- Sala I - Room I shows the importance of the Mediterranean Sea in antiquity through objects from the colonies of Ibiza and Ampurias, dating from the sixth century B.C to the second century B.C. 
- Sala II - This room offers a general introduction to the Iberian Culture. Who were the Iberians and which were the most significant social and material changes associated to these groups? 
- Sala III - Room III takes us into the daily life of Iberian cities through the example of La Bastida de les Alcusses, Moixent. 
- Sala IV - A house re-creation takes us into the Iberian domestic space. 
- Sala V - Room V addresses the funerary rituals, types of tombs and their social meaning, as well as cults in domestic spaces and in cave-shrines. 
- Sala VI - This room focuses on the exploration of the ancient city of Edeta (Tossal de Sant Miquel, Lliria) and the territorial and socio-economic organization that was established with other Iberian settlements at the Camp de Turia. 
- Sala VII - Room VII shows the Iberian epigraphic collection consisting of painted, incised and engraved texts on various media such as vessels, sheets of lead or stone steles. 
- Sala VIII - Room VIII shows Greek, Punic and Roman Republican coins and the first four Valencian mints: Arse-Saguntum (Sagunto), Saiti (Xativa), Kelin (Los Villares) and Kili.