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Warsaw, Poland
Warsaw

Masovia

Warsaw

The whole rebuilt-from-rubble Old Town lands differently once you know it, so give Warsaw two or three nights in Śródmieście, book POLIN and the Rising Museum ahead, and ride the SKM in from Chopin.

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

Best length

2-3 nights, or the second half of a Kraków-Warsaw week

Airport

Chopin (WAW), ~8km south; Modlin (WMI, Ryanair) ~40km north

Airport to centre

SKM S2/S3 train ~20-25 min from Chopin; Modlin needs a bus/coach + train

Best base

Śródmieście for first-timers; Old Town or Powiśle for atmosphere

In short

Warsaw at a glance

Warsaw is best as a 2- or 3-night city break or the second half of a Kraków-and-Warsaw week: base yourself in Śródmieście or near the Old Town, book the POLIN and Warsaw Rising museums rather than turning up, take the SKM train in from Chopin, and read the city as a near-total rebuild from rubble — once you know the Old Town is reconstructed, the whole place lands differently.

The short version

  • Stay in Śródmieście for the easiest first trip; Old Town and Powiśle are the pretty, slower-paced alternatives.
  • Book the Warsaw Rising Museum and POLIN ahead - both get busy and POLIN's core exhibition rewards a timed slot.
  • Don't treat Warsaw as a looks-first old city like Kraków: its pull is the museums and the rebuilt-from-rubble story.
  • Arrive via the SKM S2/S3 train from Chopin to the centre in about 20-25 minutes for under £1; Modlin (Ryanair) is 40km out and needs a bus or coach.
  • Two full days covers the Old Town, the Royal Route, the Rising Museum and POLIN; a third adds Łazienki Park or Praga.

The thing first-timers get wrong about Warsaw is judging it against Kraków and finding the Old Town a bit too neat. That neatness is the point: this square was rebuilt brick by brick from photographs and paintings after the city was deliberately flattened in 1944. Spend a morning in the Warsaw Rising Museum first and the reconstruction stops looking like a film set and starts looking like an act of defiance. Warsaw isn’t a pretty-old-town city break; it’s a museum-and-memory one, and it rewards visitors who treat the history as the main event rather than a backdrop to the squares.

Two full days is the practical minimum: one for the Old Town and the Royal Route, one for the Rising Museum and POLIN, with a third for Łazienki Park or the Praga bars if you have it. It also works beautifully as the second half of a week, linked to Kraków by a single 2h20 train. Below, the structured planning — where to stay, what to book, how to get in from Chopin or Modlin, and a realistic budget in pounds — picks up from here.

Plan your Warsaw trip

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

Top things to do in Warsaw

POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews

Book a timed slot for the core exhibition online before you go — Thursday is free and sells out first, and weekend afternoons are the next to fill. The thousand-year permanent gallery is the reason to come, not the airy entrance hall, so don't waste your slot on the free-entry foyer. Allow 2.5–3 hours and a calm head: it covers a millennium of Polish-Jewish life and ends with the Holocaust, and rushing it does it no favours.

2.5–3 hours £9

Warsaw Rising Museum

The Warsaw Rising Museum on ul. Grzybowska 79 is the exhibit that makes the rebuilt Old Town make sense — it tells the 63 days of the 1944 uprising and the deliberate flattening of the city that followed. A standard ticket is 30 zł (about £6), reduced 25 zł, and admission is free on Mondays — which is exactly why Mondays are heaving. It is closed on Tuesdays. Allow two to three hours: the building is dense, dimly lit and built to disorient, and the highlights — the full-size B-24 Liberator replica, the cramped sewer passage you can walk through, and the 'City of Ruins' aerial film — are easy to rush past if you treat it as a tick-box stop.

Allow about 2 to 3… £6

Where to stay first

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

Śródmieście

££ mid-range

The central district around Nowy Świat and the Palace of Culture: metro line M1, the main rail stations, restaurants and an easy walk or tram to both the Old Town and the museums. The most convenient first-timer base, and well lit for late walks.

Best for: First-timers, short stays, museum-led trips

Browse hotels City centre

Old Town & New Town (Stare/Nowe Miasto)

££ mid-range

Inside and just north of the reconstructed square: the prettiest base and walkable to the castle and the river viewpoints, though restaurants on the Market Square are pricier and more touristy. Quieter at night than the centre.

Best for: Atmosphere, couples, slower pace

Browse hotels 10-15 min walk to centre

Powiśle & Solec

£ value

The riverside strip below the escarpment, near the Copernicus Science Centre and the redeveloped Vistula boulevards. Younger, greener and good value, with a short uphill walk or tram to the Old Town.

Best for: Value, river walks, repeat visitors

Browse hotels 5-10 min by tram

Praga (right bank)

£ value

The grittier east-bank district, now an arts-and-bars scene with the Koneser vodka-factory complex and Różycki Market. Cheaper and more local, but you'll cross the river for most sights and it's less polished after dark.

Best for: Repeat visitors, nightlife, local feel

Browse hotels 10-15 min by tram across the Vistula

Airport to city centre

Warsaw airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
SKM S2/S3 train from Chopin (WAW) to Śródmieście / Centralna ~20-25 min 4.40 zł single (under £1) on a ZTM ticket Best value; runs every ~15-30 min
Bus 175 from Chopin to the centre/Old Town ~30-40 min 4.40 zł ZTM single Direct to the Old Town without a change
Official taxi or app from Chopin ~15-25 min about 40-60 zł (£8-£12) Use marked iTaxi/Bolt/Uber, not terminal touts
Modlin (WMI, Ryanair): Modlinbus coach or ŻKA bus + train ~50-70 min about 35-49 zł (£7-£10) Modlin is 40km out - factor the transfer into Ryanair savings
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: Late April to June and September to early October are the sweet spot: mild 14-22°C days, beer gardens and river boulevards open, manageable crowds at the museums, and lower prices than the July-August peak.

High summer is warmest at mid-20s°C and busiest, with the Vistula beaches and outdoor bars in full swing; winter is cold (often below freezing) but atmospheric for the December Christmas market on the Old Town Square. January and February are the cheapest and quietest, though days are short and dark.

What it costs

UK return flights to Warsaw run from about £25-£60 off-peak on Ryanair (to Modlin) or Wizz Air booked ahead, £90-£180 in the school holidays or at short notice, and £200-£350 on LOT or BA at busy times. Northern UK departures like Manchester and Edinburgh are often as cheap as London.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 3-night mid-range Warsaw break for one person is roughly £400-£560 before shopping: £60-£140 flights, £180-£300 hotel share, £90-£120 food and local transport, and £30-£40 for the Rising Museum, POLIN and one more ticket. The same trip on a budget lands near £300-£350.

Warsaw is the most expensive Polish city but still cheap by Western European standards. The easiest saving is lunch in a bar mleczny (milk bar) - a subsidised canteen where soup and pierogi runs 15-25 zł (£3-£5) - rather than eating on the Old Town Market Square.

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 Poland

See the full Poland guide

Warsaw FAQs

How many days do you need in Warsaw?
Two full days covers the essentials: one for the Old Town, the Royal Route and the Palace of Culture terrace, and one split between the Warsaw Rising Museum and POLIN. A third day lets you add Łazienki Park, the Praga district or the Copernicus Science Centre at an easier pace.
Is Warsaw or Kraków better for a first trip?
Kraków wins on looks - its old town survived the war largely intact - so most first Poland trips start there. Warsaw is the museum-and-history city: its Old Town is a reconstruction and its pull is POLIN and the Rising Museum. They're about 2h20 apart by fast train, so a week split between the two is the natural pairing.
How do you get from Warsaw airport to the city centre?
From Chopin (WAW), 8km south, take the SKM S2/S3 train to Śródmieście or Centralna in 20-25 minutes for 4.40 zł on a ZTM ticket, or bus 175 to the Old Town. Modlin (WMI), used by Ryanair, is 40km north and needs a Modlinbus coach or a ŻKA shuttle bus plus a train - budget 50-70 minutes and factor it into the fare saving.

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