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Vienna, Austria
Vienna

Vienna

Vienna

A three- or four-night long weekend inside the Ringstrasse or Neubau: pre-book a timed Schönbrunn slot, take the €5.40 S7 from Schwechat over the CAT, and build days around coffee houses, not every palace.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Best length

3-4 nights

Airport

Vienna Schwechat (VIE), ~18km southeast

Airport to centre

S7 train ~23 min to Wien Mitte; CAT ~16 min

Best base

Inside the Ring for first-timers; Neubau (7th) for value and cafés

In short

Vienna at a glance

Vienna is best as a 3- or 4-night long weekend: base yourself inside the Ringstrasse or in Neubau (7th), pre-book a timed Schönbrunn Grand Tour slot before you fly, take the €5.40 S7 train from Schwechat rather than the €14.90 CAT, and build the days around coffee houses and the imperial sights rather than trying to see every Habsburg palace.

The short version

  • Base inside the Ring for first-time grandeur, or Neubau (7th) for design hotels, indie cafés and quick U-Bahn access.
  • Pre-book a Schönbrunn Grand Tour timed slot — turning up on the day means a long wait or a sold-out afternoon.
  • Take the S7 suburban train from the airport (€5.40, ~23 min), not the CAT (€14.90); both end near the centre.
  • Buy a 24-hour Wiener Linien ticket for €8 and validate it before you board, or risk a €100–€500 fine.
  • Three full days covers the Hofburg, Schönbrunn, the Belvedere for Klimt and a coffee-house afternoon without a rush.

Vienna runs on two registers at once — the grand one of Habsburg palaces, the Staatsoper and the Ringstrasse, and the slow one of the coffee houses, where a single Melange buys you an afternoon with the newspapers. First-timers tend to chase the grand register and treat the slow one as filler, then leave exhausted having queued at Schönbrunn without a ticket and eaten badly near the opera. The better trip pre-books the two or three palaces that genuinely need a timed slot, bases somewhere that keeps the centre on foot, and protects the café time as part of the plan rather than the gap between sights.

Three full days is the practical minimum: one for Schönbrunn and its gardens, one for the Hofburg and the compact old town, and one for the Belvedere’s Klimt and a proper coffee-house afternoon. Four nights buys a standing-room opera evening or a day out. Below, the structured planning — where to base, what to book, the S7-versus-CAT airport call, and a realistic budget in pounds — picks up from here.

Plan your Vienna trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Vienna

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.

2–3 hours From about €19.50

Schönbrunn Palace

Book a timed Grand Tour slot online before you fly — Schönbrunn is Austria's single most-visited attraction and afternoon slots routinely sell out in peak season, so turning up on spec means a long wait or no entry. The state rooms are a fixed one-way route on an audio guide; the gardens, the Gloriette and the maze outside are free. Take a morning slot to beat the coach tours that pile in after lunch, allow about half a day for the palace and grounds together, and ride the U4 out rather than driving.

About 1–1.5 hours… €34

St Stephen's Cathedral

The nave of Stephansdom is free to enter, so the thing you actually pay for is the climb, the catacombs and the treasury — buy the combined 'all-inclusive' ticket (about €20) only if you want all of them, otherwise pay per section at the desk. The South Tower is 343 steps with no lift and the better view; the North Tower is a quick lift to the Pummerin bell. Go before 10:00 or after 16:00 to dodge the worst of the day-tripper crush on Stephansplatz, and allow 1–1.5 hours.

1–1.5 hours €6.50

Belvedere Palace

The Belvedere is two baroque palaces facing each other across a free formal garden, and the one you book is the Upper Belvedere (Oberes Belvedere) — it holds Klimt's 'The Kiss' along with his 'Judith', plus Schiele and Kokoschka. The Lower Belvedere is for temporary shows, so most first-timers want a plain Upper ticket. It sits in the 3rd district, a 10-minute tram ride from the Ring. Buy a timed Upper slot online, go at the 09:00 opening before the coach groups reach the Klimt room, and allow about 90 minutes to two hours.

About 90 minutes t…
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier — not an exhaustive directory.

Innere Stadt (1st district, inside the Ring)

£££ premium

The walkable imperial core: St Stephen's, the Hofburg, the Staatsoper and the great coffee houses are all on foot from here. It is the priciest base, but it saves you U-Bahn time every day on a short trip.

Best for: First-timers, couples, short stays

Neubau (7th district)

££ mid-range

The MuseumsQuartier edge: design hotels, independent cafés, the Spittelberg lanes and good restaurants, with U2/U3 access into the centre in minutes. Better value than the 1st and a more local evening.

Best for: Design hotels, food-led trips, value

Browse hotels 5-10 min by U-Bahn

Leopoldstadt (2nd district)

£ value

Across the Danube Canal by the Prater park and the Augarten: leafy, lower prices and a quick tram or U-Bahn hop to the centre. Good if you want space and a residential feel over old-town footsteps.

Best for: Value, longer stays, families

Browse hotels 10-15 min by U-Bahn

Wieden (4th district, near Naschmarkt)

££ mid-range

Around the Naschmarkt and Karlsplatz: market food, the Secession and a relaxed local rhythm a short walk south of the Ring. A solid mid-range base that keeps you close without 1st-district prices.

Best for: Food markets, repeat visitors, walkers

Browse hotels Walk or 1 U-Bahn stop

Airport to city centre

Vienna airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
S7 suburban train to Wien Mitte ~23 min €5.40 single (or covered by a Vienna ticket + outer-zone add-on) The value pick for most central hotels
City Airport Train (CAT) to Wien Mitte ~16 min €14.90 single Faster but nearly triple the S7 — only worth it for the few minutes
Vienna Airport Lines bus to Morzinplatz / Schwedenplatz ~20-40 min about €11.50 single Useful with luggage or for hotels off the rail line
Taxi or pre-booked transfer ~25-40 min usually €40-€50 Best for late arrivals or groups
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May to June and September to early October are the sweet spot: 15-25°C, the full cultural calendar, café terraces open and fewer crowds than the July-August peak. For the Christmas markets aim for mid-November to early January, when the Rathausplatz and Spittelberg markets are in full swing.

High summer (July-August) is warm, humid and busy in the centre, with the Salzburg-bound crowds passing through; December brings the Christmas markets and the city dressed for the season but near-freezing days. The shoulder months either side are cheaper and quieter — book spring weekends and December market trips early because UK city-break demand is heavy.

What it costs

UK return flights to Vienna run from about £40-£80 off-peak on Ryanair, Wizz Air or easyJet booked ahead, rising to £120-£200 in the school holidays or at short notice, and more on BA or Austrian at busy times. Booking around five weeks out typically saves roughly 25% versus last-minute.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 3-night mid-range Vienna break for one person is roughly £520-£720 before shopping: £70-£140 flights, £270-£420 hotel share, £100-£140 food and coffee-house stops, about £20 on transit and two S7 airport runs, and £80-£120 for Schönbrunn, the Hofburg and the Belvedere.

The everyday saver is the Mittagsmenü — a fixed weekday lunch, often €10-€16 — and the Würstelstand sausage stands for a quick €4-€6 bite, rather than a sit-down lunch near the Staatsoper. A coffee-house Melange and a slice of Sachertorte runs €8-€12, so budget the cafés as an experience, not a cheap pit stop.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Austria

See the full Austria guide

Vienna FAQs

How many days do you need in Vienna?
Three full days is the practical first-timer minimum: one for Schönbrunn and the gardens, one for the Hofburg and the central old town, and one for the Belvedere and a long coffee-house afternoon. Four nights is more comfortable if you want a standing-room opera evening or a day trip.
Where should first-timers stay in Vienna?
Inside the Ringstrasse (1st district) is the safest default because the imperial sights, St Stephen's and the coffee houses are all on foot — but it is the priciest base. Neubau (7th) is the better-value alternative: design hotels and indie cafés a few U-Bahn minutes from the centre.
Is the CAT worth it from Vienna airport?
Usually not. The City Airport Train (CAT) costs €14.90 and takes about 16 minutes to Wien Mitte; the S7 suburban train costs €5.40 and takes around 23. For a few saved minutes you pay nearly triple, so most travellers take the S7 and put the difference towards a Melange.

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