Budapest
City Guide

Budapest

Hungary · Best time to visit: Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct.

Guide coming in Français, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 2 days
Daily budget HUF80.00/day
Best season Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct
Language Hungarian
Currency HUF
Time zone Europe/Budapest
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

The Moment Pest Takes Your Breath Away

09:00

Hungarian Parliament Building

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €17

Start your Budapest story at the most magnificent parliament in Europe. The 09:00 English-language guided tour lets you inside before the midday crowds descend — you'll walk through the vaulted Grand Staircase, stand beneath the 96-metre dome, and see the Holy Crown of Hungary in near-silence. Morning light floods the stained glass from the east, turning the interior into a cathedral of gold.

Tip: Book tickets online at jfrgy.hu at least 3 days ahead — the 09:00 English slot sells out fast. Enter from the Visitor Centre on Kossuth tér's north side, not the main facade. Tours may be cancelled on parliamentary sitting days; check the calendar before your trip.

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11:00

St. Stephen's Basilica

Religious
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €4

Walk south along the Danube embankment from Parliament — after 5 minutes you'll pass the Shoes on the Danube Bank, a haunting iron memorial worth a quiet moment. Then turn inland on Zrínyi utca, where the Basilica's neoclassical dome rises ahead. By 11:00 the first tour-bus wave has passed but the dome terrace is still uncrowded — climb the 364 steps or take the lift for a 360-degree panorama that puts all of Budapest at your feet. Inside, find the golden reliquary holding the mummified right hand of St. Stephen, Hungary's founding king.

Tip: The church itself asks a small donation (€2); the dome climb costs €4. Take the panoramic lift if your legs are tired — the view is identical. For photos, the south-facing terrace gives you Parliament and the river in one frame.

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12:30

Café Kör

Food
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €15

Step out of the Basilica's south exit and walk one block to Sas utca — Café Kör is the kind of unpretentious neighbourhood bistro that Budapest does brilliantly. Locals pack this tiny dining room for honest Hungarian cooking at honest prices. Order the gulyásleves (beef goulash soup, €5) to start, then the chicken paprikash with hand-pinched nokedli dumplings (€11). The portions are enormous and the paprika is the real thing — smoky, warm, and nothing like the supermarket version.

Tip: No reservations for lunch — arrive right at 12:30. By 13:00 every table is taken and the queue spills onto the street. Cash is preferred though cards are accepted. Ask for the daily fish special if it's on the chalkboard; they source it fresh from Lake Balaton.

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14:00

Central Market Hall

Shopping
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk south from Café Kör along Váci utca, Pest's main pedestrian boulevard — it's touristy but the architecture above the shopfronts is worth looking up at. After 15 minutes you'll see the neo-Gothic iron roof of the Central Market Hall ahead. The ground floor is where Budapest does its grocery shopping: mountains of paprika, strings of dried sausage, jars of acacia honey. Head upstairs to the mezzanine back corner for a fried lángos (deep-fried dough with sour cream and cheese, €3) — the undisputed king of Hungarian street food.

Tip: Closed on Sundays. The ground-floor paprika vendors near the main entrance charge triple — walk to the far end of the hall where locals shop and buy the same Szeged sweet paprika for €3 instead of €9. Tin boxes make the best souvenir; they're airtight and stack flat in your luggage.

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15:30

Dohány Street Synagogue

Religious
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €14

Walk north from the market along Múzeum körút for 10 minutes, then turn right on Dohány utca — the twin Moorish-Byzantine towers are unmistakable. This is the largest synagogue in Europe and the second-largest in the world. Afternoon light streams through the rose window, painting the interior in reds and blues. The guided tour takes you through the main sanctuary, the Heroes' Temple, and the Raoul Wallenberg Memorial Garden with its weeping willow tree of remembrance — each silver leaf engraved with a name. It is one of the most moving memorials in Europe.

Tip: Closed on Saturdays and Jewish holidays. Buy the combo ticket (€14) that includes the Jewish Museum next door — it adds only 20 minutes and the collection of ceremonial objects is extraordinary. Photography is allowed without flash. Men are given a paper kippah at entry.

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19:00

Mazel Tov

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €25

Walk 5 minutes north through the Jewish Quarter's graffiti-covered courtyards — past Szimpla Kert (peek inside the famous ruin bar if the queue is short) — to Mazel Tov on Akácfa utca. This converted courtyard space is draped in fairy lights and greenery, with a soaring glass canopy that makes it feel like dining in a garden even in winter. Order the lamb kofta with tahini (€13) and the shakshuka for sharing (€9). Pair everything with a Furmint dry white from Tokaj — €4 a glass and the best-value wine pairing in Budapest.

Tip: Reserve online 2-3 days ahead and request a courtyard table. Without a booking, arrive at 18:30 — the 19:00 rush fills every seat. After dinner, Szimpla Kert is a 2-minute walk for drinks, but avoid eating there — overpriced, tourist-trap quality. Any restaurant on Kazinczy utca with a laminated photo menu is a hard pass.

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Day 2

Buda's Hilltop Crown and the Waters That Heal

09:00

Fisherman's Bastion

Landmark
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €3

Take bus 16 from Deák Ferenc tér to Szentháromság tér on Castle Hill — a 10-minute ride that saves you the steep climb first thing in the morning. At 09:00 the white neo-Romanesque turrets are bathed in warm eastern light and you'll share the terraces with a handful of early risers instead of the midday selfie crowds. The view from the upper terrace is the defining panorama of Budapest: Parliament, Chain Bridge, and the Danube in one sweeping frame. Walk along all seven turrets — each represents one of the Magyar tribes that founded Hungary.

Tip: The upper terrace charges €3 from March to October between 09:00-19:00, but the lower terrace is always free and the view is nearly identical — most visitors don't realise this. For the classic Parliament-framed-by-turrets photo, stand at the south end of the upper terrace and shoot through the pointed arches.

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10:00

Matthias Church

Religious
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €8

Step through the archway at the south end of Fisherman's Bastion — Matthias Church is 30 seconds away, its diamond-patterned Zsolnay ceramic roof tiles glinting in the mid-morning sun. Inside, every surface is covered in painted geometric patterns that feel more Ottoman than Gothic — a visual record of Budapest's centuries under Turkish rule. The church has crowned Hungarian kings since the 13th century, and the acoustics are so extraordinary that organ concerts are held here regularly. Climb the narrow spiral staircase to the gallery for a view down into the painted nave.

Tip: Check the church website for service times — it closes to tourists during Mass (usually Sunday mornings and some weekday evenings). The Zsolnay roof tiles are best photographed from the south side of Szentháromság tér around 10:00-11:00 when direct sun hits the coloured ceramic.

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11:15

Buda Castle

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Walk south along the Castle District's cobblestone spine — take Úri utca, lined with pastel-coloured medieval houses and almost no tourists compared to the main road. After 10 minutes you'll reach the vast Baroque bulk of Buda Castle. Walk through the Habsburg-era courtyards to the eastern terrace for a face-on view of Pest that rivals the Fisherman's Bastion panorama but with almost no one around. The Turul bird statue at the northern gate and the Matthias Fountain on the western facade are the two sculptures worth lingering at.

Tip: The castle grounds and terraces are free and open 24 hours — it's the views you're here for. If you want to enter the Hungarian National Gallery inside, tickets are €8 and the 19th-century painting hall (Munkácsy, Szinyei Merse) is the highlight. Take the terrace near the funicular upper station for one last panoramic shot before heading down.

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13:00

Baltazár Grill and Wine

Food
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €18

Walk back north through the Castle District for 8 minutes to Országház utca, a quieter street behind Matthias Church. Baltazár is a neighbourhood grill that happens to be on Castle Hill — the kitchen is serious about sourcing, and you can see the open charcoal grill from your table. The Baltazár burger with mangalica pork and smoked cheese (€12) is legendary, or go for the duck leg confit with braised red cabbage (€16). Ask for a glass of Villányi Franc (€5), a Hungarian red that could hold its own against any Bordeaux.

Tip: Lunch service is relaxed — walk in at 13:00 and you'll get a table immediately. If the weather is good, grab the small terrace out front; you'll look directly at Fisherman's Bastion without a single selfie stick in the way.

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14:30

Széchenyi Thermal Bath

Entertainment
Duration: 3h Estimated cost: €22

Take bus 16 back down from Castle Hill to Deák tér, then hop on the M1 metro — continental Europe's oldest underground line — four stops to Széchenyi fürdő. Walk through the grand neo-Baroque entrance of the largest thermal bath complex in Europe. The afternoon is the sweet spot: morning lap-swimmers have left, evening crowds haven't arrived, and the outdoor pools steam dramatically in the open air. Soak in the 38°C main outdoor pool — the chess-playing pensioners in the corner have been coming every day for decades. Work your way through the 18 pools from cool plunge to the hottest thermal chamber. This is not a spa day; this is how Budapest has lived for 500 years.

Tip: Buy tickets online at szechenyibath.hu — the locker ticket (€22) is perfectly fine; the private cabin (€28) adds a changing room you won't use after the first 5 minutes. Bring your own towel and flip-flops to save on rentals. Avoid Saturdays when sparties (pool parties) take over the outdoor pools after dark.

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19:00

Menza

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €22

Walk from the baths back to the M1 metro and ride three stops to Oktogon, then stroll one block south to Liszt Ferenc tér — a leafy square lined with terraces that comes alive at dusk. Menza is a love letter to 1970s Hungarian canteen culture reimagined with proper cooking: retro furniture, enamel plates, and patterned wallpaper. Order the Wiener schnitzel pounded impossibly thin with cucumber salad (€12) or the roast duck leg with steamed red cabbage and plum sauce (€15). Finish with a túrógombóc — sweet curd dumplings rolled in buttered breadcrumbs (€5) that you'll dream about on the flight home.

Tip: Reserve a terrace table for 19:00 — the square faces west and catches the last golden light. The Unicum Spritz (€6) uses Hungary's famously bitter herbal liqueur and actually makes it drinkable. After dinner, walk 10 minutes down Andrássy Avenue toward the Danube for a night view of the illuminated Parliament — the last image of Budapest you want to carry home. Skip the Váci utca souvenir shops; everything there costs triple what you paid at the Central Market Hall.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Budapest?

Most travelers enjoy Budapest in 2 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Budapest?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Budapest?

A practical starting point is about €80 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Budapest?

A good first shortlist for Budapest includes Hungarian Parliament Building.