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South view of the Schönbrunn Palace and park.
Vienna, Austria Worth it

Schönbrunn Palace

Worth it, but plan it. Book a timed slot, do the Grand Tour, then walk up to the Gloriette for the view that makes the trip out here pay off. Treat it as a half-day, not a quick stop, and avoid the midday summer crush.

Photo: C.Stadler/Bwag (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

This was the Habsburgs' summer place, 1,400-odd rooms of yellow stucco with formal gardens climbing to a hilltop arch called the Gloriette. You tour a fixed route of state rooms on a timed ticket, so the smart move is to book your entry slot online and show up for it, because walk-up tickets in summer mean a real wait. The grounds and the climb to the Gloriette viewpoint are free, so even if you skip the interior you can spend a good morning here.

Is Schönbrunn Palace worth it?Worth it

Worth it for

  • Anyone interested in the Habsburgs and the imperial story
  • Free gardens and a genuinely good hilltop city view
  • Families, with the zoo and maze on site

You can skip if

  • You only have a day in Vienna and would rather stay central
  • You have already toured the Hofburg apartments and want something different rather than more imperial rooms

Our pick for Schönbrunn Palace

Schönbrunn is the kind of place where the rooms blur together without context, and a guide who knows the Habsburg story turns the whole thing into a narrative you remember. The guided skip-the-line option gets you past the ticket queues and straight into the state apartments with someone who can put you in front of the right details. Go in the morning when it's still breathable and the light is good, and you will leave having actually understood what you walked through.

If our pick doesn't fit

Official, book ahead

The palace sells timed entry at face value through its own ticketing, but summer slots go far ahead, so book early, and note the checkout hands off to the palace own ticketing arm, not a reseller.

Official tickets

How to visit Schönbrunn Palace

The rooms blur without context, so a guided visit with skip-the-line access is the clearest choice for most people.

  • Guided tour Best for most; turns the Habsburg room sequence into a story you remember rather than a blur of gilt.
  • Skip the line If you prefer your own pace, at minimum get a timed entry that avoids the midday summer crush.
  • Self-guided Works only if you've read up on Habsburg history beforehand; the audio notes in the standard ticket help somewhat.
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Straight from recent visitors

What travelers flag about Schönbrunn Palace

We weighed recent Vienna traveler opinion on Schonbrunn against the provider reviews. These are the themes that came up again and again.

  • Book the interior ahead, it sells outReported by many

    The palace interior is timed-entry and sells out on busy days, so book a slot online rather than turning up. Go for the first slot of the day or late afternoon to dodge the coach-tour crush, and give the trip out here a half day rather than a quick stop.

  • The gardens are freeReported by many

    The huge formal gardens, the walk up to the Gloriette, and the hilltop city view all cost nothing, and for many people that free wander is the best part. You only pay for the palace rooms and the extras like the maze, the Gloriette top, and the zoo, so you can enjoy Schonbrunn even on a tight budget.

Sourced from recent traveler discussions, not provider reviews. We only flag what several visitors independently reported, and the bars show how widely each point came up.

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Which ticket should you buy?

Book a timed palace slot online before you arrive, aim for an early-morning or late-afternoon window, and remember the park and the Gloriette climb cost nothing.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
Grand Tour Timed entry to about 40 rooms including Maria Theresa's apartments, audio guide usually included First-timers who want the full interior, roughly 75 minutes
Imperial Tour Timed entry to the shorter route, roughly 22 rooms, the imperial apartments and some state rooms Tighter schedules that still want to see the inside
Gardens and grounds attractions Separate tickets for the Gloriette terrace, maze, Palmenhouse, or zoo; the main park is free Visitors skipping the palace interior who still want a half-day outdoors
Schönbrunner Schloßstraße 47, 1130 Vienna, Austria View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

What it is

Schönbrunn is the imperial summer residence, roughly a 20-minute U-Bahn ride southwest of the old town. Maria Theresa shaped most of what you see, and the rooms run from heavy gold-and-mirror reception halls to her own lighter Rococo chambers. Franz Joseph was born here and died here, so a lot of the Habsburg story is concentrated under one roof.

It is two things at once: a palace interior you pay to tour, and a large public park you can walk for free. The park holds the gardens, the Gloriette on the hill, a maze, the Palmenhouse, and the Tiergarten, which bills itself as the oldest zoo in the world. People underestimate how much ground there is and how much of it costs nothing.

Kammergarten pavilions in the gardens of Schönbrunn Palace, Vienna, Austria. The location, a UNESCO… Photo: Diego Delso (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

What to see

Inside, the two main routes are the Imperial Tour (the shorter one, roughly 22 rooms, the apartments of Franz Joseph and Elisabeth plus some state rooms) and the Grand Tour (about 40 rooms, around 75 minutes, adds Maria Theresa's apartments and the Rococo interiors). The Grand Tour is the one worth doing if you came this far. An audio guide is usually included.

Outside, walk up to the Gloriette. It is a steady uphill but not brutal, maybe 10 to 15 minutes, and the payoff is the palace framed against the city behind it. That view is the photo everyone remembers, and it costs nothing. The formal parterre gardens between palace and hill are at their best in late spring and summer when the beds are planted.

Visiting and tickets

Interior tickets are timed entry. You pick a slot, you enter in that window, and last admission is usually about 45 minutes before closing. In peak season from spring through October, slots for the same day can be gone by midday, so book ahead online rather than gambling on the ticket office.

Buy from the official channel to avoid resale markups. If you only want the gardens, maze, Gloriette terrace, or zoo, those have their own separate tickets or are free, and you do not need a palace ticket to walk the grounds.

Schönbrunn Palace in Vienna, Austria, as seen from (or rather through) Neptune Fountain, part of… Photo: Martin Falbisoner (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

Getting there and timing

Take the U4 line to Schönbrunn station and walk a few minutes to the main gate. Tram 10 and bus 10A also stop right out front. It is far enough from the center that it deserves its own block of time, not a quick squeeze between two other sights.

Go early, ideally for an opening slot, or late afternoon. Midday in summer is the crush, with tour groups stacked at the entrance and heat baking the open gardens. Half a day is realistic if you do the interior plus the Gloriette walk.

Schönbrunn Palace: FAQs

For the palace interior, yes, especially from spring through October. Tickets are timed entry and same-day slots often sell out by midday in high season. The gardens, Gloriette, and maze do not need a palace ticket.

The Imperial Tour covers fewer rooms (the apartments and some state rooms). The Grand Tour adds Maria Theresa's apartments and the Rococo interiors, runs about 75 minutes, and is the fuller experience. If you only do one, do the Grand Tour.

Yes. The main park, the formal gardens, and the path up to the Gloriette are free during opening hours. Some attractions inside the grounds (Gloriette terrace, maze, Palmenhouse, zoo) charge separately.

Plan half a day. The interior tour is roughly an hour, and the walk up to the Gloriette and back through the gardens easily adds another hour or two. Add the zoo and it becomes a full day.

Photography inside the state rooms is generally not allowed. The gardens and exterior are fine. Plan to put the camera away once you start the indoor route.

Right at opening or in the last couple of hours of the day, and outside the summer peak. Midday in July and August is the busiest, with tour groups bunched at the entrance.

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