephemera from major films: one of Julie Andrews’s dresses from The Sound of Music, the prop soap from the Fight Club poster, a severed ear from Blue Velvet. Go in swearing you’re just there to admire the fabrics from West Side Story, come out with a copy of There Will Be Blood and a tallboy for good measure.
Good for: Movie buffs; impressing out-of-town friends; extracting ineffable wisdom from Julianne Moore’s Magnolia coat
Admission: Free
Japanese American Museum of Oregon
old town
Formerly known as the Oregon Nikkei Legacy Center, this museum is pointedly placed in a segment of the city that was on its way to becoming a thriving Japantown, pre–World War II internment. Featuring interactive exhibits, like the jail cell where Japanese American attorney Minoru Yasui was held for breaking curfew during internment, and guided tours of the waterfront’s Japanese American Historical Plaza, it’s small but mighty, with a well-curated gift shop.
Good for: Families
Admission: $5–8 (ages 11 and under free)

Tried and true, OMSI has been making science fun for locals since 1944.
Image: Checubus/shutterstock.com
OMSI
Hosford-abernethy
You know OMSI. You love OMSI. You’ve tried and failed to beat the Pac-Man game that illustrates how alcohol affects the body's reaction time. The trusty Oregon Museum of Science and Industry has been serving Portland-area families since 1944, and its now-iconic waterfront space (opened in 1992)—complete with a planetarium, movie theater, and tourable US Navy submarine—makes every trip feel like a certified event.
Good for: Families; being a little stoned at the planetarium (shhhh)
Admission: $12–17 (ages 3 and under free)
Portland Chinatown Museum
old town
The Chinatown Museum—opened in 2018 and located just up the street from the Lan Su Chinese Garden—offers a robust glimpse at our once-thriving Chinatown, which was among the largest in the country into the mid-twentieth century. Featuring local history exhibitions, a slate of panels and storytelling events, and regular musical performances, it’s one of the brightest spots in Old Town.
Good for: Local history buffs
Admission: $5–8 (ages 12 and under free)

What is the Zymoglyphic Period? Per the museum's founder Jim Stewart: “I made it up.”
Image: Courtesy Kelly Clarke
Zymoglyphic Museum
Mt. tabor
Started by Jim Stewart in 2000, this compact museum houses strange, beautiful, surreal found-object sculptures, all celebrating “the Zymoglyphic Period.” What is the Zymoglyphic Period? Per Stewart: “I made it up.” A meticulous, poignant ode to an era that never was, the project is situated upstairs in Stewart’s home near Mount Tabor, and available to aspiring Zymoglyphologists the second and fourth Sunday of each month from 11am to 3pm.
Good for: Communicating that you are a dork (in a fun way); feeling like you are in an extended sketch about Portland
Admission: Free

The Freakybuttrue Peculiarium pays homage to Bigfoot and goths alike.
Freakybuttrue Peculiarium
northwest district
The state’s official Bigfoot shrine rests 45 minutes southeast of the city at the North American Bigfoot Center, but this love letter to goth friends the world over pays the big guy his respects right here in Northwest Portland. The small space is filled to bursting with bizarre, upsetting art and oddities—including a 10-foot rendering of the ’Squatch himself. Fans of the macabre are welcome seven days per week.
Good for: an überkitschy date; Prepping to join the Addams family; giving your children nightmares
Admission: $10 ($7 on Tuesdays)
Portland Puppet Museum
Sellwood-moreland
Depending on your tastes, the Portland Puppet Museum is either fiendishly adorable or the stuff of nightmares. Launched in Sellwood in 2012 by marionette professional Steven Overton, the Puppet Museum features a collection more than 2,000 strong, spanning styles, sizes, and all corners of the uncanny valley. Labors of love don’t come more full-throttle than this.
Good for: Kids; brave adults; anyone planning to launch a Goosebumps-adjacent franchise
Admission: Free
Oregon Jewish Museum
pearl district
The Jewish Museum began as a nomadic effort in 1989, taking up residence at the Central Library, Montgomery Park, and a storefront in the Pearl District, among other locations, until it opened its permanent home in 2017 just off the North Park Blocks, which it recently expanded in 2023. After a 2014 merger with the Center for Holocaust Education, the museum expanded its mission and now marries world-class art exhibitions (recent programing has included Rembrandt, Dalí, and Helen Frankenthaler) with educational programs and regular talks and events.
Good for: Art fans; intellectuals
Admission: $5–10 (ages 12 and under and members free)

Stark's Vacuum Museum is contained to a single wall, but covers over a century of dust-buster history.
Stark’s Vacuum Museum
kerns
Located in its namesake neon-clad vacuum store near the mouth of the Burnside Bridge, this ode to clean carpets showcases vacuum models from the late nineteenth century through the twenty-first from a permanent collection of more than 300. A 2017 remodel added an explicative timeline, which we’re into. The use of “museum” here is a bit dubious (it fills up a single wall), but it’s a great way to acquire a weird vacuum-centric party trick while replacing that decades-old Hoover.
Good for: a distraction while buying a vacuum
Admission: Free
Five Oaks Museum
northwest portland
Formerly the Washington County Museum, this local history museum opened in 1956, and today sits on PCC's Rock Creek campus. The new name—and with it, new leadership—came in 2019, following heavy criticism for its white-hued lens; in an effort to diversify the perspectives it amplifies, the museum exclusively employs guest curators today. With help from a Native curator, the permanent exhibition This Kalapuya Land was transformed into This IS Kalupaya Land, updating its depiction of Native history while serving as a land acknowledgment. Current online and in-person programing includes multiple exhibits dedicated to Indigenous peoples, as well as genderqueer and Latinx populations.
Good for: Brushing up on institutional trends; accurate native american history
Admission: Free ($5–10 suggested donation)