Northern Hungary
Tokaj Wine Region
A first trip to Hungary's Tokaj wine country: how to reach it without flying into Budapest's airport twice, which cellars to book, and why you taste the sweet Aszú here rather than buy it at home.
In short
Tokaj Wine Region at a glance
Tokaj is the wine country in Hungary's far north-east where the sweet, golden Tokaji Aszú is made — a 28-village UNESCO landscape of volcanic hills, loess soils and damp, mould-lined cellars. It's a slow add-on to a Budapest trip rather than a destination in itself: it's about 2h30 north-east of Budapest by car or direct InterCity train, and the point is to taste the Aszú and the bone-dry Furmint at source, in cellars you can't visit any other way. Two or three nights is plenty — base in Tokaj town or the prettier village of Mád, and don't try to do it as a single day trip from the capital.
Tokaj is where Hungary makes its most famous wine — the sweet, golden Tokaji Aszú the kings of Europe used to ship home by the cartload — and the whole point of going is to drink it in the cold, mould-blackened cellars cut into the volcanic hills, surrounded by the barrels it ages in. It is not a stop you pass through on the way to anywhere; it sits up in the far north-east corner of the country, a couple of hours and change from Budapest, and rewards the people who slow right down rather than the ones ticking it off.
The mistake first-timers make is trying to do it as a day trip from the capital. By the time you’ve travelled up and back you’ve barely tasted two cellars, and you’ve missed the part that matters — the unhurried estate visits in villages like Mád, the dry Furmint that has quietly become the region’s pride, the long lunch between tastings. Stay a night or two, decide early whether anyone is driving (Hungary’s drink-drive limit is zero, so the driver simply doesn’t taste), and let the place set the pace.
The route
A relaxed two-to-three-night loop through the wine villages, reachable without a car if you base yourself on the train line. Times below are real road and rail estimates from Budapest and between the villages; cellars in Hungary almost always need booking ahead, so fix your tastings before you travel.
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Day 1
Tokaj town
Arrive by the direct InterCity train from Budapest-Keleti (about 2h30) or drive up the M3/M30. Settle in along the Bodrog river, walk to the World Heritage Wine Museum, and book a first-evening tasting in one of the town's cellars — the Rákóczi Cellar's barrel-lined tunnels are the easiest introduction to Aszú.
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Day 2
Mád & Tarcal
Spend the day in the two best cellar villages. Mád (about 20 minutes' drive from Tokaj) has the region's smartest estates and restaurants; Tarcal sits below the Aranykút hill and is a 10-minute drive on. Pre-book a couple of estate tastings rather than turning up — most are by appointment, not walk-in.
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Day 3 (optional)
Sárospatak or a slow finish
If you have a third day, drive 40 minutes north-east to Sárospatak for its hilltop castle, or simply spend a slower morning on a vineyard walk above Tokaj before the early-afternoon train back to Budapest. Don't try to cram in extra towns — the pleasure here is the unhurried pace.
Where to base yourself
Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.
Tokaj town
££ mid-rangeThe obvious first base: it's the only village on the direct Budapest train line, sits where the Bodrog meets the Tisza, and has the town cellars and the wine museum within walking distance. Practical and well-connected, if a little workaday compared with the prettier villages around it.
Best for: Arriving by train and a car-free trip
Mád
£££ premiumThe most characterful base — a hill village of restored cellars, the smartest estates and the region's best cooking, about 20 minutes' drive from Tokaj town. Better for a car-borne trip focused on tastings and a good dinner; quieter at night and short on public transport.
Best for: Cellar-focused stays with a hire car
Tarcal
££ mid-rangeA small village below the Aranykút vineyard hill with a couple of upmarket wine hotels and big views over the plain. Calm and scenic, good for a slower pace, but you'll want a car as it's off the train line and a short drive from the cellars in Mád and Tokaj.
Best for: A quiet, scenic vineyard base
Getting around Tokaj Wine Region
You can reach Tokaj without a car — direct InterCity trains run from Budapest-Keleti to Tokaj station in about 2h30 (roughly 5,000–7,000 Ft / £12–£17 each way, cheaper with a seat reservation booked ahead on the MÁV app). But the wine villages are spread across the hills, and Mád, Tarcal and the outlying estates have little public transport, so a hire car or a booked local driver makes the difference between seeing one village and seeing the region. If you drive, remember Hungary's zero-tolerance drink-drive limit means the driver cannot taste at all — most couples either alternate days, hire a driver for the tasting day, or stay in Mád and walk between cellars. Many estates run by appointment only, so confirm visits before you arrive rather than relying on turning up.
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