Pomerania
Malbork Castle
How to visit Malbork Castle as a day-trip from Gdańsk: which ticket includes the audio guide, when to go to beat the coach groups, and whether the world's largest brick castle earns the train ride.
Where
Gdańsk, Poland
Opening hours
Castle grounds and exhibitions roughly 09:00–19:00 in peak summer (May–September, last audio-guide route around 17:30) and 10:00–15:00 in winter (October–April); closed some public holidays and the route is shorter out of season. Always confirm your date on zamek.malbork.pl.
Tickets
Standard adult ticket with the included audio guide from about 90 zł (£18) in high season, around 60 zł (£12) in low season; reduced (children, students, seniors) roughly half; under-7s free. A separate cheaper 'green route' grounds-only ticket exists out of peak hours.
Time needed
3–3.5 hours for the full audio-guide route; add the 35–50 min train each way from Gdańsk, so block out half a day.
In short
Visiting Malbork Castle
Take the PKP train from Gdańsk Główny (35–50 minutes, around 16–24 zł / £3.20–£4.80 each way) and book a standard ticket with the audio guide online for summer dates — the timed slots cap numbers and the busiest morning coach windows do sell out. The audio-guide route is genuinely long, winding through three concentric castles, so allow the full 3–3.5 hours it quotes and aim for a slot after 14:00 or right at opening to dodge the late-morning tour crush. The riverside view of the red-brick walls from the far bank of the Nogat is the photograph, and it is free.
How to visit without losing the day
Malbork is a half-day from Gdańsk, and the mistake is treating it as a quick hop. The cheapest, easiest way out is the PKP train from Gdańsk Główny — 35 to 50 minutes for roughly 16–24 zł (£3.20–£4.80) each way — which drops you a flat ten-minute walk from the gates, no tour bus required. Book a standard ticket with the audio guide online on zamek.malbork.pl for any summer date: entry is by timed slot, the numbers are capped, and the busy mid-morning windows do sell out a day or two ahead once the coaches start arriving.
What people underestimate is the route. The audio guide winds through three nested castles — the Low, Middle and High — and the quoted three to three and a half hours is real, not padding. Don’t book a slot that leaves you racing the last train back, and check the return times before you set off, because the evening service thins out.
Worth the day trip from Gdańsk?
Go at opening or after 14:00 to sit between the coach waves rather than inside them; the late-morning crush is when the day-trip buses from Gdańsk and the Baltic resorts all land together. Late afternoon has a second payoff — the warm light on the red brick from the footbridge over the Nogat, which is the castle’s signature photograph and costs nothing.
It earns the trip. It’s the largest brick castle in the world and a UNESCO site, and the sheer scale only registers once you’re walking the courtyards inside the walls. Just go for the castle itself — Malbork town has little else, so don’t pad the day expecting more — and pair it with a slow morning on Gdańsk’s Długi Targ rather than stacking it against the Museum of the Second World War the same day. One heavyweight sight per day is plenty here.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Gdańsk city guide.
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