Almost 530 museums have closed since 2000, study finds

This article was first published by the Museums Association.

Almost 530 museums have closed since 2000 and the risk of closure is far higher within the first 10 years of a museum’s life, a groundbreaking report has found.  

Published by the Mapping Museums Lab at Birkbeck, University of London this week, the report is based on a large-scale, two-and-a-half year research project on museum closures over the past 25 years.

The study – the first of its kind conducted on the UK museum sector – documented the closure of 524 museums between 2000 and 2025, examining why they closed and what happened to their collections.  

Fiona Candlin, the director of the Mapping Museums Lab, gave an overview of the “rich and extensive” data gathered by the project at a launch event this week.

The research found that the sector has grown since 2000, with 870 museums opening over that period. However the growth rate of museums has “flattened” in recent years and the sector is ageing, with fewer new museums opening every year, Candlin said.

The project found that the closure rate has stabilised to around 1% after reaching a high of 2% during the austerity years of the early 2010s. Age is a significant factor in determining the risk of closure, the data showed, with museums much more likely to close before they are 10 years old. Many new museums that opened in the late 20th century did not survive until 2025, according to the report.