Caen Memorial Museum — known in French as the Mémorial de Caen — is widely regarded as the single best introduction to D-Day and the Second World War in Normandy, and the ideal first stop before visiting any of the landing beaches. Built into a hillside on the northern edge of Caen, just a few minutes from the city centre and around 15km from the Portsmouth to Caen ferry terminal at Ouistreham, it’s one of the largest and most highly regarded contemporary history museums in Europe.
The Mémorial de Caen museum was inaugurated in 1988 by French President François Mitterrand, built as a museum of peace rather than a museum of war — a distinction its founders considered essential, and one that still shapes how the exhibitions are presented today. It takes visitors from the end of the First World War, through the rise of Nazism, the Second World War and D-Day, all the way to the Cold War and the fall of the Berlin Wall, with an average visit lasting around four hours.
This complete guide to the Caen Memorial Museum covers everything you need to plan your 2026 visit: the museum’s history and what makes it different from a typical war museum, a full breakdown of what’s inside, current Caen Memorial Museum opening hours and ticket prices, parking and how to get there, and the best way to combine a visit with the D-Day beaches themselves.
Last updated: July 2026 | Prices, hours and practical details verified directly from the official Mémorial de Caen website and Caen la Mer Tourism.
