Kaunas
Lithuania · Best time to visit: May-Sep.
Choose your pace
Start at the confluence of the Nemunas and Neris — the red-brick stronghold sits on the high bank where the two rivers meet, the medieval seed from which the whole city grew. Morning light hits the surviving round tower head-on from the east, and the wall fragments read as pure scale against the open sky. Skip the small interior museum — the castle is meant to be circled, not entered.
Tip: Drop down to the riverside path on the north side of the castle — from the grass spit between the two rivers you get the postcard angle (tower, walls and confluence in one frame) that ninety percent of visitors miss because they never leave the upper plaza.
Open in Google Maps →Leave the castle grounds heading south on Aleksoto g. — a 5-minute walk over cobbles brings you past Vytautas Church (the 15th-century riverside Gothic brick gem) and into Rotušės aikštė. Pastel merchant houses ring the 16th-century 'White Swan' Town Hall — the most photographed civic building in Lithuania. Loop the square clockwise to catch the Cathedral Basilica's brick mass and the strange Perkūnas House, a thunder-god shrine reborn as a Jesuit chapel.
Tip: For the cleanest shot of the White Swan, stand at the south-east corner near the Vilniaus g. entrance between 10:30 and 11:30 — the sun is behind you, the full tower is lit, and the tour groups haven't arrived yet from the river-cruise terminal.
Open in Google Maps →Cross the east side of the square onto Vilniaus g., the Old Town's pedestrian artery — 3 minutes along brings you to a heavy oak door at no. 34 that drops you into a 16th-century vaulted cellar. This is Kaunas's oldest microbrewery, where students, lawyers and off-duty cooks all eat the same thing: cepelinai (potato dumplings stuffed with minced pork, €8.50) and smoked pork ribs (€13), washed down with the honey-spiced 'Medaus' house ale (€4.50). In summer, the cold beet soup šaltibarščiai (€4.50, electric pink, served with hot potatoes) is non-negotiable.
Tip: Walk in without a booking and head straight to the back of the cellar — the front tables are reserved for the lunchtime office crowd at 13:00 sharp, so arriving by 12:30 gets you a corner booth and a 15-minute kitchen window before the rush.
Open in Google Maps →Continue east on Vilniaus g. — at the white domes of the Soboras (former Russian Orthodox cathedral, now St. Michael the Archangel) the street widens into Laisvės alėja, a 1.6 km linden-shaded pedestrian boulevard. This is the UNESCO core: walk slowly and look up at Pieno Centras (1934, the dairy cooperative HQ with ocean-liner curves), Pažangos rūmai (1934), and the Central Post Office (1932) with its honey-onyx lobby. Halfway down, stop at Spurginė (Laisvės al. 84, since 1958) for a single warm curd-cream donut (€1.20) — the most defiantly local thing you can eat in this city.
Tip: The strongest modernist facades aren't on Laisvės itself — they're one block north on K. Donelaičio g. and one block south on V. Putvinskio g. Detour briefly down either: zero crowds, much cleaner geometry for photos, and you'll see the apartment buildings where the 1930s diplomatic corps actually lived.
Open in Google Maps →At the eastern end of Laisvės alėja, where it opens into Vytautas Park, turn left up Aušros g. — 5 minutes brings you to the wooden funicular station at no. 6. Climb aboard the 1931 oak carriage (€1, every 10 min) — the oldest funicular still in daily commercial service in Europe — for a 2-minute crawl up the green hillside. From the upper station, walk 8 minutes through quiet Žaliakalnis to the Christ's Resurrection Basilica: a stark 70-metre-tall white modernist tower finished in 1940, hijacked as a Soviet radio factory, finally consecrated in 2004. The rooftop elevator (€3) opens onto a 360° terrace over the entire red-tiled Old Town, the two rivers, and the modernist boulevard you just walked.
Tip: Time the rooftop for 17:00 — by 17:30 the low west sun lights the Old Town's red roofs orange against the deep green of the river valleys, the best 20 minutes of light Kaunas gives you all day. The terrace closes at 18:00 sharp and the last elevator runs at 17:45, so do not dawdle in the nave.
Open in Google Maps →From the basilica, ride the funicular back down and turn left onto V. Putvinskio g. — 6 minutes through the 1930s villa quarter brings you to Uoksas at no. 31, on the ground floor of a former diplomat's house. This is Kaunas's flagship modern Lithuanian kitchen: chef Martynas cooks rye, beetroot, smoked eel and forest mushrooms with restraint and a Nordic eye. Order à la carte the beetroot tartare with smoked curd (€12) and the slow-braised beef cheek with parsnip (€19), or surrender to the seven-course tasting menu (€65). The wine list is deliberately Baltic and Georgian — let the sommelier choose.
Tip: Reserve at least 24 hours ahead (phone or website) — Uoksas seats only 32 and Friday-Saturday books out a full week in advance. And the area-wide trap to avoid: any restaurant directly on Laisvės alėja with a laminated English menu and €18 cepelinai under a heat lamp — locals eat exactly one block off the boulevard, which is precisely where you're sitting right now.
Open in Google Maps →Walk to the northern tip of Old Town where the Nemunas and Neris rivers braid together — a red-brick rotunda stands alone on a grassy mound, the city's earliest defender of trade and faith. Arrive before the museum opens at 10:00 and you'll have the medieval ramparts and the riverbank entirely to yourself. From 11:00 the day-trip coaches roll in from Vilnius, so this single hour is the one you cannot get back.
Tip: Skip the small archaeology exhibit in the basement and climb the tower instead — it's the only place in the city where you can frame the castle, both rivers, and the Old Town skyline in a single photograph. Morning sidelight rakes across the brick at this hour; by noon the façade flattens out.
Open in Google Maps →Stroll south through cobbled Pilies and Muziejaus streets — eight minutes past pastel merchant houses with their Hanseatic gables — and the square opens around the snow-white tiered tower of the former town hall, known to locals as the White Swan. The Cathedral Basilica anchors the eastern edge: step inside for the country's largest Renaissance interior and the tomb of poet Maironis, tucked into a quiet side chapel where Lithuanians still leave handwritten notes.
Tip: Climb the cathedral bell tower (3 euro at the small side door) for the only elevated view down onto the square's pastel rooftops — it closes at 17:00 and is empty before lunch. The carved wooden confessional on the south aisle, dated 1709, is the oldest surviving piece inside; most tour guides walk straight past it.
Open in Google Maps →Two minutes off the square down Valančiaus street, descend into the wood-beamed cellar where Kaunas families have ordered cepelinai for three generations. Get the potato dumpling stuffed with curd cheese (cepelinai su varške, 8 euro) and the cold pink borscht (šaltibarščiai, 5 euro) whose colour comes from kefir and grated beetroot. Budget 15-20 euro a head with a Švyturys beer.
Tip: Meat cepelinai are boiled to order and take 25 minutes — place the order the moment you sit, then graze on potato pancakes (bulviniai blynai) while waiting. Ask for a 'kabina' — a carved wooden booth in the back room with a private door — instead of the open dining hall by the entrance.
Open in Google Maps →Walk west along Aleksoto street for four minutes to the most flamboyant Gothic façade in Lithuania — a 15th-century Hanseatic merchant house named for a pagan thunder god whose carved figure was uncovered in its brick wall. Continue 100 metres to the riverbank where the dark Gothic Vytautas Church squats by the Nemunas, built in 1400 by the grand duke himself as a vow of thanks for surviving the Battle of the Vorskla.
Tip: The House of Perkūnas façade is shadowed all morning by the buildings opposite — afternoon is the only time the western sun reaches across that brick lace, so this is when you photograph it. Inside is a small Adam Mickiewicz museum; pass unless you read Polish romantic poetry.
Open in Google Maps →Cross the pedestrian bridge over the Nemunas — six minutes, the river wind in your face, the Old Town receding behind you — to the 1935 wooden funicular at the base of Aleksotas hill. The 40-second ride costs 1 euro; at the top, a small terrace gives you the most photographed view in the country: the entire Old Town skyline, castle on the right, rivers converging at your feet.
Tip: This hour is the deliberate one — the sun is now behind you, lighting the Old Town's spires and roofs in honey gold. Sunset itself drops behind the wrong horizon for this view; the magic window is roughly 90 minutes before sundown. Bring a 2-euro coin: the ticket booth doesn't take cards and the conductor will not break a 20.
Open in Google Maps →Walk back across the bridge and follow the riverside promenade ten minutes east — Uoksas sits in a glass-fronted villa on Maironio street, the only kitchen in Kaunas making serious work of fine dining. The tasting menu (60 euro, six courses) reads the Lithuanian forest like a map: birch sap, pickled spruce tips, smoked pike-perch from the Curonian Lagoon. À la carte mains run 22-28 euro.
Tip: Reserve at least three days ahead via uoksas.lt — there are only 28 seats and the chef has taken national restaurant of the year twice. Tourist trap warning: do NOT eat dinner under the patio umbrellas on Town Hall Square itself — those addresses charge double the prevailing price for reheated frozen cepelinai aimed squarely at coach passengers.
Open in Google Maps →From the city centre walk north on Donelaičio and Kęstučio streets, ten minutes uphill, to the lower station of the 1931 Žaliakalnis funicular — the oldest continuously operating funicular in Europe, two carriages still cranking up the slope on the original cable. The 67-second wooden ride climbs to Christ's Resurrection Basilica, a white concrete monolith begun in 1934 as the nation's thanksgiving for independence and finally completed in 2004 after Soviet desecration.
Tip: The rooftop terrace lift opens at 10:00 — be at the basilica door by 09:55 and ride up the moment they unlock. On a clear morning you can pick out the green Italianate domes of Pažaislis Monastery nine kilometres east. Five minutes inside the austere nave is enough; the architecture is the point, not the interior decoration.
Open in Google Maps →Take the funicular down — same ticket valid — and walk south on V. Putvinskio street for six minutes, green sycamores overhead, interwar villas with rounded balconies on both sides. The museum opens at 11:00 sharp and houses 3,000 sculptures, masks and carvings of the devil collected from 60 countries by painter Antanas Žmuidzinavičius from 1906 onwards. Look for the Hitler-and-Stalin figure dancing as twin devils on a heap of human bones — a quiet act of resistance carved in 1980s Soviet Lithuania.
Tip: Start on the third floor and work down — you'll end with the international collection rather than hitting devil-fatigue while the strongest pieces are still ahead. The unsung stars are the 1980s Lithuanian folk masks on floor two, painted by village craftsmen who never showed their work elsewhere; most visitors rush past them to the imported devils. Photos allowed without flash.
Open in Google Maps →Walk one block south to Laisvės alėja — the 1.6 km pedestrian boulevard that has been Kaunas's living room since 1856 — and turn west to number 70. Spurginė is a Soviet-era doughnut counter that refuses to die: order three spurgos (1.20 euro each) from the glass case — the classic curd cheese, the rose-jam, the cherry — and a bowl of šaltibarščiai (4 euro) if you want it to count as a meal. Total: 8-10 euro.
Tip: This is lunch as a Kaunas student eats it, not a Michelin meal — the point is the unchanged 1970s pink-and-cream tiled interior, not the kitchen. Sit at the window counter facing the avenue and watch the city pass. The cherry-filled spurga is the local favourite and sells out by 14:00; ask which tray was fried last if you want yours still warm.
Open in Google Maps →Walk east along the avenue itself — 15 minutes end to end, lime trees overhead, no cars permitted. UNESCO inscribed Kaunas's interwar architecture in 2023, and this is its spine: the 1930 Central Post Office at number 102 with its golden mosaic façade, the streamlined Pienocentras dairy headquarters, the Romuva cinema of 1940 still showing films. The avenue ends at Vytautas Park spreading down to the Nemunas.
Tip: Look UP — modernist Kaunas hides its best details on the second and third floors, above eye-level shopfronts dressed for tenants who came after. Pienocentras at number 55 has streamline-moderne porthole windows worth crossing the street to frame. Pick up the free 'Modernism for the Future' map at any tourism kiosk; it numbers 33 buildings within a ten-minute radius.
Open in Google Maps →Walk back west on Donelaičio street — seven minutes parallel to Laisvės alėja — to Unity Square (Vienybės aikštė), the patriotic heart of the interwar capital. The museum at its centre holds the broken-orange wreckage of the Lituanica, the single-engine aircraft in which Steponas Darius and Stasys Girėnas tried to fly New York to Kaunas non-stop in 1933 and crashed 650 km short of home. Outside, the 49-bell carillon plays the national anthem at 16:00 daily.
Tip: Time your arrival for 15:55 so you are standing in the front garden when the carillon begins — twelve minutes of bell music drifting over the square, more moving than any exhibit inside. Once it ends, head straight to the Lituanica gallery on the ground floor; that is the room people return to. Last Sunday of every month is free entry.
Open in Google Maps →From Unity Square walk east along Laisvės alėja for five minutes — Etno Dvaras occupies number 88, a wood-pillared interior dressed like a Žemaitija country manor with hanging linen, iron lanterns and a wood stove. Order the pork knuckle braised in dark beer (16 euro) and šakotis-style tree cake (5 euro); mains run 12-18 euro, three courses with a beer about 35 euro a head. This is the restaurant where Kaunas families bring visiting cousins.
Tip: Walk past the front terrace and ask for the back room — the carved gallery upstairs is quieter and has the carved-wood ceiling that's worth being inside the building to see. Tourist trap warning for Laisvės alėja: avoid the addresses with laminated photo menus and English-only outdoor signage — those target the cruise-coach circuit and charge 18 euro for industrial cepelinai. A real Kaunas restaurant prints its menu Lithuanian-first, English second.
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Kaunas?
Most travelers enjoy Kaunas in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Kaunas?
The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Kaunas?
A practical starting point is about €95 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Kaunas?
A good first shortlist for Kaunas includes Kaunas Castle, Rotušės aikštė & Old Town, Žaliakalnis Funicular & Christ's Resurrection Basilica.