REVIEW · TBILISI
Skip the Line: Experimentorium Ticket
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Touch physics, no lab coat required. Experimentorium is a science museum in Tbilisi built around doing, not just reading, and your pre-booked ticket is the ticket to a smoother entry. I like how the skip-the-line setup helps you spend less time waiting and more time pushing buttons, pulling levers, and trying the science in front of you.
My second favorite part is the hands-on focus: you’ll be surrounded by roughly 80 interactive exhibits that visualize the laws of physics, and the experience also includes time for show-style moments like liquid nitrogen. One consideration: this is not a quiet, lecture-heavy museum—some kids may need close supervision around interactive stations, and a few exhibit explanations can feel a bit hard to locate in the room.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Plan Around
- A Timed, Mobile Ticket That Gets You In Fast
- The 1–2 Hour Window: What Your Visit Feels Like
- Inside the Museum: Around 80 Hands-On Physics Exhibits
- The Show-Style Science: Plan for the Nitrogen Moment
- Staff, Language, and the Human Side of the Experience
- Family-Friendly, With One Important Reality Check
- Location and Timing: Building It Into Your Tbilisi Day
- Price and Value: What $46 Really Covers
- Who Should Book This Skip-the-Line Ticket?
- Should You Book the Experimentorium Skip-the-Line Ticket?
- FAQ
- How long does the Experimentorium ticket last?
- What is the price for the Skip the Line: Experimentorium Ticket?
- Do I get a mobile ticket?
- Is skip-the-line admission included?
- How do session times work?
- What’s included with the ticket?
- Are explanations available in English?
- Is free cancellation available?
Key Things I’d Plan Around

- Skip-the-line with a mobile ticket so you’re not stuck in a queue
- Around 80 touchable physics exhibits designed for hands-on learning
- Liquid nitrogen cold-show and related chemistry moments included with admission
- Hourly start times from 10:00 to 19:00 for flexible scheduling
- Explanations in Georgian, Russian, and English for easier understanding
- Great indoor option for families when weather or timing doesn’t cooperate
A Timed, Mobile Ticket That Gets You In Fast
This is a museum visit where timing matters. You’re buying an Experimentorium ticket for a chosen date and time, and you’ll get a mobile ticket rather than a paper voucher. That matters because the whole point is a clean entry—show up when your slot begins and you’re in the flow.
There’s also something practical here: the museum experience is about 1–2 hours, so every minute you save from waiting feels noticeable. If you’re combining this with other Tbilisi sights, a timed slot makes it easier to protect your schedule.
If you're still narrowing it down, here are other tours in Tbilisi we've reviewed.
The 1–2 Hour Window: What Your Visit Feels Like

The visit length is listed as approximately 1 to 2 hours. In real life that usually means: you’ll either do the highlights in a focused way, or you’ll slow down when something grabs you—like an exhibit you want to repeat to really see what’s happening.
Sessions begin every hour, with the excursion window listed as 10:00 to 19:00. That hourly rhythm is helpful if you’re traveling with kids who have a limited attention budget, or if you want a later start to avoid earlier crowds.
And yes, it’s an indoor activity. When you want an afternoon that doesn’t depend on the weather, Experimentorium is exactly the kind of plan that keeps moving.
Inside the Museum: Around 80 Hands-On Physics Exhibits

The main event is the exhibit floor. Experimentorium presents about 80 interactive, touchable displays that visualize physics concepts. The idea isn’t to memorize formulas—it’s to test the rule with your hands and your eyes.
You can expect a mix of playful experiments and “wait, that actually works” demonstrations. Based on the museum’s style, you’re likely to run into hands-on experiences such as sitting on nails and lifting a friend into the air, catching thunder with your hands, drawing on sand, and even a music-room setup where you feel like a rock star.
This kind of museum design has a clear payoff for you. If you learn best by doing, you’ll feel the concepts land quickly because the exhibit gives you immediate cause-and-effect. If you’re visiting with children, it’s also a built-in way to keep them from getting bored: they have a job—try, touch, observe.
The Show-Style Science: Plan for the Nitrogen Moment
A big reason people remember Experimentorium is the show, especially the liquid nitrogen experience. Many visitors single it out as a highlight, and the museum experience description supports that with its included excursion format and experiment-style elements.
Liquid nitrogen shows are inherently dramatic because the effects happen fast and visibly. You’re watching temperature-driven physics unfold in real time, and that’s the kind of moment that tends to stick with kids and adults alike.
You might also hear references to a cold show and a nitrogen tasting called burbushella. If that detail matters to your family, it’s smart to ask when the show runs for your session so you don’t miss it while exploring exhibits.
Tip: treat the nitrogen show like a scheduled “anchor” in your visit. Start on the exhibit floor, but keep an eye on show timing so you can build your route around it rather than trying to squeeze everything in at the last minute.
Staff, Language, and the Human Side of the Experience

This is one of those places where the people running it strongly influence the mood. The experience format is guided by staff, and you’ll find multiple mentions of positive, cheerful staff and helpful guidance.
Two guide names show up in the information you provided: Ellen and Helen. Since guides can vary by session, you can’t guarantee the same person every time, but the key takeaway is that the museum’s presentation style clearly includes friendly explanations and encouragement.
Language support is another practical win. Explanations are available in Georgian, Russian, and English, so you’re not stuck guessing what something is supposed to teach you. That’s especially valuable in a hands-on museum where the “instructions” are part of what makes the experiment safe and meaningful.
Family-Friendly, With One Important Reality Check
Experimentorium is advertised as suitable for visitors of all ages, and the museum’s interactive design naturally works well for families. A lot of the appeal comes from the fact that kids can actually participate, not just look at glass cases.
That said, one real consideration comes up: keep an eye on children during interactive moments. In a hands-on science space, curiosity moves fast, and not every exhibit is the kind where a parent can relax completely.
So your best strategy is simple:
- Stay close during high-energy activities.
- Use the staff explanations as your cue for what’s safe and what’s not.
- Let kids have fun, but don’t let the fun turn into wandering without supervision.
If you go in with that mindset, the family-friendly side tends to shine.
Location and Timing: Building It Into Your Tbilisi Day

Experimentorium is near public transportation, and one review specifically notes the area around Rustaveli street. That’s useful when you’re planning because you can fit it between walks and meals without needing a dedicated taxi trip.
For timing, remember this is an indoor plan that lasts about 1–2 hours. That makes it easy to slot in as either:
- A rainy-day break when the rest of your day might stall, or
- An energy reset after you’ve been walking in the city
If you’re choosing a time slot, aim for when your group is most alert. In a museum built around interaction, the best visits are the ones where you can actually follow along and enjoy the cause-and-effect.
Price and Value: What $46 Really Covers
At $46, you’re paying for more than a museum entrance. The ticket is tied to a pre-booked time, it includes skip-the-line admission, and the excursion start format is part of what you’re buying. That reduces friction, which is worth real money in any city—especially when you’re traveling with family.
You’re also getting access to a large set of interactive experiences—about 80 exhibits—plus show-style moments that people clearly remember, including the nitrogen experience. For groups who like active activities (rather than passive sightseeing), that turns the price into “paid participation,” not just “paid standing in a room.”
Is it a bargain compared to every attraction in Tbilisi? That depends on your preferences. But based on what the museum offers in one chunk of time, $46 can be good value when you’d otherwise spend an afternoon on smaller, less memorable activities.
Who Should Book This Skip-the-Line Ticket?
This is an easy “yes” for:
- Families with kids who like to touch, press, and try
- Adults who enjoy science best through demonstrations rather than long lectures
- Travelers wanting a reliable indoor plan that won’t collapse if weather changes
It may be a lower match if you want:
- A quiet museum focused mainly on theory and deep academic explanations
- A slow, contemplative pace with minimal audience involvement
If your group falls somewhere in the middle—curious, playful, open to hands-on learning—you’ll likely have a better time. The nitrogen show energy and the interactive exhibit floor work well together when everyone is willing to participate.
Should You Book the Experimentorium Skip-the-Line Ticket?
If you want an experience that feels active, hands-on, and family-friendly, I’d book. The skip-the-line angle is the practical reason: you’re buying less waiting and more doing, and your visit fits neatly into a 1–2 hour window.
Book it especially if you’re traveling with children or you’re in Tbilisi for a short time and don’t want to waste hours negotiating queues. The museum also provides multilingual explanations in Georgian, Russian, and English, which lowers the stress of not understanding what you’re looking at.
One last check before you commit: plan your session so you can comfortably catch the show timing—liquid nitrogen is the part that many people treat like the main event. If you schedule with that in mind, you’ll get the full payoff of what Experimentorium is designed to do.
FAQ
How long does the Experimentorium ticket last?
The experience is listed as approximately 1 to 2 hours.
What is the price for the Skip the Line: Experimentorium Ticket?
The price is $46.
Do I get a mobile ticket?
Yes, the ticket is described as a mobile ticket.
Is skip-the-line admission included?
Yes. The ticket includes skip-the-line admission so you don’t waste time waiting to get in.
How do session times work?
You pick a date and time to visit. The excursions begin every hour, and the listed excursion window is 10:00 to 19:00.
What’s included with the ticket?
Admission is included, and the excursion is described as included in the ticket price. The experience also includes show time as part of the visit.
Are explanations available in English?
Yes. Explanations are available in Georgian, Russian, and English.
Is free cancellation available?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






















