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Budapest
Budapest
Relaxing spas, raucous bars and rooftop views await you in the Hungarian capital
2025: There’s loads happening in Budapest right now, terraces, pools and live venues all a-buzz – not to mention the upcoming opening of the Time Out Market Budapest! Check out the concert and party schedules at the Dürer Kert, A38 Boat and Akvárium Klub, but don’t forget about the music festivals at unique locations.
Get ready to glide along the Danube, lay into a bowl of hearty goulash and take in some serious views from rooftop bars, chairlifts and great heights – Budapest awaits. This city is steeped in history, blessed with spa waters and embellished with grandiose façades from the Habsburg days, with plenty of new openings to get stuck into too. From attractions to nightlife, here’s our local’s guide to the city.
RECOMMENDED: Ultimate guide to what to do in Budapest
In a word, no. Budapest is no longer a cheap date but the weak local forint means your meal or night out is still affordable. Yes, that soak in the Széchenyi costs £20, but a tram ride is £1, a cinema ticket £5 and a beer £3 – if reclaiming the deposit on your glass. It might not be one of Europe’s cheapest city breaks, but it’s definitely good for a budget trip.
The perfect day in Budapest always begins with coffee, ideally with an extravagant cake at the ornate Művész near the Opera. From here, you can stroll, cycle or take Continental Europe’s oldest metro along elegant boulevard Andrássy út to the City Park, where the House of Hungarian Music or the Széchenyi Baths await. A late lunch at culinary landmark Gundel shouldn’t break the bank nor evening drinks at the panoramic 360 Bar as the sun sinks over Europe’s most beautiful metropolis.
Words by Peterjon Cresswell, original photos by Szabó Gábor, both based in Budapest. At Time Out, all of our travel guides are written by local writers who know their cities inside out. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines. This guide includes affiliate links, which have no influence on our editorial content. For more information, see our affiliate guidelines.
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Budapest will soon be home to Time Out Market – the food and cultural market that brings the best of the city together under one roof, opening 2025 at Corvin Palace on Blaha Lujza Square. Time Out Market Budapest will feature 11 kitchens, three bars, five event spaces, and around 540 seats. Find out more!
What is it? Surrounded by the greenery of City Park, the Széchenyi Baths are an ornate oasis of relaxation in thermal waters. Pools piping hot, dauntingly cold and mercifully temperate await inside and out, complemented by steam and dry saunas, ice machines, relaxation areas, a lane pool, a whirlpool and a bar/restaurant with an expansive terrace. There’s enough to keep you healthily entertained all day – the hefty price of admission means you’ll want to get your money’s worth in any case.
Why go? Practically all European capitals have galleries, museums and Michelin-starred restaurants – sitting outside in the Széchenyi Baths as the city sizzles or snowflakes flutter is a uniquely Budapest experience.
🤫 Insider tip: On Saturday nights, the Széchenyi transforms into Sparty, a mass pool party with DJs and light shows.
Address: Állatkerti körút 9-11, 1146 Budapest, Hungary
Opening hours: Monday-Friday 7am-8pm, Saturday-Sunday 8am-8pm
What is it? The short climb by funicular from Clark Ádám tér takes you to the former royal palace atop Castle Hill now housing the National Gallery, the Budapest History Museum and the Széchényi Library. Its green-coloured cupola, an addition during the lengthy post-war rebuild in the 60s, forms an integral part of Buda’s stunning cityscape.
Why go? A quick zip up Castle Hill by funicular is pretty much top of everyone’s bucket list their first time here – particularly if they’re a fan of Monet or Cezanne, on view at the National Gallery near the funicular terminal. Visitors may also access the panoramic terrace for outstanding views from the cupola.
🤫 Insider tip: Check Buda Castle’s events schedule before you go: throughout the year it hosts a wine festival, a sausage festival and more.
Address: Szent György tér 2, 1014 Budapest, Hungary
Opening hours: Museums open Tuesday to Sunday, 10am-6pm, closed Mondays. Outdoor areas and courtyards open 24 hours.
What is it? This is Budapest’s original ruin bar, the one that set the tone for so many others to follow, adorning a vast, dilapidated building, its open courtyard and labyrinth of rooms, with eclectic furniture, edgy artwork and fairy lights. A regular agenda of DJs and live acts is programmed, and it tends to be the spot for foreign partygoers.
Why go? It’s still an essential Budapest experience (but perhaps not for Hungarians trying to avoid tourists). If you’ve never visited the city, the Szimpla will blow your mind – just be prepared to pay a little more for your drinks.
🤫 Insider tip: Treat your hangover to a gentle Sunday morning at the Szimpla market, in which artisanal producers set up around the main courtyard amid bearable live jazz.
Address: Kazinczy utca 14, 1075 Budapest, Hungary
Opening hours: Monday-Friday 3pm-4am, Saturday 12pm-4am, Sunday 9am-4am
What is it? The city’s most revered family-friendly lido on recreational retreat, Margaret Island.
Why go? The Palatinus opens up from May onwards, when the mainly shaded kiddies’ pool, wave pool and leisure pool, lined with water jets, all come into their own. There’s even a thermal pool with sunbathing areas and waterproof chessboards.
🤫 Insider tip: As a treat for little ones unhappy about being dragged out of the water, take them to the nearby musical fountain, illuminated in summer, a selection of popular tunes played on a loop every evening.
Address: Margaret Island, 1007 Budapest, Hungary
Opening hours: Daily 9am-7pm
What is it? This former Ukrainian stone-carrying cargo ship has been transformed into one of Budapest’s most popular nightspots for live music, DJ parties and general after-hours fun. It has a restaurant, too, and a gallery with occasional exhibitions, but its varied concert agenda is the main draw, establishing the A38 as a mainstay of the city’s music scene for the best part of 20 years.
Why go? For a night out during your stay here, this is the best bet, whatever happens to be scheduled that particular evening. Even if a Bulgarian black metal band isn’t to your liking, you can always enjoy a drink on the top deck and watch the Danube go by. The A38 is also close to the all-night 4/6 tram route on Petőfi Bridge above, meaning you needn’t mess around with taxis afterwards.
🤫 Insider tip: now that it’s spring, A38’s rooftop is the place to be for the sunset.
Address: Petőfi híd, Buda side, 1117 Budapest, Hungary
Opening hours: Monday-Sunday 8am-10pm or until the end of the last programme
🪩 Read more about Budapest’s best nightlife spots
What is it? The Danube defines and delineates Budapest into its twin components, Buda and Pest. Wide and graceful, the river is linked by a string of beautiful bridges, and traversed by cruise ships, barges, fire-red speedboats and waterborne lines on the city’s transport network.
Why go? Relaxing by day, romantic after dark when the bridges light up like pearl necklaces, the Danube plays to your inner Strauss, for hour-long sightseeing tours, all-day cruises and more.
🤫 Insider tip: Celebrating something special? Why not indulge in a floating starlit dinner à deux.
What is it? Thrown up by architect Frigyes Schulek as an afterthought – he had just spent decades reconfiguring next door’s Matthias Church in medieval style – this turreted confection provides wonderful Danube views from its vantage point on Castle Hill.
Why go? The views are outstanding but this is also a history lesson. Harking back to the days when there was a fish market here, the menfolk bringing up their catch from the Danube immediately below, the Fishermen’s Bastion has the same number of turrets as the original Hungarian tribal leaders who came to this part of the Carpathian Basin in the late 800s. All links to the Hungarian millennial celebrations of 1896, when this was built.
🤫 Insider tip: for fewer crowds and twinkling Budapest panoramic views, consider stopping by at night after dinner.
Address: Szentháromság tér 5, 1014 Budapest, Hungary
Opening hours: Lower terraces open 24 hours year-round, upper terraces open daily 9am-9pm
What is it? Effortlessly gliding up to Budapest’s highest point atop János Hill at 527 metres in 12 panoramic minutes, the Zugliget Chairlift is an accessible, affordable and thrilling attraction in operation all year round.
Why go? Passengers sit in two-person gondolas as the Hungarian capital spreads out before them, romantic on summer evenings, off the scale on snowy winter mornings. Special starlit rides are also laid on in high season, the stuff that proposals are made of. And, with under-15s charged a couple of euros or so for a return ticket, it can be a family affair.
🤫 Insider tip: You may have reached the top of János Hill but higher still is the Elizabeth Lookout, a calf-crunching hike further up, offering wonderful views from a tower built in 1911.
Address: Zugligeti út 97, 1121 Budapest, Hungary
Opening hours: Opens 10am every day, closing times change seasonally but extends to 7pm in summer months
What is it? Synonymous with the cake of the same name, Gerbeaud is the non plus ultra of Budapest confectioners, no idle boast in a city built on sweet indulgence – and right on the main square of Vörösmarty tér, too.
Why go? What was the point of the Habsburgs if not to spoil us with creamy treats a century or so later? Their empire may have crumbled but their cakes are still devoured with delicate little forks on exquisite china in institutions such as Gerbeaud, inventor of the layered chocolate-and-apricot delight that carries its name and logo across Hungary.
🤫 Insider tip: Every day between 2pm and 6pm, Gerbeaud offers an afternoon tea feauturing Hungary’s most revered cakes, Dobos, Gerbeaud and the buttercream-rich Esterházy slice.
Address: Vörösmarty tér 7-8, 1051 Budapest, Hungary
Opening hours: Monday-Thursday 9am-8pm, Friday-Saturday 9am-9pm, Sunday 9am-8pm
What is it? Numerous firewalls around Pest, particularly in District VII, are decorated with murals, some related to Hungarian history or culture. These echo many aspects of the country’s past, its inventions and creativity such as Rubik’s Cube, its role in World War II and heroism in the 1956 Uprising, and its recent achievements, such as award-winning scientist Katalin Karikó, instrumental in the development of a coronavirus vaccine.
Why go? For an alternative sightseeing tour, with special walks available, Budapest’s murals offer the visitor an insight into areas of Hungary’s heritage they might not have known about, and take them to streets they may not have walked down otherwise.
Don’t miss: The huge representation of the famous match between Hungary and England in 1953 at Wembley, overlooking a car park in Rumbach Sebestyén utca.
Address: Various locations around Budapest
📍 How to do a weekend in Budapest
🍲 The best restaurants in Budapest
🏘️ The best Airbnbs in Budapest
🏨 The best hotels in Budapest
🍽️ Coming soon: Time Out Market Budapest
🇭🇺 Ultimate guide to what to do in Budapest
Been there, done that? Think again, my friend.
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