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Vue du Parlement hongrois depuis l'autre côté du Danube.
Budapest, Hungary Worth it

Hungarian Parliament Building

Worth it, but mostly for the exterior and the crown jewels. The building from outside, especially at night and from the river, is the defining Budapest view and costs nothing. The interior tour is short and a bit rushed for the price, so book it if you love grand interiors or want to see the Holy Crown, and skip it if you are tight on time or budget.

Photo: Kilyann Le Hen (CC BY 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

This is the building on every Budapest postcard: a huge neo-Gothic pile of spires and arches sitting right on the Danube, lit gold at night. You can only see inside on a guided tour, and those sell out, often a week or two ahead, so book your timed slot online before you arrive rather than turning up and hoping.

Is Hungarian Parliament Building worth it?Worth it

Worth it for

  • Anyone who wants the iconic riverfront photo (free, anytime)
  • Seeing the Holy Crown of St. Stephen and the coronation regalia
  • Fans of over-the-top neo-Gothic interiors and gilded staircases

You can skip if

  • You are on a tight budget and happy with the exterior and night view
  • You hate fixed-time tours and security queues for a 45-minute walkthrough

Our pick for Hungarian Parliament Building

The Parliament interior can only be seen on a timed tour, and this one walks you through the frescoed grand staircase, the gilded debating hall, and the Crown Chamber with the history filled in as you go. It is backed by a far stronger track record than the alternative, which for a fixed-route visit like this is exactly the difference that matters: you are booking the version visitors consistently say runs smoothly.

If our pick doesn't fit

Buy it direct

The National Assembly runs its own ticketing here, so you book the timed guided tour straight from the source without a reseller markup.

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Straight from recent visitors

What travelers flag about Hungarian Parliament Building

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

  • Tour only, and it sells outReported by many

    You cannot wander the Parliament: the interior is seen only on a fixed timed tour, and slots sell out days ahead in summer. Book on the official site as soon as you have a date. The tour is short, about 45 minutes, and non-EU visitors pay more than EU citizens.

  • The free view is the real iconReported by several

    Almost everyone agrees the defining Budapest shot is the Parliament seen from across the river or from the Buda side at night, and that costs nothing. Book the interior only if grand gilded halls and the Holy Crown genuinely pull you; otherwise the exterior is the memory people keep.

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.

More options for Hungarian Parliament Building

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Which ticket should you buy?

Buy directly from the official Parliament visitor center site for the real EU/non-EU rates, and grab a morning slot. Third-party 'skip-the-line' tickets often just resell the same timed entry at a markup.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
Guided interior tour (EU rate) 45-minute guided tour: main staircase, Dome Hall with the crown jewels, old Upper House chamber EU citizens with matching ID who want the full interior at the lower rate
Guided interior tour (non-EU rate) Same guided route as the EU ticket, charged at the standard non-EU price Visitors from outside the EU who want to see inside
Skip-the-line / guided combo via operators Reserved entry plus an outside guide and sometimes nearby sights bundled in People who want a guide to add context and don't mind paying a markup
Kossuth Lajos tér 1-3, 1055 Budapest, Hungary View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

What it is

Hungary's working seat of government, finished in 1904 and still one of the largest parliament buildings in the world. The architect Imre Steindl modeled the outline loosely on the Palace of Westminster, then piled on Hungarian detail: 365 turrets, a central dome, and a riverfront facade that is symmetrical to the point of obsession.

It is genuinely big, and from across the river on the Pest embankment or from a boat at dusk it is the single best skyline shot in the city. The exterior is free to walk around any time, and the square in front (Kossuth Lajos tér) is open and worth a few minutes even if you skip the interior.

Hungarian Parliament Building, Budapest, Hungary Photo: Godot13 (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

What to see inside

The tour is short, roughly 45 minutes, and front-loaded with the showpieces. The grand main staircase is the moment most people remember: red carpet, gilded vaults, 96 statues, and far more gold leaf than feels reasonable. You also walk through the old Upper House chamber, which is a near-mirror of the working lower house.

The other reason people come is the Hungarian Coronation Regalia, including the Holy Crown of St. Stephen with its famously bent cross, displayed under guard in the central Dome Hall. Note that photography is not allowed in the dome where the crown sits, so just look. The tour does not enter the active chamber when parliament is in session.

Visiting and tickets

Entry is by guided tour only, in one of several languages including English, and tours leave on a set timetable through the day. Tickets are sold online through the official Parliament visitor center, and there is a separate, cheaper EU-citizen rate versus a non-EU rate, so bring ID that matches the ticket you bought.

Arrive early. Security screening is airport-style and there is a real queue at the visitor center (which is underground, on the north side of the square, not at the main facade). Give yourself 20 to 30 minutes before your slot. If a date shows sold out online, it usually is, so plan this one ahead of the rest of your trip.

Hungarian Parliament Building: FAQs

No. The interior is only open as a guided tour with timed entry. The grounds and the square outside are free and open, but the staircase, chambers, and crown jewels are tour-only.

As far as you can. Tours commonly sell out one to three weeks out in peak season, and English slots go first. Book online through the official visitor center the moment you know your dates.

Yes. There is a separate, notably cheaper rate for EU citizens versus non-EU visitors. Carry a passport or ID that matches the ticket type you purchased, since they do check.

No photography is allowed in the Dome Hall where the Holy Crown is displayed. You can photograph the staircase and most of the rest of the route.

At the underground visitor center on the north side of Kossuth Lajos tér, not the grand riverfront entrance. Look for the gate and ramp leading down, and allow time for security screening.

Yes, and it is free. The whole facade is floodlit and the reflection in the Danube is the classic shot. View it from the Pest embankment or from the Buda side near Batthyány tér.

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