Vienna
Hofburg
How to visit Vienna's Hofburg: which Sisi Ticket to buy, when to go to dodge the coach groups, and whether the Imperial Apartments are worth it over Schönbrunn.
Where
Vienna, Austria
Opening hours
Imperial Apartments, Sisi Museum and Silver Collection daily 09:00–17:30 (last entry 16:30), extended to 18:00 in July and August. Open every day including public holidays. Always confirm your date on sisimuseum-hofburg.at.
Tickets
Sisi Ticket from about €19.50 (£16.80) for adults, covering the Imperial Apartments, Sisi Museum and Silver Collection; under-6s free, children 6–18 about €11.50. The combined Sisi Ticket also bundles Schönbrunn and the Vienna Furniture Museum for around €44 if you want all three.
Time needed
2–3 hours for the apartments, Sisi Museum and Silver Collection with the included audio guide.
In short
Visiting Hofburg
The Hofburg is not one ticket but a cluster of sights — the part most people mean is the Imperial Apartments, the Sisi Museum and the Silver Collection, all covered by one combined Sisi Ticket. It is right in the centre, so you walk to it rather than making a trip of it. Allow two to three hours, go at opening or after 15:00 to miss the late-morning coach groups, and buy the Sisi Ticket online so you skip the queue at the Michaelertor.
Which ticket, and how to skip the queue
The thing people get wrong is treating the Hofburg as a single attraction. It’s a sprawling palace complex, and most of it — the National Library, the Spanish Riding School, the chapel — is ticketed or visited separately. The part that earns the visit is the Sisi Ticket, which covers the Imperial Apartments, the Sisi Museum and the Silver Collection on one entry. Buy it online before you go in: the Hofburg doesn’t sell out the way Schönbrunn does, but the ticket desk at the Michaelertor clogs up the moment the late-morning coach groups arrive, and a pre-bought ticket walks you straight past it.
Time your visit for the 09:00 opening or after 15:00. The Imperial Apartments are a string of fairly narrow rooms, so the mid-morning tour-group surge turns them into a shuffle, and the Sisi Museum’s quieter, more affecting displays are wasted if you’re reading the labels over someone’s shoulder. Allow two to three hours with the included audio guide, and don’t rush the Silver Collection at the start — it’s better than it sounds.
Hofburg or Schönbrunn? The honest take
If you’re already doing Schönbrunn, the Hofburg isn’t a duplicate — it’s a different story. Schönbrunn is the grand summer palace and the gardens; the Hofburg’s real draw is the Sisi Museum, which strips away the romantic Empress-Elisabeth myth and tells the genuinely sad story underneath. If you only have the appetite for one set of imperial state rooms, make it Schönbrunn for the scale — but the Sisi Museum is the more human visit of the two.
Because it sits right in the Innere Stadt, you walk to the Hofburg rather than making a half-day trip of it, which is its quiet advantage. Pair it with St Stephen’s and a Melange at Café Central a few minutes away, and you’ve a full central day without touching the U-Bahn. Don’t stack it against the Belvedere on the same day — two sets of palace rooms back to back is how Vienna stops landing.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Vienna city guide.
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