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National Naval Aviation Museum — Perdido Key, FL 🔑 Is this your business? Claim it
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National Naval Aviation Museum

FL Unclaimed
attraction · Sorrento / Bauer Road · $

Free, world-class, indoor. Dozens of aircraft, real Blue Angels jets, an IMAX. The closest thing to a museum-must on the Gulf Coast.

The National Naval Aviation Museum is on Naval Air Station Pensacola, about 25-30 minutes east of Perdido Key. It is one of the most genuinely impressive free attractions on the Gulf Coast — over 150 restored aircraft on the floor, a Blue Angels exhibit (NAS Pensacola is their home base), simulators, an IMAX theater, and the WWII memorial garden.

Critical: the museum is on an active military base. Access requires going through the NAS Pensacola gate. Civilians can enter for the museum but you need a current government-issued ID, and access policies sometimes change for security reasons. Check the museum website for current entry rules before driving over.

Admission to the museum itself: free. IMAX and simulators are extra. Plan 2-4 hours minimum. The cafeteria on-site is fine.

This is one of the answers to “what do we do with the kids on a rainy day on the Key” that’s worth the half-day commitment. Older kids who care about planes will lose their minds. Younger kids who don’t care about planes are still impressed by the scale.

The base also houses the Pensacola Lighthouse (climbable, separate small fee, great view), which makes a half-day stop into a full-day plan.

What to see

Over 150 restored aircraft fill the floor, from WWII warbirds to the Blue Angels exhibit — NAS Pensacola is the team’s home base, so this is the natural place to see their jets up close. Flight simulators and an IMAX theater add the hands-on draw that keeps older kids engaged for hours, and the WWII memorial garden is worth the walk outside.

Planning the visit

Two things to plan around. First, the museum sits on an active military base, so entry is through the NAS Pensacola gate — bring a current government-issued ID and check the museum site for current access rules before you drive, since policies shift for security reasons. Second, budget the time: admission is free, but it’s a 25-30 minute drive from Perdido Key and a genuine 2-4 hour visit. Pairing it with the climbable Pensacola Lighthouse on the same base turns a half-day into a full one.