Cars on steroids. In the best way. This Orlando Auto Museum packs a massive indoor footprint into themed rooms built for fans of movie cars, comic heroes, and celebrity vehicles. I especially love hunting down the Batman collection in its dedicated bat cave space, and I’m a big fan of the screen-used James Bond vehicles and memorabilia setup.
One practical heads-up: your mobile ticket may not scan smoothly every time, so I recommend having your confirmation pulled up and ready (or a screenshot), just in case.
In This Review
- Key points to know before you go
- A $200 Million Car Vault Inside Dezerland Park
- Price and Timing: Figuring Out the Value for $31.90
- Your Main Stop: The Orlando Auto Museum Floor Plan Energy
- What the themed rooms do for you
- The Batman and James Bond Sections: Two Fan-Magnet Worlds
- Batman’s bat cave vibe
- James Bond: vehicles, planes, and memorabilia
- Movie Cars That Trigger Instant Recognition
- A practical way to enjoy the movie section
- Vespas, Micro Cars, and Motorized Bikes: When Small Machines Win
- The Harley Lounge effect
- Classic Car Nostalgia (and Surprising International Finds)
- Photos, Comfort, and Walking Through 250,000 Square Feet
- Mobile Ticket Entry: The One Thing to Prepare For
- Who This Auto Museum Ticket Is Best For
- Should You Book the Orlando Auto Museum at Dezerland Park?
- FAQ
- What is the Orlando Auto Museum at Dezerland Park Orlando?
- How much is the ticket?
- How long does the visit take?
- Is this an indoor attraction?
- Do I need to print a ticket?
- What collections and themed areas can I expect?
- Are any admission fees included?
- Is transportation included?
- Are service animals allowed?
- Can I change or get a refund if I cancel?
Key points to know before you go

- Batman bat cave room plus a world-style setup built around that franchise energy
- James Bond collection with vehicles, planes, and memorabilia tied to the screen
- 18 themed rooms that keep you moving instead of wandering a single big hallway
- Movie-car highlights like Ghostbusters Ecto 1, Fast & Furious cars, and the Back to the Future DeLorean
- Vespa and microcar displays that add variety beyond the usual muscle-car crowd
A $200 Million Car Vault Inside Dezerland Park

If you like cars, you’ll feel right at home within minutes. The Orlando Auto Museum sits inside Dezerland Park Orlando and turns roughly 250,000 square feet of indoor space into a themed collection you can walk through at your own pace. It’s not just a room of vehicles; it’s more like a choose-your-own-adventure for car geeks, movie fans, and people who grew up memorizing license plates from TV and film.
The scale is part of the magic. You’re looking at an incredible number of vehicles, including thousands tied to pop culture and entertainment. The museum’s reputation for breadth shows up immediately once you start exploring themed rooms, where you’re meant to pause, take photos, and point things out to anyone who’s stuck in your passenger seat.
I also like that it’s air-conditioned. Orlando heat can bully your schedule, and this gives you a solid indoor block that still feels like an event. Even if you only have a few hours free, you can get a lot of enjoyment without melting.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Orlando
Price and Timing: Figuring Out the Value for $31.90
The ticket price is $31.90 per person, with a visit length of about 1 to 3 hours. That time window matters, because the museum is big and intentionally packed. If you try to see everything in detail, 3 hours can still feel quick. If you come with a short list of must-sees, it feels very doable.
Here’s the value math that works for most people:
- You pay once and get access to 18 themed rooms
- You get a break from Florida weather while still staying entertained
- The variety means you won’t be stuck only looking at one type of vehicle
Booking is typically done around 10 days in advance on average, so don’t wait until the last minute if your dates are fixed. You’ll also get a mobile ticket, which makes entry easy when it behaves—and annoying when it doesn’t. More on that below.
Timing-wise, the museum operates Monday through Thursday from 12:00 PM to 9:00 PM during the listed season dates. If you’re planning your day around other Dezerland Park indoor attractions, a later start can help you avoid the hottest portion of the day while keeping your evening flexible.
Your Main Stop: The Orlando Auto Museum Floor Plan Energy

This experience is really one place, and it’s designed around stopping points. You’ll walk room to room, with plenty of opportunities to slow down and re-find details you missed the first time. Think of it like a museum with an entertainment rhythm: see a theme, soak it in, move to the next.
Expect to encounter over 2,000 vehicles, plus themed sections that can pull you in different directions:
- comic-book hero vehicles
- motorcycle and motorized-bicycle style displays
- classic cars mixed with modern showpieces
- movie cars you recognize instantly
One of the nicest things is that the museum doesn’t force you to be an expert. You can enjoy it even if you only know a handful of the cars by name. For car lovers, there’s plenty to geek out on, but for casual visitors, the pop-culture connections do the heavy lifting.
And because you’ll be inside and moving, you’re not just looking at objects behind rope. You’re walking through scenes that feel built for photos and shared moments.
What the themed rooms do for you
The biggest reason this museum works so well is that 18 themed rooms keep the experience from getting monotonous. Instead of one long “car gallery” vibe, you get mini-worlds—some playful, some nostalgic, some straight-up sci-fi cool.
That’s especially helpful for families. Kids and teens often latch onto a specific theme quickly, while adults can enjoy the cross-generational feel of the collection. It’s a place where a parent can find a classic memory while a child points at something that feels like a toy version of real-life film magic.
The Batman and James Bond Sections: Two Fan-Magnet Worlds

Two themed areas consistently feel like the headline acts: the Batman universe and the James Bond universe. If those are your targets, build your visit around them first.
Batman’s bat cave vibe
The museum is known for the World’s Largest Collection of Batman vehicles, and it’s not hidden away in a random corner. There’s a dedicated space built around the vibe—including a bat cave. When you hit this section, you’ll understand why people plan their whole visit around it. It’s dramatic, recognizable, and it turns “cars” into a story world.
For anyone who grew up with comics or the movies, this is the kind of room where you start recognizing names and shapes right away. For photographers, it also gives you that darker, cinematic atmosphere you can use for better-looking shots than you’d get in a bright, generic showroom.
James Bond: vehicles, planes, and memorabilia
Then there’s the James Bond Collection, tied to a stated $100 million screen-used and memorabilia emphasis. The museum includes screen-used vehicles, planes, and other items that connect to the franchise.
I like this section because it widens the idea of what Bond fans expect. You’re not only looking at cars. You’re seeing how the franchise expands into vehicles and aviation-style pieces, which adds variety even if you’re not a hardcore car historian.
If Bond is your angle, allow extra time here. It’s the type of exhibit where you might pause longer than you think just to take in details and compare the vehicles to what you remember.
Movie Cars That Trigger Instant Recognition

One reason this museum gets recommended is simple: it’s full of cars people actually recognize. The collection includes Hollywood-style highlights such as:
- Ghostbusters Ecto 1
- Fast & Furious movie cars
- Back to the Future DeLorean Time Machine
That matters because it changes how you experience the room. Instead of “I’m looking at a car,” you’re saying, That’s the one. It’s a mental shortcut that keeps you engaged without needing a guide.
A practical way to enjoy the movie section
If you’re a film fan, go through once fast—just to find the big icons. Then go back for a second pass on the cars you care about most. The museum is large enough that a single slow walk might not let you properly focus on the highlights.
Also, if you’re with kids, let them call out what they recognize. It keeps everyone moving and makes the whole visit feel like a scavenger hunt rather than a lecture.
Vespas, Micro Cars, and Motorized Bikes: When Small Machines Win

Not every section is about huge, loud, famous cars. There’s also a lot of charm in the smaller stuff. The museum features hundreds of Vespas and microcars, plus motorized-bicycle style displays.
This is a big deal if you think you’re only coming for one kind of car. Once you see the variety, you realize the museum is built to satisfy different tastes:
- People who love motorcycles may jump to that zone for the “Harley” vibe
- People who love European classics may get extra joy from seeing cars from different places
- People who like compact vehicles often find microcars surprisingly fun to explore
The Harley Lounge effect
There’s also a dedicated Harley Lounge motorcycle room. That’s a helpful break from the “film car checklist” approach. It turns the museum into something more like a collection of collector worlds, not one single theme.
Classic Car Nostalgia (and Surprising International Finds)

Even if you only care about pop culture, you’ll likely notice classic vehicles along the way. People mention recognizing cars from their own generation and feeling a quick rush of nostalgia when they spot familiar models.
I also like that the museum doesn’t feel locked into one country or one era. Some visitors are surprised by specific international cars they spot—like French classics showing up among the variety. You might be pleasantly distracted for a while if you have a favorite brand or model.
This is one of those parts where personal taste really matters. If you’re the type who reads car badges and model details, you’ll have fun slowing down. If you’re not, you can still enjoy it by focusing on the big moments—movie cars, themed rooms, and the most striking displays.
Photos, Comfort, and Walking Through 250,000 Square Feet

You’ll be walking a lot more than you think at first. The museum’s footprint is enormous, and it’s packed with enough visual details to keep you looking around even when you’re standing still.
Here’s what helps you enjoy it without rushing:
- Wear comfortable shoes. You’re indoors, but you’ll still rack up steps.
- Plan for “photo stop” time. This isn’t a quick selfie gallery; it’s a place where you’ll want time to frame shots.
- Use a priority list. Pick 3–5 areas you care about most so you don’t feel lost in the scale.
Air conditioning is a plus, but you’ll still feel the walking. I’d treat this like an indoor attraction that deserves the same footwear and pacing you’d use for an outdoor museum.
Mobile Ticket Entry: The One Thing to Prepare For
Most people can participate, and the museum welcomes service animals. Getting in is usually smooth with a mobile ticket, but there’s a specific risk worth planning for: the app may not always scan perfectly at entry.
My advice is simple:
- Keep your ticket confirmation open and visible
- Save it as a screenshot as backup
- Give yourself a little patience at the door if there’s a line
This one prep step can turn a stressful moment into nothing at all.
Who This Auto Museum Ticket Is Best For
This is a strong pick if you fit any of these categories:
- you’re a movie-car fan and want recognizable icons in one indoor stop
- you love themed collections and want to move room to room
- you travel with family and want a day that works for different ages
- you like classic cars but also want modern and pop culture mixed together
It’s also a good option if you’re doing Dezerland Park as part of a larger Orlando plan. Since it’s indoor and air-conditioned, it helps smooth out a travel schedule that otherwise depends on Florida weather.
If you’re only interested in one niche—say, just one car brand or just one era—you might find the museum feels broad. But that breadth is also the point. The place is built to surprise you.
Should You Book the Orlando Auto Museum at Dezerland Park?
I’d book this if you want a fun, air-conditioned indoor attraction where you can see thousands of vehicles without needing expertise. The combination of Batman, James Bond, and movie-car recognition is a rare combo, and it gives you a built-in reason to keep moving and exploring.
Skip it only if your idea of value is very different—like you want a quiet, traditional museum with deep curatorial explanations. This one is more about the eye-candy, the themed worlds, and the fast hit of recognition.
If that sounds like your kind of afternoon, you’ll likely come away with at least a few “I can’t believe that’s here” moments.
FAQ
What is the Orlando Auto Museum at Dezerland Park Orlando?
It’s an indoor auto museum in Orlando featuring thousands of vehicles across many themed rooms, including Batman and James Bond collections.
How much is the ticket?
The price is $31.90 per person.
How long does the visit take?
Plan for about 1 to 3 hours.
Is this an indoor attraction?
Yes. It’s an air conditioned, indoor attraction.
Do I need to print a ticket?
No. You’ll use a mobile ticket.
What collections and themed areas can I expect?
You can expect themed rooms including Batman (with a dedicated bat cave), a Harley Lounge motorcycle room, Vespas and microcars, Hollywood cars from movies, and a James Bond collection.
Are any admission fees included?
Yes. All fees and taxes are included, along with admission to the Orlando Auto Museum.
Is transportation included?
No. Transportation is not included.
Are service animals allowed?
Yes, service animals are allowed.
Can I change or get a refund if I cancel?
No. The experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason.

























