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Stary Rynek (Old Market Square), Poland
Stary Rynek (Old Market Square)

Greater Poland (Wielkopolska)

Stary Rynek (Old Market Square)

One of Poland's largest medieval squares, ringed by colourful merchant houses and the Renaissance town hall — best used as a slow base for coffee, meals and the noon goats rather than a quick tick-box stop.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Poznań, Poland

Opening hours

Open access (always open). The square is a public space you can walk at any hour; individual cafes, museums, bars and the cellar venues keep their own daytime and evening hours, busiest in the warmer months and on weekends.

Tickets

Free — no ticket needed to wander the square. You spend only on food and drinks at the cafes and cellar bars, or on the museums housed in the town hall and surrounding buildings.

Time needed

An hour to stroll and photograph, or a relaxed half-day if you fold in lunch, the noon goats and a museum, then come back for the evening.

In short

Visiting Stary Rynek (Old Market Square)

The Stary Rynek is one of the largest medieval market squares in Poland, ringed by colourful merchant houses, the Renaissance town hall and rows of pavement cafes. It works best as a slow morning or evening base rather than a sight to tick off: come for the noon goats on the town hall, linger over a meal, and find the bars and restaurants tucked into the cellars beneath the square.

A square to settle into

The Stary Rynek is one of the largest medieval market squares in Poland, a wide expanse of cobbles framed by tightly packed merchant houses painted in greens, pinks and ochres, with the Renaissance town hall rising in the middle. It is genuinely handsome, and it photographs beautifully in low light — though it is worth knowing that, like much of central Poznań, a good deal of it was carefully rebuilt after the Second World War, so you are admiring a faithful restoration rather than an untouched medieval set piece.

The mistake is to treat it as a sight to tick off in ten minutes. It rewards the opposite: slowness. The pleasure here is sitting at a pavement table with a coffee or a beer, watching the square fill and empty, and letting Poznań come to you rather than rushing on.

How to use it

Anchor your visit around noon, when the town hall’s famous mechanical goats butt heads above the clock and a crowd gathers below — a free couple of minutes that everyone times their morning around. The same building holds the city history museum if you want to step inside.

Then look down. Beneath the houses ringing the square is a network of vaulted cellars that now hold some of the city’s best bars and restaurants — cool in summer, atmospheric at night, and the reason the square has a proper evening life rather than emptying after dark. Come back after dinner and it feels like a different place.

The square is free, open at any hour, and busiest in the warmer months and at weekends. Use it as your base: meet here, eat here, and strike out from here into the rest of the old town. Check GOV.UK for current Poland travel advice before you travel.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Poznań city guide.

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Stary Rynek (Old Market Square) FAQs

Is the Stary Rynek worth visiting?
Yes, but manage expectations. It is a handsome, lively square rather than a single must-see monument, and much of it was rebuilt after wartime damage. Treat it as the heart of the old town where you eat, drink and watch the city go by, and time your visit for the noon goats on the town hall.
What is there to do around the square?
Plenty: the noon goats and city history museum in the Renaissance town hall, the colourful merchant houses to photograph, pavement cafes for coffee or beer, and a string of bars and restaurants in the vaulted cellars beneath the square. It is also a natural starting point for exploring the rest of Poznań's old town.
When is the best time to be in the square?
Late morning around noon for the goats and a relaxed lunch, or the evening when the cellar bars fill and the lighting flatters the facades. Warmer months bring the cafes out onto the cobbles. Check GOV.UK travel advice for Poland before you go for any current entry or safety guidance.