Museums may apply for accreditation to gain prestige, advice, access to funding or other resources. However, several funding schemes, including those from
Art Fund, the
Royal Society, and Arts Council England, do require museums to be accredited, in the process of becoming accredited, or to justify why not. Museums including the
Museum of Croydon and
Northampton Museum lost accredited status for selling parts of their collections to raise funds. This made them ineligible for some funding streams.
Networking Accredited museums are part of a UK network. When
Bury Art Museum lost accreditation in 2005 due to the sale of a
Lowry painting, it was excluded from British networks. After a successful international touring program, the museum was reaccredited in 2014.
Collections Accredited museums are able to apply to the
Treasure Trove Unit to apply for ownership of significant
archaeological finds. Museum accreditation can limit what can be done with collections in terms of engagement, in order to meet professional standards.
Loans and touring exhibitions Becoming accredited enables museums to host
touring exhibitions. British museums that are accredited may not be able to loan artefacts to museums that are not accredited.
Impact on the sector Jeffrey Abt has suggested that accreditation was part of a trend toward
professionalisation and the emergence of the public museum. == 2025 review ==