Atlas Guide Logo
Atlas Guide

Explore the World

Austria · Central Europe

Vienna.
The empire is gone. The culture stayed.

The Habsburg capital that produced Mozart, Beethoven, Freud, Klimt, and the Wiener Schnitzel. Imperial palaces on every boulevard. Coffee houses where nobody has been in a hurry since 1683. And a classical music programme that runs every single night of the year.

1.9M
Population
Currency
9.0/10
Safety
GMT+2
Timezone
VIE
Airport
Overview

The city that ran an empire for six centuries left behind the most extraordinary cultural infrastructure in Europe.

Vienna was the capital of the Habsburg Empire for over 600 years — a court that ruled from Madrid to Budapest and accumulated one of the greatest concentrations of art, architecture, music, and intellectual life in Western history. When the empire collapsed in 1918, Vienna was left with the infrastructure of a great power and the population of a medium-sized city. The result is a place where you can attend the opera for €10, see Vermeer and Raphael in the afternoon, drink coffee in a room unchanged since 1905, and walk home through streets designed for an empire.

The city's cultural output in the late 19th and early 20th centuries was singular. Freud invented psychoanalysis here. Klimt and Schiele reinvented painting. Mahler directed the Opera. Wittgenstein, Popper, and the Vienna Circle transformed philosophy. The Wiener Werkstätte reimagined design. This was not a coincidence of geography — it was the specific result of Vienna's position as a crossroads of German, Slavic, Hungarian, and Mediterranean influences, catalysed by the anxiety of a declining empire.

Today Vienna is consistently ranked the world's most liveable city — clean, efficient, culturally extraordinary, and operating on a scale that makes it feel intimate despite its imperial ambitions. It rewards slower visitors. An afternoon in a coffee house with a newspaper is not wasted time here. It is the point.

Districts

The First District for the palaces. Naschmarkt for the food. The 7th for the galleries.

Vienna is organised into 23 numbered districts (Bezirke). The First District (Innere Stadt) is the historic core within the Ringstrasse. The surrounding inner districts — 4th through 9th — are the most interesting for eating, drinking, and the contemporary city. The 13th and 14th contain the great palaces on the outer edges.

Naschmarkt & 4th/5th/6th Districts
Food market · Restaurants · Local life

The Naschmarkt — Vienna's most famous open-air food and flea market — runs along the Wienzeile just south of the First District. The surrounding Mariahilf and Margareten neighbourhoods are Vienna's most densely restaurant-populated areas. The best base for food-focused visitors and those who want a local rather than tourist atmosphere.

Naschmarkt daily Saturday flea market Best restaurants
MuseumsQuartier & 7th District (Neubau)
Contemporary art · Galleries · Cafes

The 7th District (Neubau) around the MuseumsQuartier complex is Vienna's most creative neighbourhood — independent boutiques, concept stores, gallery spaces, and the Leopold Museum and MUMOK (Museum of Modern Art) in the former Imperial Stables. The outdoor courtyards of the MQ complex are the best summer gathering place in the city.

Leopold Museum MUMOK Independent shops
Prater & 2nd District (Leopoldstadt)
Park · Prater Riesenrad · Local & up-and-coming

The former Jewish quarter of Vienna, now one of the most interesting and up-and-coming neighbourhoods — the Prater park (free to enter) with the giant Ferris wheel (Riesenrad), the Augarten porcelain factory, excellent independent restaurants, and a local atmosphere completely different from the tourist-heavy First District.

Prater park Riesenrad Local restaurants
📌
First time in Vienna?
Stay in the First District or just outside it in the 4th, 6th, or 7th. The First District puts you within walking distance of the Stephansdom, the Opera, and the great coffee houses. The 6th or 7th gives you lower prices, better restaurants, and a ten-minute U-Bahn ride to everything else.
Where to Stay

Grand hotels on the Ringstrasse. And excellent boutiques in the inner districts.

Vienna's accommodation ranges from the imperial grandeur of the Hotel Sacher and the Bristol to genuinely good mid-range boutique hotels in the inner districts. The grand hotels on the Ringstrasse are among the most storied in Europe. The boutique hotels in the 4th through 8th districts offer much better value with a short U-Bahn ride to everything.

Hotel Sacher Wien
Grand Luxury
1st District (Opera)·from €450/night

The most famous hotel in Austria, directly behind the Vienna State Opera — birthplace of the Sachertorte, a hotel of extraordinary history (Franz Joseph, Winston Churchill, Marlene Dietrich), and still one of the finest in Central Europe. The Café Sacher is the best place to eat the original Sachertorte. An iconic Vienna experience.

Check availability →
Park Hyatt Vienna
Luxury
1st District·from €350/night

A converted early 20th-century bank building — the original banking hall now an extraordinary ballroom-style lobby, with one of the finest hotel pools in Vienna in the former bank vaults. The most architecturally spectacular hotel transformation in the city and a genuine design landmark.

Check availability →
25hours Hotel beim MuseumsQuartier
Boutique
7th District·from €130/night

A design-forward hotel in the MuseumsQuartier complex with a rooftop terrace and pool, excellent restaurant, and the most creative atmosphere in Viennese hotel accommodation. The best mid-range option for design-conscious visitors who want to be in the most interesting neighbourhood rather than the most expensive one.

Check availability →
Hotel Rathaus Wein & Design
Boutique Wine
8th District·from €160/night

Every room in this design hotel is dedicated to a different Austrian winemaker — the room features their wines, their story, and their label as the design motif. A brilliant concept and excellent execution, in a beautiful 19th-century building near the Rathaus. Consistently praised as one of the most original hotels in Vienna.

Check availability →
Wombat's City Hostel Vienna
Hostel
6th District / Mariahilf·from €22/night

One of the most praised hostel chains in Europe, with two Vienna locations. The Mariahilf location near the Naschmarkt is the best — a rooftop bar, excellent dorms, private rooms available, and the friendliest atmosphere in Vienna budget accommodation. The best budget base in the city.

Check availability →
Palais Hansen Kempinski
Palace
1st District (Schottenring)·from €300/night

A restored 19th-century palace on the Ringstrasse with a view of the Votivkirche — grand public rooms, excellent spa, and the most architecturally impressive Ringstrasse hotel at below-Sacher prices. The rooftop terrace at sunset with the Votivkirche spires in the foreground is one of the great hotel views in Vienna.

Check availability →
Interactive Hotel Map

Find and compare hotels across Vienna's districts.

Food & Coffee

The Kaffeehaus is a way of life. The Wiener Schnitzel is a religion.

Viennese cuisine is the food of a multicultural empire — Hungarian goulash, Bohemian dumplings, Italian influences, and Turkish coffee all absorbed into a local tradition of extraordinary richness. The coffee house culture is UNESCO-listed. The pastry tradition is the finest in Central Europe. And the Wiener Schnitzel, done correctly — a thin veal cutlet hammered flat, breaded, and fried in clarified butter until the breadcrumb coating puffs away from the meat in a specific wave — is one of the great dishes of the world.

01
Viennese Coffee House (Kaffeehaus)
€4–6 per coffeeHistoric cafes throughout the 1st District

The Viennese Kaffeehaus is a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage — not just a café but a social institution where you can sit for three hours with one Melange and a newspaper and nobody will hurry you. The classic coffees: Melange (espresso with steamed milk), Einspänner (black coffee topped with whipped cream, served in a glass), Verlängerter (espresso with hot water). Café Central (1876), Café Hawelka (1939), and Café Landtmann are the three most celebrated institutions. Always bring a book or a newspaper.

02
Wiener Schnitzel
€18–35Traditional Gasthäuser

A thin escalope of veal (Kalbsschnitzel), not pork (the pork version is Schnitzel Wiener Art — not the same), hammered flat, dusted in flour, egg, and breadcrumb, then fried in very hot clarified butter until the crust puffs and waves. Served with a wedge of lemon and potato salad or parsley potatoes. Figlmüller in the Bäckerstrasse is the most famous address (and deserves its reputation). Zum Wohl in the 8th is an excellent local alternative without the tourist queue.

03
Sachertorte
€7–10 per sliceCafé Sacher and Demel

A dense chocolate sponge cake with a layer of apricot jam, coated in chocolate glaze — the most famous pastry in Austria and the subject of a seven-year court case between Hotel Sacher and Demel bakery over the "original" recipe. Both serve it with a large jug of unsweetened whipped cream. The original is at Café Sacher, behind the Opera. Demel on the Kohlmarkt is the more beautiful setting. Both are correct answers.

04
Naschmarkt
€3–15 per itemWienzeile, Mon–Sat

Vienna's open-air market running 1.5km along the Wienzeile — fresh produce, Austrian cheeses, Styrian pumpkin oil, Viennese bread, Turkish food stalls, Asian grocers, and excellent takeaway stands. Open Monday to Saturday, the market is best on weekday mornings when it is primarily local shoppers. Saturday mornings add a flea market at the south end — one of the best in Central Europe for antiques, vinyl, and books. Avoid Sunday — it is closed.

05
Heurigen (Wine Taverns)
€4–7 per glassGrinzing, Gumpoldskirchen & Döbling

Vienna is the only major capital city in the world with vineyards inside the city limits. The Heuriger is the traditional wine tavern found in the outer wine districts — Grinzing, Sievering, Neustift am Walde — where the winemaker serves their own wine (Grüner Veltliner, Riesling, Gemischter Satz) at bare wooden tables in a garden or courtyard. A Heuriger evening in summer — local wine, cold cuts, bread, and a garden overlooking the city lights — is one of the most distinctly Viennese experiences possible.

Activities

Schönbrunn in the morning. Vienna Philharmonic in the evening. Kunsthistorisches Museum in between.

Vienna's activities are concentrated in two categories: the imperial heritage (palaces, museums, the Opera) and the living cultural city (coffee houses, wine taverns, the contemporary art scene). Both reward time and neither should be rushed. The standing tickets at the Opera for €10 are one of the great cultural bargains in the world.

Schönbrunn Palace
Palace
13th District·from €16 (Grand Tour)

The 1,441-room summer palace of the Habsburg emperors — the most visited monument in Austria and entirely deserving of its status. The Grand Tour covers 40 state rooms including the Hall of Mirrors where the six-year-old Mozart performed for Empress Maria Theresia in 1762. The Gloriette hilltop pavilion above the palace gardens has the finest panoramic view of Vienna. The gardens are free and beautiful year-round.

Book skip-the-line →
Vienna State Opera (Wiener Staatsoper)
Opera
1st District·from €10 standing

The most celebrated opera house in the world runs a different programme almost every night of the season (September–June) — no production is repeated consecutively, so the house performs up to 300 times per year. Standing tickets (Stehplatz) for the Parterre and gallery cost €10–13 and go on sale 80 minutes before performance at the Abendkasse. Queue from 45 minutes before. Dress code is smart casual minimum — the building itself is as extraordinary as any performance.

Book opera tickets →
Kunsthistorisches Museum
Museum
1st District (Ringstrasse)·€21

The Habsburg imperial art collection — one of the finest in the world, in one of the most beautiful museum buildings ever constructed. Vermeer's Art of Painting, Raphael's Madonna in the Meadow, Cellini's Salt Cellar, and the world's largest collection of Bruegel the Elder. The building itself — designed by Semper and Hasenauer, with painted ceilings by Klimt — is as worth seeing as the collection. Allow a full half-day.

Book tickets →
Belvedere Palace & Klimt
Palace & Art
3rd District·€17 (Upper Belvedere)

The Upper Belvedere houses the world's largest collection of Gustav Klimt — including The Kiss, one of the most reproduced paintings in history. The palace itself is a masterwork of Baroque architecture set in formal gardens. The Kiss hangs in the Marble Hall on the first floor in a room where you can sit on a bench and look at it for as long as you wish. Book online to skip the entrance queue.

Book Belvedere →
Hofburg Imperial Palace
Palace
1st District·from €18 (Sisi Museum)

The 2,600-room winter palace of the Habsburgs in the heart of the First District — the Imperial Apartments, the Sisi Museum (dedicated to Empress Elisabeth), the Imperial Silver Collection, and the Spanish Riding School (Lipizzaner stallions performing in the Winter Riding Hall). The combination ticket covers all three Imperial Apartments sections. The Spanish Riding School performances require advance booking months ahead.

Book Hofburg →
Vienna Philharmonic Concert
Concert
Musikverein, 1st District·from €6 standing

The Vienna Philharmonic performs in the Musikverein — the finest concert hall acoustics in the world, in a building of extraordinary golden grandeur. Subscription tickets are held by members and inherited across generations. However, remaining tickets and standing places go on sale before each concert. The New Year's Concert (globally televised) sells out years ahead — the regular season is far more accessible and equally extraordinary.

Check concert schedule →
Getting Around

The U-Bahn is excellent. The inner city is entirely walkable.

Vienna has one of the finest public transport networks in Europe — five U-Bahn (metro) lines, trams, and buses running on a single ticket system. The First District is walkable for most sights. The Vienna City Card covers all transport and gives museum discounts. Almost no visitor needs a taxi.

🚊
U-Bahn (Metro)

Five lines (U1–U4, U6) covering the entire city. The most useful for tourists: U1 (Stephansplatz to Schwedenplatz), U2 (MuseumsQuartier, Rathaus), U4 (Schönbrunn, Stadtpark, Schwedenplatz). Single ticket €2.40 or 24h pass €8. Trains run every 3–5 minutes during the day, and every 10–15 minutes at night (Fri–Sun, all-night service).

€2.40 single / €8 day pass
🚋
Tram (Straßenbahn)

The Ringstrasse trams (lines 1, 2, D, 71) are an excellent way to see the monumental architecture of the Ringstrasse boulevard — the Opera House, Parliament, Rathaus, Burgtheater, Votivkirche, and the great museums all in sequence. Tram 1 and 2 circle the Ring in opposite directions. Same ticket as the U-Bahn. An architectural city tour for €2.40.

€2.40 (same ticket as U-Bahn)
🚁
Vienna City Card

The Vienna City Card covers all public transport (U-Bahn, trams, buses) for 24h (€17), 48h (€25), or 72h (€29), plus discounts at most major museums and attractions. If you are spending more than one day actively sightseeing, the 48h or 72h card saves money versus individual tickets.

€17 (24h) / €25 (48h) / €29 (72h)
✈️
Airport Transfer

Vienna International Airport (VIE) is 18km from the city. The City Airport Train (CAT) runs to Wien Mitte in 16 minutes for €14.90. The S-Bahn S7 covers the same route in 25 minutes for €4.20 with a Vienna transport pass. The CAT is faster; the S7 is the smarter choice with a City Card. Taxis cost €35–45 fixed rate.

€4.20 (S7) / €14.90 (CAT) / €40 (taxi)
🚘
Train (ÖBB)

Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) from Wien Hauptbahnhof and Wien Westbahnhof. Essential for day trips to Salzburg (2h30, from €29), Bratislava (1h, from €10), and Budapest (2h30, from €19). Book Sparschiene (advance discount) tickets online at oebb.at for significant savings on regular fares.

From €10 (Bratislava) / €29 (Salzburg)
📶
eSIM / Data

Austria uses EU roaming rules, so EU SIM cards work at domestic rates. An Airalo eSIM for Austria or the broader EU covers multiple countries. Local SIMs from A1 or Magenta are available at the airport and convenience stores. Coverage is excellent across the city and in the Wachau valley for day trips.

EU roaming / eSIM from $5
Budget

Mid-range for Western Europe. The €10 standing ticket at the Opera is the best cultural bargain anywhere.

Vienna is mid-priced by Western European standards — more affordable than Zurich or London, similar to Paris, slightly more expensive than Prague. The great cultural experiences (Opera standing tickets, the Philharmonic, most museum entry) are remarkably affordable. Accommodation and restaurant meals at the top end match any European capital.

Category Budget (€60–90/day) Mid-range (€130–200/day) Comfortable (€300+/day)
Accommodation €22–45
Hostel dorm or budget guesthouse
€90–160
Boutique hotel, inner districts
€250+
Hotel Sacher, Park Hyatt, Kempinski
Food €18–30
Würstelstand, Naschmarkt, Gasthaus lunch
€40–70
Restaurant dinner + coffee house
€100+
Fine dining, Heuriger wine evening
Transport €8–17
24h Vienna City Card
€17–25
48h Vienna City Card
€29+
72h City Card + day trip train
Activities €10–25
Opera standing + free parks + 1 museum
€40–80
Schönbrunn + KHM + Belvedere
€100+
Spanish Riding School, concert seats
🎤
The Würstelstand is Vienna's greatest democratic institution
The Viennese sausage stand (Würstelstand) operates at street corners across the city from early morning to 4am. A Käsekrainer (pork sausage with melted cheese inside), a Burenwurst, or a Debreziner with mustard and a bread roll costs €3–5. Eaten standing at the counter, occasionally beside a person in opera attire who has just come from the Staatsoper. This is the correct Viennese experience and it costs less than a coffee at Café Central.
Best Time to Visit

Spring and autumn for the palaces. December for the Christmas markets.

Vienna is a year-round destination. Spring (April–June) and autumn (September–October) are the most comfortable and coincide with the full opera and concert season. December is magical — the Christmas markets around the Rathaus and Schönbrunn are among the finest in Europe. July and August are warm and busy. January and February are the quietest, coldest, and cheapest months — but the Opera and Philharmonic are at peak intensity.

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Best
Good
Hot & busy
Cold & quiet
🎄
Vienna Christmas Markets — late November to 26 December
The Rathausplatz Christmas market (in front of the Town Hall) is one of the most beautiful in Europe — 150 stalls of crafts, roasted chestnuts, Glühwein, and the illuminated Neo-Gothic facade behind it. The Schönbrunn Palace Christmas market in the palace courtyard is smaller and more upmarket. The Am Hof market in the First District is the oldest. All run from late November and close on 26 December. Weekday evenings are significantly less crowded than weekends.
Safety

One of the safest capitals in Europe. Pickpockets on the tourist tram routes are the only concern.

9.0

Overall safety score — Very Low Risk

Vienna is consistently ranked among the safest cities in the world. Violent crime against tourists is extremely rare. Pickpocketing on crowded tourist routes is the primary and essentially only concern.

👗
Pickpocketing

Concentrated on the tram routes circling the Ringstrasse, at Stephansplatz, and at major tourist sights. Keep bags in front of you on crowded trams. Be aware at ticket machines in the U-Bahn where distraction theft operates. Standard urban awareness is all that is required — Vienna is not a challenging environment by any reasonable standard.

👩
Solo Female Travel

Vienna is excellent for solo female travellers — consistently among Europe's safest cities. Walk anywhere, at any hour, without specific concern. The inner city, the 6th and 7th Districts, and the Prater are all comfortable at night. The usual awareness in bar areas late at night applies but there is nothing specific to Vienna.

🌞
General Safety

Vienna has very low rates of street crime, harassment, and tourist-targeted aggression. The city is well-lit, well-policed, and operates with a general orderliness that reflects its consistent ranking as the world's most liveable city. The main practical advice: validate your public transport ticket — inspectors are present and fines for travelling without a valid ticket are €100+.

🏛
Opera & Concert Etiquette

Vienna takes concert and opera etiquette seriously. Do not arrive late — latecomers are not admitted until a break. Do not applaud between movements of a symphony (wait for the conductor to lower their baton). Mobile phones entirely off, not on silent. Smart casual dress minimum for the Opera — the house does not enforce a strict dress code but the audience still dresses. Standing ticket holders should arrive early for a good position against the rail.

Locals Know

What Viennese locals never think to tell tourists.

01
The Ringstrasse tram is a free architectural tour of one of the greatest boulevards in EuropeThe Ringstrasse, built by Emperor Franz Joseph I in the 1860s, is a 5.3km circular boulevard of monumental public buildings — the Parliament (Greek Revival), the Rathaus (Neo-Gothic), the Burgtheater, the Natural History Museum, the Kunsthistorisches Museum, the Opera House — all in a single circuit. Tram 1 or 2 covers the full ring for €2.40. No audio guide, no tour bus, no booking. Just sit on the tram and watch it go past.
02
The Opera standing ticket queue opens 80 minutes before performance and sells out in 30The Stehplatz (standing tickets) for the Vienna State Opera cost €10–13 and are the most democratically extraordinary cultural institution in Europe. They go on sale at the Abendkasse 80 minutes before curtain. If the performance is sold out upstairs, start queuing 45 minutes before the box office opens. Secure your standing rail position with a tie or scarf (the local custom) and then explore the foyer. The view from the Parterre standing area is excellent.
03
A Heuriger in the Vienna wine hills is one of the most distinctly Viennese experiencesTake the U4 to Heiligenstadt, then a bus to Grinzing or Sievering. Sit in a garden with a carafe of Grüner Veltliner from the estate's own vines, a plate of cold meats and bread, and the Vienna city lights below you as it gets dark. A pine branch (Buschen) above the door means the Heuriger is open and serving its own wine. This is how Viennese people spend summer evenings. It costs about €15 and is utterly irreplaceable.
04
The Kunsthistorisches Museum has Klimt paintings almost nobody knows aboutBefore Gustav Klimt became famous for The Kiss (at the Belvedere) and his portrait commissions, he spent years painting the spandrel and intercolumnar paintings in the grand staircase of the Kunsthistorisches Museum. These allegories of art history — his largest finished works — are visible to anyone who visits the museum and almost nobody looks at them as Klimt paintings. Stand in the staircase hall and look up.
05
The Naschmarkt Saturday flea market starts at 6:30am and the best finds are gone by 9amThe Saturday flea market at the southern end of the Naschmarkt is one of the finest in Central Europe — antique furniture, silverware, books, vinyl, military medals, maps, and Vienna Werkstätte ceramics among the genuine finds. It runs from 6:30am to roughly 2pm, but serious dealers and antique shop owners arrive at 7am and work through the stalls methodically. Come by 8am for the best selection; by 10am the interesting things are largely gone.
06
The Café Central waiter will never bring your bill until you askThis is a feature, not a oversight. The Viennese Kaffeehaus tradition holds that you are welcome to sit as long as you wish with one coffee and one newspaper. The waiter will not hurry you, will not check in repeatedly, and will not bring the bill until you signal for it ("Zahlen bitte" or simply catching the eye). This applies at every genuine Kaffeehaus. Sit for two hours. Read. Watch people. This is the correct use of the institution.
Day Trips

Salzburg is 2.5 hours. Budapest is 2.5 hours. Bratislava is 1 hour.

Salzburg
2h30 by ÖBB train·from €29 Sparschiene

Mozart's birthplace and the setting for The Sound of Music — a Baroque city below a dramatic cliff-top fortress, with the Salzach River, excellent museums, and the Mozarteum. The Hohensalzburg Fortress is the most complete medieval fortress in Central Europe. A full day trip or better as an overnight.

Wachau Valley
1h by train to Krems·from €20

A UNESCO World Heritage valley of the Danube — terraced Riesling and Grüner Veltliner vineyards, Baroque monasteries (Melk, Göttweig), and medieval villages. Cycle the valley in summer (bikes on trains) or take the Danube boat from Krems to Melk. One of the most beautiful landscapes in Austria.

Budapest
2h30 by Railjet train·from €19

The Hungarian capital — Buda Castle, the Hungarian Parliament on the Danube, the thermal baths, and a ruin bar scene that has become one of Europe's most distinctive nightlife cultures. A long day trip or better as an overnight. Book early for the best Sparschiene fares on the ÖBB Railjet.

Bratislava
1h by Railjet or REX train·from €10

The Slovak capital — a compact Old Town, a hilltop castle above the Danube, excellent independent restaurants, and some of the cheapest beer in Central Europe. Often overlooked but genuinely pleasant for a half-day. The most accessible capital city from Vienna and a completely different cultural atmosphere.

FAQ

Questions we hear every time.

How many days do I need in Vienna?
Four days covers Schönbrunn, the Kunsthistorisches Museum, the Belvedere and The Kiss, the Opera (standing ticket), St Stephen's Cathedral, the Hofburg, the Naschmarkt, and enough time in coffee houses to understand the city. Five or six days allows the Wachau day trip, a Heuriger evening, and the slower museum visits that Vienna rewards. Most visitors leave wishing they had one more day.
Do I need to book the Opera in advance?
For seated tickets at popular performances, yes — book at wiener-staatsoper.at. For standing tickets, no — they go on sale 80 minutes before performance at the Abendkasse. If the performance is sold out, standing tickets may still be available. The €10 Stehplatz is the most democratic way to experience the Opera and entirely comparable to seated in terms of acoustic quality.
What is the difference between Café Central, Café Hawelka, and Café Landtmann?
Café Central (1876) is the grandest — a Neo-Gothic palace of a coffee house where Trotsky, Lenin, and Freud were regulars. More tourist-facing now but the room is extraordinary. Café Hawelka (1939) is the most atmospheric and bohemian — dark, cramped, unchanged since the 1950s, frequented by artists and writers. The Buchteln pastries served from 10pm are legendary. Café Landtmann (1873) on the Ringstrasse is favoured by politicians and theatre people from the adjacent Burgtheater. All three are correct and all are different.
Is the Vienna Card worth buying?
For a four-day visit with active sightseeing, the 72h Vienna City Card (€29) pays for itself in transport alone and delivers museum discounts on top. For a two-day visit focusing on one or two major museums, individual tickets may be cheaper. Calculate based on your specific itinerary — but for most visitors spending four or more days, the 72h card is excellent value.
Is Wiener Schnitzel always veal?
Technically, the authentic Wiener Schnitzel is always Kalbsschnitzel (veal). A pork version must be labelled "Schnitzel Wiener Art" (Schnitzel in the Vienna style) — it is the same preparation but with pork escalope rather than veal. Both are excellent; the veal is more delicate. Figlmüller in the Bäckerstrasse serves the most famous version in Vienna — enormous, overhanging the plate, and worth the queue.

Exploring beyond Vienna?

The full Austria guide covers Salzburg, the Wachau Valley, Innsbruck, the Austrian Alps, visa rules, and everything else you need for the country.

Read the Austria guide →