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Prado museum does not need "a single visitor more", says director

"A museum’s success can collapse it"

Prado Madrid

The Prado Museum in Madrid does not need "a single visitor more" after it welcomed a record 3.5 million guests in 2025.

Via a report in the Guardian, the Prado welcomed 3,513,402 guests in 2025, an increase of more than 56,000 from the previous year. Visitor numbers have risen by more than 816,000 over the past 10 years.


Rather than celebrating the museum's growing attendance, the Prado's director Miguel Falomir told a press conference last week: "The Prado doesn’t need a single visitor more.

Couple look at painting in the Prado Museum

"We feel comfortable with 3.5 million. A museum’s success can collapse it, like the Louvre, with some rooms becoming oversaturated. The important thing is not to collapse."

Falomir said the museum had started a new project, called Plan Host, to prioritise quality over quantity, ensuring the institution does struggle under the weight of its own success like Paris' Louvre museum.

Plans include improving the museum's entrances and reconsidering the size of visiting groups.

Rising attendance at museums

"It can’t be like catching the Metro at rush hour," said Falomir.

“You can’t judge a museum on visitor numbers. The quantity isn’t as important as the quality; there should be a diverse and inclusive range of visitors.”

Last January, the Louvre's director Laurence des Cars said the building was in need of an overhaul.

louvre paris

Visiting the institution had become a "physical ordeal", with some spaces in "very poor condition", she wrote in a leaked memo.

The past year has been challenging for the Louvre, which welcomed 8.7 million visitors in 2024. In October, jewels valued at €88 million were stolen from the institution.

In addition to the robbery, a water leak in November damaged hundreds of items in the museum's Egyptian department, and a gallery of nine rooms was later closed due to ceiling safety issues.

In recent months, workers at the Louvre have been striking, prompting a series of shutdowns and disruptions at the world's most visited museum since mid-December.

Images courtesy of the Prado