Tag Archive for: budapest guide

Best things to do in Budapest for Father’s Day in 2023

The origins of Father’s Day can be traced back to the early 20th century. The idea of dedicating a day to honor fathers emerged as a counterpart to Mother’s Day, which had already gained popularity. If you are here for this special day with your parents we have collected a couple of great activities which your father would definitely enjoy. With that here are our favorite things to do in Budapest for Father’s Day on June, 18th 2023:

Take a Danube River Cruise

Treat your father to a relaxing Danube River cruise where you can enjoy breathtaking views of Budapest’s most iconic landmarks, such as the Buda Castle, Matthias Church, Fisherman’s Bastion, the Chain Bridge, and the Hungarian Parliament. These sightseeing cruises usually offer some extra service besides the views, so choose wisely depending on what your father would enjoy the most for example the unlimited prosecco cruise, café and cruise, or the dinner and cruise with traditional Hungarian live music. Most importantly book it for the night so you can see the Parliament lit up. 

 

Explore Buda Castle Hill on our Free Buda Castle District Tour

Take our free tour through the historic Buda Castle neighborhood. Enjoy the panoramic views of the city from the significant view spots and lookout towers.

Relax in the thermal baths

Budapest is famous for its thermal baths, and spending a few hours at one of them can be a fantastic Father’s Day treat. Széchenyi Baths and Lukács Baths are two popular options where you can relax in the thermal waters, and steam chambers and enjoy various spa treatments including full body massage. Most of the bathhouses offer beer baths as well if you are into something really special. 

Visit a local restaurant in the Jewish District or check out one of the food markets.

Budapest is known for its delicious cuisine and eating out can be a great way to celebrate Father’s Day together. If you are curious about Hungarian dishes it is worth starting with the Central Market Hall and then visiting one of the great Hungarian restaurants in the Jewish District, as you are there that neighborhood is the hub for the international kitchen too, whatever you desire Italien, Vietnamese, Korean, Indian, Middle Eastern you will find excellent traditional places from all of those cuisines so it worth to experiment for sure!

Explore the world of the excellent Hungarian wines

Hungarian wine’s distinct indigenous grape varieties, unique winemaking traditions, diverse terroir, and the famous Tokaji Aszú all contribute to its unique and compelling qualities, making it an intriguing choice for wine lovers and an integral part of Hungary’s cultural heritage. Hungarian wines often offer excellent value for money, providing high-quality wines at relatively affordable prices compared to some other wine-producing regions.  It is worth experimenting on your own, but if your father is really a wine enthusiast we would recommend joining a wine tasting to learn the essentials of Hungarian wine.

Take a Walk along Andrássy Avenue

Stroll along Andrássy Avenue, a beautiful tree-lined boulevard in Budapest. You can admire the stunning architecture, browse through high-end shops, and stop for a coffee at one of the charming cafes. The avenue is lined with stunning Neo-Renaissance buildings, charming townhouses, and elegant mansions. 

 

We hope you and your father have a fantastic time celebrating Father’s Day in Budapest. 

If you have any questions, drop us an e-mail at info@triptobudapest.hu 

 Enjoy your trip!

Sights worth visiting in Old Buda – Óbuda

Sights of Óbuda – recommended by the Free Budapest Walking Tours Team

Besides taking some of our free tours in Budapest, it is also worth to wander around some areas where walking tours do not go very often. Let’s see the sights of Old Buda (Óbuda in Hungarian which is also known as the 3rd district of the Hungarian capital).

  • Roman amphitheater and Aquincum Museum: before the Hungarians settled down in this area, there used to be a Roman settlement here called Aquincum. The Aquincum Museum, which has huge a collection (objects and finds), presents the heritage of ancient Rome to those interested in a unique way. Next to the museum is the Romkert, one of the largest Roman archaeological parks in Hungary. During the tour of the area, visitors can get to know a part of the civic city of Aquincum, as well as the most typical public buildings and private houses of the city center, which were built in the 2nd-3rd centuries AD.

 

  • Kiscelli Museum: the building was originally built as a monastery, and was later bought by the furniture manufacturer Miksa Schmidt, who gave the building and its park to the capital. Today’s museum presents the history of Budapest and also has a significant fine art collection. The courtyard of the building complex, reminiscent of the Romantic era, is also a kind of exhibition space where you can see sculptures and works of art. The museum is surrounded by the Kiscelli park forest, recently renovated and expanded with a modern forest playground, where from spring to autumn we can take really pleasant walks and even have a picnic.

 

  • Roman beach (Római part in Hungarian): After Óbudai Island to the north, Római-part is a popular spot for those who want to relax after the hustle and bustle of the city. This stretch of the Danube coast is busy with visitors all year round, whose souls and bellies are taken care of by the cozy restaurants, stalls, and open air places that offer excellent gastronomic experiences. If you can, spend as much time as possible on the Római coast walking, running, cycling, or enjoying the waters of the Danube, you certainly won’t regret it.

Programs for the rest of April in Budapest

Program recommendations for the rest of April by the Free Budapest Walking Tours Team (Triptobudapest.hu Team)

  • Opening of Budapest Garden, 21st-23rd April: Budapest Garden opens the season with varied and free programs for the whole family between April 21 and 23. This weekend, the Fröccsbár awaits wine lovers (fröccs in the Hungarian wine spritzer = wine and soda water), but you can also tune in to the seaside feeling at the cocktail-making workshop with the panorama of the Danube. On Saturday, you can get to know the world of whiskey, gin and rum at a tasting combined with a performance, and on Sunday, once you’ve set the mood, the Keep Swinging team will teach you a couple of jazz and Charleston steps. Meanwhile, the little people won’t be bored either: a sports field, a fire park and many guided games await them. Location: Buda side, Árpád Fejedelem útja 125.
  • Modern, Gastronomical and Musical Celebration of the 1st of May, 30th April – 1st of May: The following places (restaurants and bars) will have and extended Labor Day celebration starting earlier than the 1st of May: Nemdebár, 101 bistro, Pigrumba, Sárkány, Easy. They will have their stands on the street, on a quite local square on the Buda side, the Széll Kálmán square (on the metro line number 2). There will be good food and music, plus your kids and pets will not be bored either!
  • Budapest Spring Festival (Budapesti Tavaszi Fesztivál) 20th April- 2nd May: In the spring, Budapest’s cultural diversity is again in the spotlight. On the occasion of the 43rd Budapest Spring Festival, programs are organized at nearly 30 locations. The center of the event series, which features more than 50 programs, is the constantly changing artistic and cultural life of the city. You can expect an exciting line-up: the repertoire includes theater performances, round table discussions, digital art reviews, photo exhibitions, film screenings and big band concerts. Here is their website with the programs!

Also, Do not forget to join our daily free tours in Budapest! We are looking forward to seeing you! 🙂

15th March – National Holiday in Hungary

The 15th of March – National and Bank Holiday in Hungary

Let the Free Budapest Walking Tours Team (a.k.a. Triptobudapest.hu Team) introduce you to the first National Holiday of the year.

First, let us inform you that on this day bigger shops, grocery stores, shopping malls, markets, banks will be closed.

However, tourist attractions, bathhouses, museums, most of the restaurants, smaller non-stop supermarkets will be open and our free tours in Budapest run as usual!

There will be commemorations all over the city center that you can see for free and some museums are also free on national holidays like the 15th of March, for example (including but not limited to): Hungarian Agricultural Museum in the City Park, inside of Vajdahunyad Castle, Hungarian National Museum, Ludwig Museum of contemporary art, Museum of Military History in the Buda castle district, Hungarian Natural History Museum.

What Hungarians commemorate on the 15th of March in a nutshell

For a long time, from the end of the 1600s until the end of the First World War Hungary was part of the Austrian Empire. We organized a number of revolutions and freedom fights to get more rights inside of the empire. In 1848 the biggest and most important revolution happened in Budapest and Hungary. The 15th of March was the day when the freedom fight broke out. Even though this revolution failed, we can say that it is one of the most significant events in Hungary’s modern history, and it forms the cornerstone of modern Hungarian national identity.

You can also find a square in Budapest named after this day of commemoration, in Hungarian it is called Március 15. tér, and its a nice place next to the river Danube, on the Pest side of the city.

Hope to see you soon on our free walking tours in Budapest where you can learn more about Hungarian history! 🙂

 

Programs in Budapest for the rest of February 2023

Dear Travelers,

let us, the Free Budapest Walking Tours Team (Triptobudapest.hu Team) recommend you a few things to do before/after taking some of our free tours in the Hungarian capital after the 18th of February 2023.

  • Indoor Beer Festival (24-25th February): Once again, unlimited beer will flow from the beer taps at Hungary’s only winter beer festival, the Indoor Beer Festival (link of the Facebook event). In addition to the Danube panorama, the organizers promise a truly multicultural environment: you can celebrate the last weekend of February with Hungarian, Czech, German, English and Belgian beers. The festival experience is rich in effervescent pleasures and is completed by cultural & historical additions, beer gastronomy delicacies, beer dinners and beer drinking competitions. With the tasting glass included in the ticket, this year you can also request as many tastings of the more than 100 types of small and large-scale beer on tap as you can.
  • Plants & Grooves: The Bazaar (25th February): Exhibitors and sellers bring a wide selection of spring flowers and indoor plants as well as plant-based, nature-related designer products, fashion and interior design goods to the Plants & Groove plant fair (link of the Facebook event), and visitors can take part in a florarium workshop, too. The Groove Cartel DJ duo will be responsible for the atmosphere and the good mood of the plants and the visitors and guests; they will provide the audience with music in association with a surprise musician. The event is free and will take place in the place called MANYI.
  • MentesFeszt (25-26th February): The Mentes Festival, which will be held on the weekend of February 25th, welcomes new and returning visitors to the first all- free (gluten free, lactose free, vegan etc…)  meeting of the Carpathian Basin. The health-conscious festival waits for you to the ELTE Gömb Hall with various professional presentations, a small market, a gastropub, vegan wines and cheese specialties.
  • Jazzation – Carnival concert (20th of February): Anything can happen at Jazzation’s carnival concert (link of the Facebook event): the band’s singers know no limits in terms of musical virtuosity, so this time they are pushing the boundaries of effective stage appearance.

Have a nice rest of February & See you soon on our private of free walking tours in Budapest! 🙂

Free programs and places to visit in Budapest

Recommendations about Free programs and places to visit in Budapest

Let us recommend you a few events and places where you can go for free before or after participating in some of our free walking tours in Budapest 🙂

  • Free concerts at the Budapest Jazz Club on the Pest side of the river Danube: besides the beloved free jam sessions on the weekends, there are some free events on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays as well at this location. Besides well known artists, the youngsters of the Franz Liszt Music Academy perform, too. It is worth to have a look at their program to be able to enjoy free music next to your meal or drink at the Budapest Jazz Club. Address is: Budapest, Hollán Ernő street 7.
  • Free ice skating rink in Kőbánya (10th district of Budapest on the Pest side): a tiny bit out of the city center, but definitely a local experience! It is open until the 29th of January 2023 between 9am and 8pm. You can easily take bus number 9 from the very city center and you can be at this 650 square meter big open air ice skating rink next to the Szent László Church. Do not worry if you do not have your ice skates with you, it is possible to rent some at the location.
  • Free events in Pótkulcs pub: it is quite a special place on the Pest side of the capital city, you will not even find a sign outside this bar, but you can look for the address of it in Google maps (A little help: Csengery street 65/b). They have free eclectic music events and folk music and dancing programs usually on Tuesdays. Check out their Facebook page (linked above).
  • Free admission to museums on given days of the month in Budapest for people under the age of 26 OR for children under 18 with their 2 adult parents/caretakers: there is one day/every month when the mentioned people can visit these museums for free, let’s see a couple of examples: first Sunday of each month: Natural History Museum and House of Terror (mainly about the communist dictatorship after WW2 in Hungary) ; 3rd Saturday of each month: Hungarian National Museum, Museum of Fine arts, Hungarian National Gallery, Hungarian Folk Museum ; last Saturday of each month: Budapest History Museum (in the Buda Castle District), Aquincum Museum (on the Buda side about the Roman times and ruins in Hungary), Hungarian Technical and Transport Museum.

We, the Free Budapest Walking Tours Team (Triptobudapest.hu Team) hope that we could help you with this post to participate in useful and entertaining programs while staying in our city! See you soon on our free tours in Budapest!