Lower Silesia
Panorama Racławicka
How to visit the Racławice Panorama in Wrocław: booking a 30-minute timed slot, the English commentary, and whether the 114-metre painting-in-the-round is worth it.
Where
Wrocław, Poland
Opening hours
Summer (1 April–31 October): open daily 08:30–19:00. Winter (1 November–31 March): closed Mondays; Tue–Fri 09:30–16:00, Sat 09:30–17:00, Sun 09:30–16:00. Viewings run as timed 30-minute sessions every half-hour, with the last session shortly before closing. Confirm your date on mnwr.pl before you travel.
Tickets
A standard adult ticket is 50 zł (≈ £10); reduced and family tickets are 35 zł (≈ £7) per person. It is a combined ticket: it also gives free entry to the permanent exhibitions at the National Museum in Wrocław, the Ethnographic Museum and the Four Domes Pavilion for three months after your Panorama viewing. Check the current rate on mnwr.pl.
Time needed
About 30 minutes for the rotunda viewing and commentary, plus 15–20 minutes for the entrance hall. Allow a half-day if you use the combined ticket to walk over to the nearby National Museum afterwards.
In short
Visiting Panorama Racławicka
Book a timed entry before you go — viewings run as fixed 30-minute sessions every half-hour, capacity is limited, and the Panorama is the one Wrocław sight that genuinely sells out, sometimes days ahead in summer. Each session carries a spoken commentary available in several languages including English, so you are not stuck with Polish. The draw is the painting itself: a 114 m by 15 m canvas wrapped 360 degrees around you, depicting the 1794 Battle of Racławice, with a sculpted foreground that blurs where the model ground ends and the paint begins. The viewing is short, around 30 minutes, but the 50 zł ticket is a combined one that also covers the National Museum, the Ethnographic Museum and the Four Domes Pavilion for three months, so plan to use it.
Book the timed slot before anything else
The Racławice Panorama is not a gallery you drift through — it is a single timed session inside a purpose-built rotunda, where you stand on a raised platform and a 114-metre by 15-metre painting wraps a full 360 degrees around you. It shows the 1794 Battle of Racławice, painted in 1893–94 by Jan Styka and Wojciech Kossak for the battle’s centenary, and the clever part is the sculpted foreground: real earth, broken carts and fence posts run up to the canvas so you cannot quite tell where the model ground stops and the brushwork starts.
Sessions start every 30 minutes and hold a capped audience of about 85, which is why the Panorama is the one Wrocław sight that genuinely sells out — sometimes several days ahead on summer weekends and over the December market. The spoken commentary inside the rotunda is available in several languages including English, so you are not stuck with Polish; you just book a slot. Reserve online via mnwr.pl before you travel. A standard adult ticket is 50 zł (around £10), reduced and family 35 zł — and crucially it is a combined ticket that also gives free entry to the National Museum in Wrocław, the Ethnographic Museum and the Four Domes Pavilion for three months after your viewing.
A short visit — is it worth the ticket?
Aim for an early weekday session, before the coach groups and school trips arrive; the rotunda holds a capped audience, so an early slot is calmer and the platform less crowded. In summer (1 April–31 October) it is open every day, 08:30–19:00; in winter (1 November–31 March) it is closed Mondays and shuts at 16:00 (17:00 on Saturdays). The last session is shortly before closing, so don’t leave it until late afternoon on a tight day.
It earns the ticket, but manage your expectations on length. The viewing and commentary run about 30 minutes — this is a short, intense experience, not an afternoon out, and visitors who expect to linger leave a little flat. Treat the combined entry to the National Museum, Ethnographic Museum or Four Domes Pavilion as the back half of the visit and the 50 zł maths works nicely. Getting there is easy: the rotunda sits on ul. Purkyniego on the eastern edge of the old town, a 15-minute walk from the Rynek or a couple of tram stops, so pair it with the square and Cathedral Island rather than making a special trip across the city.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Wrocław city guide.
More to see in Wrocław
Book the essentials
Tours & tickets
Panorama Racławicka FAQs
Do you need to book the Racławice Panorama in advance?
Is the Racławice Panorama worth it?
How do you get there and can you take photos?
Ready to book?
Check tickets & tours