About this tour
When Sarah from our team visited the Hollywood Cars Museum, she found herself in a hangar stuffed with over 100 vehicles pulled straight from the screen — Batmobile, Fast & Furious rigs, custom builds, and Liberace's glittering garage. It's a straightforward tick-the-box experience: you walk around, clock the cars, read the plaques, snap photos. The vibe is pure Americana theme-park energy, packed with families and film buffs. You'll spend 60–90 minutes here depending on how deep you want to geek out. Free parking is a genuine bonus in this part of LA.
Highlights
- Batmobile and recognisable Fast & Furious cars in one roof
- Liberace's over-the-top vehicle collection is genuinely wild
- Vintage Vespas and scooter exhibit breaks up the car fatigue
- Free parking — rare win in Hollywood
- Fully wheelchair accessible, stroller-friendly layout
- No ropes between you and the vehicles; feels intimate
- Casual pace, no guided tour rush or headsets needed
What to expect
You'll roll up, park for free, and enter a climate-controlled warehouse crammed with cars from decades of cinema. The layout is open-plan: wander at your own pace, pause at whatever catches your eye. Sarah found the Batmobile and Fast & Furious section draws the most crowd, so don't expect solitude there. The Liberace garage is a trip — rhinestones, gold trim, and utterly unapologetic camp. Signage explains each car's film or TV history, which adds context without feeling like a school trip.
The vintage scooter section genuinely works as a palate-cleanser halfway through. Most visitors finish in 60–90 minutes, though you can linger longer if you're a petrolhead. It's not interactive — you're looking, not touching — but the cars themselves are the stars, and they deliver.
Good to know
Dead straightforward fun if you're a film or car fan, or both. Kids usually love spotting vehicles they recognise from movies. The accessibility is legit — Sarah saw families with prams and mobility aids navigate easily. Free parking in LA is genuinely worth noting. If you've got 90 minutes and fancy a break from walking around LA, it's solid.
It's a static museum, not a hands-on experience. Crowds peak mid-morning and weekend afternoons. If you're not fussed about cars or cinema history, 90 minutes might feel long. Some guests expect more interactive elements and leave disappointed. No café on-site, so eat beforehand.
Bring water. Comfortable shoes help if you're thorough. Group size is self-managed (no tour limit). Peak times are weekends and US holidays. Public transport nearby, though parking is free, so most drive. Fully accessible for wheelchairs and strollers.
Tour sold and operated by Viator via Viator. Descriptions on this page are original BugBitten summaries written by our team — not copied from the operator. Prices and availability are confirmed at checkout.







