Budapest Walking Tour with Audio Guide on your Smartphone

3 hours (approximately)
Offered in: English

The audio guide is a handy mobile companion for a self-guided stroll around Budapest. This tour is specifically designed for a quick exploration of the city, taking just 2-3 hours. Simply follow the route on the app's map to navigate through the city center, passing by the main attractions. You're guaranteed to see: St. Stephen's Basilica, Hungarian Parliament, Váci Street, Danube Embankment, Klotild Palaces, Széchenyi Chain Bridge, Liberty Square.

Once you've downloaded the tour, the app runs offline. The audio guide can always be heard clearly through your headphones. Enjoy captivating stories and legends at your own pace, without the need to keep up with a tour group. This tour is ideally complemented by the Buda Castle tour on the app.
If you only have a few hours to explore Budapest, make the most of it with the audio guide and you won't miss a thing.

What's Included

Landmark Illustrations
One-year access to the tour in your preferred language
30 audio recordings narrated by a professional historian
Audio guide app for iPhone and Android
Offline map featuring a route for effortless GPS navigation
In-person tour guide
Smartphone and Headphones
Transportation
Food and Beverages

Meeting and pickup

Meeting point

- The tour begins at Ferenc Deák Square - This is a self-guided tour, there will be no human guide present at the meeting point - Launch the app, initiate the Budapest City Tour, and proceed along the designated route

End point
This activity ends back at the meeting point.

Itinerary

Duration: 3 hours (approximately)
  • 1

    Anker Palace in Budapest is a striking example of early 20th-century eclectic architecture, standing just off Deák Ferenc Square. Built in 1908 for the Austrian insurance company Anker, the building blends Neoclassical and Art Nouveau elements—with colossal statues, ornate balconies, and a dramatic façade that seems to pose for a photo at every hour. Once home to intellectual salons and political circles, including the legendary Galileo Circle, it’s now mostly apartments and offices. A grand old dame of the city, weathered but still watching.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 2

    The Klotild Palaces are twin architectural jewels guarding the entrance to Váci Street in Budapest, like sentinels of a vanished imperial age. Built between 1899 and 1902 for Archduchess Maria Klotild, their Neo-Baroque facades, crowned with ornate towers, once marked the beginning of the “royal route” to Buda. Though nearly identical, one now houses the Matild Palace hotel, blending old-world splendor with modern luxury. Standing beneath them, you feel Budapest’s layered grandeur — where Habsburg ambition still echoes in stone and spire.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • Thonet House (Pass by)

    Thonet House, located on Váci Street in Budapest, is a refined example of early 20th-century Art Nouveau architecture, designed in 1907 by architect Marcell Komor and Dezső Jakab. Commissioned by the famous Thonet furniture company — known for its elegant bentwood chairs — the building once housed both showrooms and apartments. Its curving iron balconies, floral motifs, and soft asymmetry are textbook Secessionist style. Though easily missed among tourist shops today, a glance upward reveals a façade still dancing with Viennese charm and modernist confidence.

    Admission ticket free
  • 3

    Deák Ferenc Street, often dubbed "Fashion Street," is one of Budapest’s most stylish promenades, linking Vörösmarty Square with Deák Ferenc Square. Once a quiet side street, it was reimagined in the 2000s into a polished, pedestrian-friendly boulevard lined with designer boutiques, flagship stores, and elegant cafés. Though sleek and modern today, the historic facades whisper of Belle Époque Budapest. Whether window-shopping or simply people-watching, the street offers a curated blend of global fashion and local flair — Budapest dressed in its Sunday best.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 4
    Vorosmarty Square (Vorosmarty ter)

    Vörösmarty Square is the cultural and social heart of central Budapest, anchored by a statue of the poet Mihály Vörösmarty, whose verses once stirred a nation. Surrounded by elegant 19th-century buildings and the famous Gerbeaud Café, the square hums with life year-round—hosting Christmas markets, concerts, and public events. It’s where history, poetry, and pastry come together. From here, Váci Street stretches south, while the Danube glimmers just beyond. Come for the atmosphere, stay for the strudel — and the echoes of a literary soul.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 5

    Vigadó Concert Hall, poised on the Pest side of the Danube, is one of Budapest’s most ornate and storied cultural landmarks. Originally opened in 1865 and rebuilt after wartime damage, its façade dazzles with Neo-Romantic detail, and the grand interior hosts concerts, exhibitions, and national ceremonies. Franz Liszt and Johann Strauss once performed here; today, it remains a venue for classical music, bathed in chandeliers and history. It's not just a concert hall — it’s a salon of Hungarian elegance, where music rises beneath painted ceilings and golden arches.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 6

    Café Gerbeaud, nestled in Vörösmarty Square, is Budapest’s most iconic coffeehouse — where time seems stirred into every cup. Founded in 1858 and later elevated by Swiss confectioner Emil Gerbeaud, it became a haunt of writers, aristocrats, and sweet-toothed daydreamers. Inside, gilded mirrors, marble tables, and crystal chandeliers set the stage for traditional Dobos torte, kremes, and the famous Gerbeaud slice. More than a café, it’s a living museum of Hungarian pastry art — a place to linger, sip, and taste history in velvet layers.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 7

    Kolodko statues are Budapest’s tiniest wonders — whimsical, bronze mini-sculptures by Ukrainian-born artist Mihály Kolodko, hidden in plain sight across the city. From a tiny Ferenc Liszt lounging near his namesake airport to Főkukac, the cartoon worm, peeking over a wall, each statue is playful, satirical, or deeply nostalgic. They're unsignposted and unmarked, turning the city into a treasure hunt. Spotting one feels like a private joke shared with the city itself — Budapest whispering back through a few inches of bronze mischief.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 8

    The Michael Jackson Memorial Tree in Budapest stands across from the Kempinski Hotel on Erzsébet Square, where the pop icon stayed during his visits to Hungary in the 1990s. After his death in 2009, fans spontaneously turned the tree into a tribute—covering it with photos, candles, notes, and memorabilia. It's not an official monument, but something more personal: a fan-built shrine that still receives fresh tributes. Odd, touching, and enduring, it’s a reminder that fame, like roots, sometimes grows in unexpected places.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 9
    Elizabeth Square

    Erzsébet Square (Erzsébet tér) is Budapest’s youthful pulse — an open, lively plaza where locals sprawl on grass, skateboarders weave past fountains, and tourists pause between sights. Named after Empress Elisabeth (Sisi), the square blends old and new: it houses the elegant Kempinski Hotel, the modern Akvárium Klub underground venue, and the ever-popular Budapest Eye Ferris wheel. Beneath it all runs Europe’s largest underground bus terminal. It’s not just a square — it’s the city’s outdoor living room, where Budapest stretches, chats, and soaks up the sun.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • Madame Tussauds Budapest (Pass by)

    Madame Tussauds Budapest, opened in 2023, brings the famous wax museum franchise to the heart of the Hungarian capital — right next to Andrássy Avenue. But this isn’t just a copy of its London cousin: it blends international stars like Beyoncé and Einstein with Hungarian icons such as Franz Liszt, Sisi, and Harry Houdini. The lifelike figures are displayed in immersive sets, from royal halls to backstage dressing rooms. It's part selfie playground, part history lesson — with a touch of waxy weirdness that’s strangely irresistible.

    Admission ticket free
  • 10

    Hotel InterContinental Budapest sits right on the Danube promenade, offering front-row views of Buda Castle, the Chain Bridge, and Gellért Hill. Its modernist exterior might not turn heads, but inside, it's all quiet luxury and panoramic drama. Once the Forum Hotel in the socialist era, it’s hosted diplomats, celebrities, and conference crowds alike. The lobby bar is a prime sunset spot, and rooms facing the river give you Budapest’s postcard skyline — lit up and unfolding like a stage set outside your window.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 11
    Danube River

    The Danube is Budapest’s defining line — both a divider and a unifier. It cuts the city into Buda and Pest, reflecting castles, bridges, and steeples in its broad, slow-moving current. From the Parliament Building to Gellért Hill, everything important seems to face the river, acknowledging its quiet authority. Walk the promenade, take a night cruise, or just watch it from a bench — it’s history in motion. Not grand like the Seine or wild like the Thames, the Danube in Budapest feels timeless, calm, and deeply woven into the city's soul.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 12

    The Széchenyi Chain Bridge is Budapest’s most iconic crossing — a stone-and-iron span linking Buda and Pest since 1849. Named after István Széchenyi, the “Greatest Hungarian,” it was the first permanent bridge over the Danube here, symbolizing unity and progress. With its cast-iron lions, suspension chains, and neoclassical arches, it feels both grand and grounded. Damaged in WWII and recently restored, it’s not just infrastructure — it’s a national symbol. Cross it on foot at night, when it glows like a necklace strung across history.

    5 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 13

    The Hungarian Academy of Sciences, founded in 1825, stands proudly at the Pest end of the Chain Bridge, its grand Neo-Renaissance façade overlooking the Danube like a philosopher deep in thought. This is Hungary’s highest institution of scholarly research, home to scientists, thinkers, and thick tomes of national memory. Its elegant halls host lectures, conferences, and the quiet hum of intellectual labor. More than a building, it’s a temple of reason — built when ideas were considered a country’s finest currency.

    10 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 14

    Zrínyi Street is a short but striking pedestrian lane in central Budapest, running from Hercegprímás Street to the Danube, perfectly framing St. Stephen’s Basilica like a stage set. Lined with elegant facades, cafes, and trendy restaurants, it’s a favorite for evening strolls and Instagram shots. Though thoroughly polished today, it still hums with old-world charm under modern gloss. As you walk its cobblestones, with the basilica towering ahead and the river behind, it feels like the city showing off — effortlessly.

    5 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 15

    The Policeman Statue in Budapest, just a few steps from St. Stephen’s Basilica, is a bronze tribute to a rotund, mustachioed officer in early 20th-century uniform — cheerful, stout, and ready for selfies. Created by sculptor András Illyés, he’s not a real historical figure but a charming nod to the city’s past. Locals say rubbing his belly brings good luck, so his midsection gleams brighter than the rest. More than a statue, he’s a beloved character — standing watch with a smile, blending nostalgia with a wink.

    5 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 16
    St. Stephen's Basilica (Szent Istvan Bazilika)

    St. Stephen’s Basilica is one of Budapest’s crowning landmarks — both spiritually and architecturally. Completed in 1905, it honors Hungary’s first king, Stephen I, whose mummified right hand is preserved in a gilded reliquary inside. The basilica’s neoclassical dome towers 96 meters high, matching Parliament by law to symbolize church and state as equals. Inside, expect marble, mosaics, and golden light — plus sublime acoustics for organ concerts. Climb the dome for panoramic views, where history stretches in every direction. Sacred and soaring, it’s Budapest at its most majestic.

    5 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 17

    The Postal Savings Bank in Budapest is a riot of Hungarian Art Nouveau, designed by visionary architect Ödön Lechner and completed in 1901. Tucked near Liberty Square, its façade bursts with colorful ceramic tiles, floral motifs, and rooftop bee sculptures—symbols of industrious saving. Nicknamed the “Hungarian Gaudí,” Lechner infused national folk art into modern architecture, and this building is his manifesto. Though not open to the public, it’s worth a lingering gaze: a treasury of imagination disguised as a financial institution.

    5 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 18

    The Eternal Flame in Budapest burns quietly in Liberty Square (Szabadság tér), commemorating Hungarian soldiers who died in World War I. Set in a small, low monument, it often goes unnoticed amid the grander surroundings—but its flame never ceases. Surrounded by layers of history—Soviet memorials, American embassy, and controversial statues — it stands as a quiet, flickering reminder of sacrifice. In a square full of ideological noise, the Eternal Flame speaks softly — and perhaps more truthfully — about the cost of war.

    5 minutes Admission ticket free
  • 19
    Szabadsag ter

    Liberty Square (Szabadság tér) is one of Budapest’s most symbolically charged spaces — a grand, leafy plaza layered with contradiction. Built over the ruins of a Habsburg barracks, it now hosts monuments from clashing eras: a Soviet war memorial, a controversial WWII German occupation statue, a Ronald Reagan statue, and even a memorial to Hungarian Jewish victims. Surrounded by stately architecture like the National Bank and American Embassy, the square looks serene, but its stones hum with political tension, memory, and debate.

    5 minutes Admission ticket free
  • Hungarian Parliament Building (Pass by)

    The Hungarian Parliament Building, perched on the banks of the Danube, is a Gothic Revival masterpiece — and the soul of Budapest’s skyline. Completed in 1904, it boasts 691 rooms, 29 staircases, and a central dome soaring 96 meters high, echoing the year of Hungary’s founding in 896. Inside, you’ll find golden halls, the Holy Crown of Hungary, and velvet-wrapped corridors of power. Outside, its symmetrical spires and stone lions gaze solemnly at history in motion. It's not just a parliament — it’s a national cathedral built for democracy.

    Admission ticket free
  • 20

    Shoes on the Danube Bank is Budapest’s most haunting memorial. Sixty pairs of cast-iron shoes — men’s, women’s, and children’s — line the riverbank near the Parliament, commemorating the Jews murdered by the Arrow Cross militia during World War II. Victims were ordered to remove their shoes before being shot into the Danube. Created in 2005 by Gyula Pauer and Can Togay, the sculpture’s simplicity is its power. Each pair tells a silent story of lives stolen and dignity denied. Stand here, and the river doesn’t just flow — it remembers.

    5 minutes Admission ticket free

Additional info

  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
  • The audio guide is available through a mobile app for iOS and Android
  • The entry tickets to the Parliament of Hungary and St. Stephen's Basilica are not included and must be purchased separately in advance
  • The tour does not cover all the Budapest sights
  • This is a self-guided tour. You will need to download the audio guide mobile app, activate your purchase, and follow the route on the app's map. There is no human guide provided
Supplied by TouringBee

Show 1 more

Tags

Half-day Tours
Audio Guides
Cultural Tours
Walking Tours
City Tours
Nature Walks
Short term availability

Cancellation Policy

For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.

Show more

from per person
Was {{formatPrice(summaryFromPriceBeforeDiscount, currency, 2)}}