Poznan
City Guide

Poznan

Pologne · Best time to visit: May-Sep.

Guide coming in Français, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget PLN55.00/day
Best season May-Sep
Language English
Currency PLN
Time zone Europe/Warsaw
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Two Stubborn Goats and a Thousand Years of Defiance

09:00

Ostrów Tumski (Cathedral Island)

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

From Poznań Główny station, take tram 6 east to the Katedra stop — or walk 25 minutes along the Warta River as the city wakes up around you. Cross the small Bishop Jordan Bridge onto the island where Poland was born: in 966 AD the first Polish ruler was baptised here, and the twin-towered Poznań Cathedral — the nation's oldest — has anchored this sliver of land ever since. Circle the cathedral's eastern apse to catch the Golden Chapel glowing in the early sun, then walk the silent cobblestone lanes to the tiny Church of the Virgin Mary, one of Poland's oldest surviving buildings. At this hour the island belongs entirely to you and the river birds.

Tip: Walk behind the cathedral to the island's eastern tip for a reflection shot of the twin towers in the Cybina River — this angle never appears in guidebooks. The iron Bishop Jordan Bridge with the cathedral behind you also makes a strong foreground shot, and at 9 a.m. there is not a single tourist in your frame.

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10:45

Old Market Square & Town Hall

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Cross back over Bishop Jordan Bridge into the Śródka neighbourhood — stop to photograph the enormous trompe-l'oeil 3D mural on the apartment building at the corner, a staircase that seems to climb into thin air — then walk 15 minutes west through the Old Town gates. The Old Market Square hits you all at once: a Renaissance Town Hall ringed by rows of candy-coloured merchant houses, the whole composition almost too symmetrical to be real. Position yourself at the tower's eastern face by 11:50; at noon sharp, two mechanical brass goats emerge from a door above the clock and butt heads while the crowd cheers — they have been doing this since 1551. After the show, explore the square's corners: the Bamberka Fountain and the tiny Fish Sellers' Houses tucked in the southeast.

Tip: Most tourists crowd the western side of the tower; stand on the eastern face for an unobstructed view of the goats with the pastel merchant houses as your backdrop. After the show, walk to the southeast corner to find the Domki Budnicze (Fish Sellers' Houses) — four impossibly narrow Baroque facades that are more photogenic than the main square itself.

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12:15

Pyra Bar

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €10

Walk two minutes south of the square down ul. Wrocławska — Pyra Bar is where Poznań students and office workers demolish plates of the city's signature dish. Order pyry z gzikiem — potatoes mashed with tangy white cheese curd, chopped chives, and a drizzle of lard (15 PLN / ~€3.50) — and add a bowl of żurek, sour rye soup with egg and kiełbasa served in a bread bowl (18 PLN / ~€4). The whole meal takes 20 minutes and costs less than a single cappuccino in most Western European capitals. Budget €8–12 per person.

Tip: On your way out, grab a rogal świętomarciński (8–12 PLN / ~€2–3) from a certified bakery near the square — this croissant-shaped pastry with 81 layers of dough and white poppy seed filling has EU protected geographical status, meaning it can only legally be made in Poznań. Do not buy the mass-produced supermarket versions; ask for it fresh at a bakery displaying the certification.

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13:30

Imperial Castle

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk west along ul. Święty Marcin, Poznań's grandest boulevard — lined with Art Nouveau facades and the imposing main university building — for 12 minutes until the Imperial Castle looms at the end like a dark exclamation mark. Built in 1910 as Kaiser Wilhelm II's personal residence, this neo-Romanesque fortress is the last royal castle constructed in Europe, a monument to Prussian ambition rendered in dark quarried stone. Circle the full exterior: the northern tower is the most imposing angle, and the open inner courtyard reveals the building's overwhelming scale. The castle later served as Hitler's wartime headquarters and then a Communist cultural centre — its walls have absorbed more history than most cities' entire skylines.

Tip: Walk around to the castle's south side for a view across the surrounding park that almost nobody sees — this is where the building drops its government-office demeanour and looks like the fortress it was designed to be. Bullet scars from WWII are still visible on the northwest corner if you look at chest height.

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14:45

Stary Browar (Old Brewery)

Shopping
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Exit the castle grounds from the southern gate, cross through the small park, and walk 8 minutes south on ul. Półwiejska — the red-brick chimney of the former Hugger Brewery signals your arrival. Stary Browar is an internationally award-winning architectural hybrid: 19th-century industrial brick fused with soaring glass atriums, preserved brewery equipment displayed alongside sculpture installations, and a hidden rooftop courtyard garden that most visitors never find. Even if you buy nothing, walk the full circuit of every level — the building itself is the exhibit, and the central atrium floods with natural light in the mid-afternoon, exactly as the architects intended.

Tip: Head to the inner courtyard garden on the upper level for a quiet moment after a long day of walking — it is invisible from the main shopping floors. For a Poznań-only souvenir, look for locally made ceramics or handmade cosmetics from Polish artisan brands on the ground floor rather than the international chains upstairs.

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19:00

Brovaria

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €25

The 10-minute walk north from Stary Browar back to the Old Market Square at dusk is its own reward — the merchant house facades catch the last golden light and the square transforms into an entirely different city from the one you saw at noon. Brovaria has brewed its own beer in the basement vaults since 2003 and is the square's only operating microbrewery. Order the duck confit with plum sauce (58 PLN / ~€13.50) or the massive slow-roasted pork knuckle — golonka — with crackling and mustard (52 PLN / ~€12), and pair it with a glass of unfiltered Brovaria wheat beer (16 PLN / ~€3.70). Budget €20–30 per person.

Tip: Reserve after 17:00 on weekends; on weeknights walk in at 19:00 and ask for a window table overlooking the illuminated Town Hall — it turns dinner into a private light show. One final warning for the square: do not eat at any restaurant with a hawker standing outside waving a laminated menu. If they need someone on the pavement to fill seats, the food is not filling them on its own. Brovaria never does this.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Poznan?

Most travelers enjoy Poznan in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Poznan?

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

What's the daily budget for Poznan?

A practical starting point is about €55 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Poznan?

A good first shortlist for Poznan includes Ostrów Tumski (Cathedral Island), Old Market Square & Town Hall, Imperial Castle.