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Visitation Recovery Trends from the Pandemic: A 2024 Annual Survey of Museum-Goers Data Story Update

Category: Alliance Blog
A group of illustrated people of various ages and skin tones

This visual Data Story is based on findings from the 2024 Annual Survey of Museum-Goers, a national survey of American museum visitors from AAM and Wilkening Consulting. Every year, the survey partners with individual museums to research their audiences and yield insights about their behaviors and preferences, both on an institutional and national level. Interested in joining the 2025 edition on the themes of repeat visitation, social connection, and community trust and responsibility? Sign up by February 28, 2025, for a special early bird rate.


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Visual data story reproduced in text below


It’s been nearly 5 years since the COVID-19 pandemic devastated museum visitation. While increasing numbers of museums are back to pre-pandemic attendance norms, many museums are still recovering. As AAM’s fall 2024 “National Snapshot of United States Museums” survey indicates:

  • Half of U.S. museums have not yet returned to pre-pandemic attendance.
  • 78%: average pre-pandemic attendance levels for those 1/2 of museums
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The good news is that incidence of museum-going is firmly back to pre-pandemic norms. Prior to the pandemic, we typically saw somewhere between 25% and 31% of U.S. adults reporting they had been to a museum in the past year.

In 2024, 33% of U.S. adults reported having been to a museum in the past year … slightly exceeding pre-pandemic norms.

So if incidence isn’t the primary issue, what’s responsible for ongoing attendance challenges? We’ve been tracking this via the Annual Survey of Museum-Goers, and frequency of attendance continues to be the culprit. Let’s take a look.

First, let’s time-travel back to winter of 2020, when the Annual Survey was in the field. We began pulling the data for analysis in the middle of March … pretty much the exact moment everything started shutting down and the pandemic began. That was bizarrely fortuitous in terms of data collection, because it meant we had established a clean baseline for documenting pre-pandemic norms.

Our 2021 Annual Survey thus captured the first year of the pandemic (mid-March 2020 to mid-March 2021), 2022 captured year two, and so on.

Every year, the Annual Survey asks frequent museum-goers two questions about museum visitation.

1. Self-reported repeat visitation rates at “their” museum

The first question of the Annual Survey asks respondents to report their previous year in person visitation of the museum that invited them to take the survey.

When we aggregate responses by year, we can clearly see the devastating drop in attendance from pre-pandemic highs (March 2020) to pandemic lows (March 2021).

A bar graph showing frequency of visitation for the years between 2020 and 2024, with 4+ times a year peaking in 2020 before declining dramatically in 2021 and steadily rebuilding in subsequent years.

Since 2021, frequency has been increasing, but there is still a significant gap in frequency from pre-pandemic norms. Repeat visitation simply isn’t back where it was five years ago.

Additionally, when we examine repeat visitation by age and life stage, we find that parents and guardians of minor children have been the slowest to return.

2. How many different museums they visit

We also track how many different museums a respondent reports visiting in the course of the previous year. Once again we find that visitation at museums in general plummeted from 2020 to 2021. There was substantial recovery in 2022 and this has continued, putting this breadth of museum-going close to pre-pandemic norms … though we are not quite there yet.

A bar graph showing the number of museums respondents visited for the years between 2020 and 2024, with 5 or more peaking in 2020 before declining dramatically in 2021 and steadily rebuilding in subsequent years.

Additionally, we are estimating that 3% of pre-pandemic frequent visitors are still sidelining themselves, and have not yet returned to museums at all.

While the results to this question are generally more promising, as we do seem to be approaching pre-pandemic norms, the reduction in frequency of visitation from our most avid visitors can really add up. Thus, it’s not that surprising that many museums have not yet reached 100% visitation recovery.

The good news overall is that yes, people have returned to museums, and attendance is continuing to improve for most museums.

But the return continues to be bumpy, with some museums still reporting low levels of visitation while others are exceeding pre-pandemic visitation.

As we head into 2025, new external forces are arising that may also affect leisure time and museum visitation. Ongoing economic concerns and severe weather are factors for many, which may help some museums attract more local visitors … or reduce visitation from other potential visitors.

Because of these challenges, “repeat visitation” was a theme of the 2024 Annual Survey, and upcoming Data Stories will explore what audiences said was keeping them from more frequent visitation. Stay tuned.


Annual Survey of Museum-Goers Data Stories are created by Wilkening Consulting on behalf of the American Alliance of Museums. Sources include:
• 2024 Annual Survey of Museum-Goers, n = 90,178; 202 museums participating
• 2024 Broader Population Sampling, n = 2,154
• 2017 – 2023 Annual Surveys of Museum-Goers

U.S. demographic data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

*Data Stories share research about both frequent museum-goers (typically visit multiple museums each year) and the broader population (including casual, sporadic, and non-visitors to museums).

More Data Stories can be found at wilkeningconsulting.com/data-stories

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