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JLeslie's avatar

Can someone help me understand the North American Reciprocal Museum Memberships (NARM)?

Asked by JLeslie (65487points) 2 weeks ago

I’m considering getting a membership, and I have been reading the website, and visited some websites of museums near me, but I am confused.

I am confused that it seems like my husband can get in with me on my pass at some places, is that correct? But, does he need to be named on the card too?

Also, I read it is $100 for a membership. Does that include free entry at all museums that are part of the network? One museum near me had membership to their museum as $35 individual and $50 for a couple, but then the NARM membership was an additional $100 I think? How does that work? The NARM is always an ADDITIONAL $100 over the price of the regular membership? So, should I choose the least expensive museum near me to save money?

I also read that it can’t be used at museums within 15 miles, so I guess I should get a membership to a museum without other museums around it?

I always throw extra money into the donation box at a museum, but I like the idea of being able to go for just an hour or two to a lot of museums, and the membership would help me do that.

What should I know about how it works, and if my husband can come in with me for free.

Thanks!

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10 Answers

jca2's avatar

I just learned about NARM within the past week and was looking into joining.

It seems that you can join at whatever price you find lowest from a museum of your choice. That goes to your question “should I choose the least expensive museum near me to save money?”

As for your husband, this is on the site: Membership benefits typically include two people per household, unless it is a “Family” membership and lasts for 12 months.

I was looking at a museum in CT that has the lowest price for NARM membership. When I first learned about NARM, last week, and was looking on their site to find the price of membership, I couldn’t understand why there was no price, and then I figured it out.

JLeslie's avatar

@jca2 I looked at several museums and read over the NARM website and still a little confused. The museum I was going to pick is right next to another museum I want to go to, so that won’t work, because of their 15 mile rule. I’m going to call a couple of museums today.

jca2's avatar

I believe it’s only if the museum has the asterisks next to it. As per the instructions on the site.

JLeslie's avatar

@jca2 I read that too, so do I need to join at a museum that includes my spouse? I don’t understand why they don’t just have a NARM membership that you buy through NARM? I wonder how it works financially. How the money gets moved around to the museums and back to NARM etc. I might call NARM to get their advice, maybe I will get someone who is talkative.

jca2's avatar

According to the site, it’s a “family” membership which would include your spouse or person who lives with you.

I don’t really care how the money gets moved back to NARM.

I think the membership getting purchased at a museum and not directly with NARM is more to save NARM on administrative costs.

Until I learned about NARM a week ago (exactly a week ago today), I never really looked at the membershp levels for museums. I have joined museums in the past, but always the annual basic level. Now that I know what NARM is, I will go for that.

JLeslie's avatar

@jca2 I don’t really care, just a curiosity. I won’t be asking about the money movement if I call, I will just be asking about their advice for where to join and about my husband. I want to call ahead, because if I am at a busy museum then it will be hard to ask questions with a line of people waiting behind me.

jca2's avatar

This is the one I am considering joining, because it’s cheaper than any others around, and we may go there in a few weeks to join and to visit. It’s only 125 for the NARM level.

I am visiting Maine in the summer and want to go to a museum up there, plus if I am a member of NARM, I will go to museums more often. In addition, you get the discount in the gift shop and cafes.

https://www.nbmaa.org/circle-level-membership

JLeslie's avatar

Thanks for the link. I also was thinking I would make a point to go to a lot of museums over the next 12 months if I join. If I get in free, I can just go for an hour, be in some air conditioning. If my husband can go it will work out financially, if only I can go for free then it might be better to pay each museum, not only because I will wind up paying more, but also because the museums I go to will get more money.

I’m going to try to decide this week, because I think I am going to try to go to the Chihuly glass museum next week and maybe the history museum in St. Pete also, or the Holocaust museum. When I lived in St. Pete I went to a lot of the museums, but missed a lot of them too, so I want to do a day trip and hit a bunch of them. It’s a really nice city for museums if you ever think about planning a trip.

jca2's avatar

I heard St. Pete has a lot of great museums.

Museums can be expensive sometimes. If you can get free admission, that’s great, plus cafe discount is great too. I go to a great art museum in Hartford with my daughter sometimes, and pre-Covid, we’d have a nice lunch in the cafe and she’d love to go to the gift shop and get some crap.

JLeslie's avatar

@jca2 I agree about the restaurants, some are very nice at some of the museums around the country.

Florida has a lot of great tourist sights and museums. When I was a kid people in the northeast made Florida sound like a backwater, but the history is very long and so many interesting people vacationed here in the winters and set up museums or their estates were turned into tourist centers.

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