Wawel Royal Castle on its limestone hill above the Vistula river in Kraków — red-brick and white-stone towers, the cathedral's golden dome, and the Renaissance palace catching late-afternoon light. Poland.

The hill where Poland kept its kings, its crown jewels — and its dragon

Wawel Royal Castle timed-entry tickets, decoded. State Rooms, Royal Private Apartments, Crown Treasury, Armoury and the castle underground — one clear booking in euros, with English-speaking concierge support before, during and after your visit.

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  • 1596 Royal seat of Poland until the court moved to Warsaw
  • 1517–1536 Rebuilt as a Renaissance palace for Sigismund I by Italian masters
  • 137 tapestries Survive from Sigismund II Augustus's great Brussels commission
  • UNESCO 1978 Kraków's Historic Centre — one of the first 12 World Heritage sites

Choose your ticket

Crown Treasury

Szczerbiec and the royal regalia — Poland's surviving crown treasures

€24

  • Timed entry to the Crown Treasury in the castle's Gothic chambers
  • Szczerbiec, the medieval coronation sword used to crown Polish kings from 1320 to 1764
  • Royal jewels, goldsmiths' work and ceremonial objects rebuilt into a collection since 1930
  • Access through the Renaissance arcaded courtyard
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve Treasury entry

The Armoury

Arms and armour of the Polish Crown — swords, plate and cannon

€24

  • Timed entry to the castle Armoury
  • Swords, plate armour, firearms and historic cannon from the military history of the Polish Crown
  • A compact exhibition that pairs naturally with the Crown Treasury
  • Access through the Renaissance arcaded courtyard
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve Armoury entry

Lost Wawel — the castle underground

Archaeology beneath the palace — the hill's oldest stones

€24

  • Timed entry to the Lost Wawel archaeological exhibition beneath the castle
  • The remains of the Rotunda of Sts. Felix and Adauctus, built around the turn of the 10th and 11th centuries
  • Excavated traces of medieval daily life — and scale models of the vanished buildings of the hill
  • Access through the Renaissance arcaded courtyard
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve Lost Wawel entry
  • Book in your languageYour currency, final price.
  • Pro tips includedBest times, secret spots, the room most miss.
  • Ready before you flyMobile ticket, ready in your inbox.
  • 24/7 human supportReal people, instant answers — any hour, any time zone.
4.8 from 52 verified travellers
Rebecca L.
Melbourne, Australia
“The official site defeated me — five different exhibitions, all in złoty, and I couldn't work out which one had the famous tapestries. These folks just told me: book the State Rooms and Apartments, here's your time, done. The carved heads on the ceiling alone were worth it.”
May 2026
Thomas W.
Bristol, United Kingdom
“We did the castle floors in the morning and the Crown Treasury after lunch. Seeing Szczerbiec — the actual sword they crowned kings with for four hundred years — in a quiet Gothic room was the moment of our whole Kraków trip.”
May 2026
Anika S.
Hamburg, Germany
“Paying in euros instead of working out złoty on a Polish checkout page was exactly what we needed. Ticket came as a PDF the same day, scanned straight off my phone at the entrance.”
April 2026

5-minute audio guide

Your Wawel 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit. Five minutes that turns a hill of separate exhibitions into one story — the kings, the sword, the tapestries that crossed an ocean to survive, and the dragon under the floor.

Included with your booking — your full guide arrives with your ticket.Get your guide
  • Why a Renaissance palace from Florence stands on a Polish hill — Sigismund I, Bona Sforza and Berrecci's courtyard
  • The Deputies' Hall ceiling: who the carved wooden heads are looking at
  • Szczerbiec and the tapestries — how Poland's treasures survived partition, looting and war
  • The dragon legend, the real cave, and where the statue breathes fire

Included free with every ticket. No app, no download — plays in any browser.

About Wawel Royal Castle

Wawel is where Poland happened. For more than five centuries the limestone hill above the Vistula was the seat of Polish monarchs — kings were crowned in the cathedral beside the palace, ruled from its halls, and were buried in its crypts — until Sigismund III moved the court to Warsaw in 1596. The castle that crowns the hill today is largely the Renaissance palace created for Sigismund I the Old between 1517 and 1536, when Italian masters — Francesco the Florentine, then Bartolomeo Berrecci — wrapped a vast tiered arcaded courtyard in the new style of Florence, decades before most of Europe north of the Alps had seen anything like it.

Inside, the State Rooms and Royal Private Apartments hold the castle's two defining treasures: the Deputies' Hall, whose coffered ceiling stares back at you through dozens of carved wooden heads, and the Flemish tapestries commissioned in Brussels by Sigismund II Augustus in the mid-16th century — 137 survive of one of the largest single tapestry orders ever placed, looted by Russia in the 18th century, returned in 1921, evacuated to Canada through the Second World War and home again by 1961. In the Gothic chambers below, the Crown Treasury keeps Szczerbiec, the coronation sword of Polish kings from 1320 to 1764, and the Armoury its swords, plate and cannon.

The hill itself — the courtyards, the riverside walls, the views over Kraków — is free to walk, and we'll tell you that plainly. What needs a ticket, and what genuinely confuses visitors, is the interiors: Wawel sells each exhibition as a separate timed-entry ticket, released only about a month ahead, on a Polish-first, złoty-only booking system. That maze is what we untangle. You choose the experience in plain English, pay in euros (or your own currency), and your timed PDF e-ticket arrives by email, ready to scan at the door.

Practical information

Opening hours
Exhibitions are typically open Tuesday to Sunday from about 09:00 to 17:00, and Mondays on a shorter free-admission programme from about 10:00 to 16:00. Hours vary by season and by exhibition, and last entry is before closing — we confirm your exact slot on your ticket.
Address
Wawel Royal Castle, Wawel 5, 31-001 Kraków, Poland
Getting there
Wawel Hill rises at the southern end of Kraków's Old Town — about a 10–15 minute walk from the Main Market Square along Grodzka or Kanonicza street. Several tram lines stop near the foot of the hill (Wawel stop).
Getting there from the airport
Kraków Airport (KRK) is about 11 km west of the city. The airport train reaches Kraków Główny (main station) in roughly 20 minutes; from there it is a 20–25 minute walk or a short tram or taxi ride to Wawel.
Time needed
Allow 60–90 minutes for the State Rooms + Royal Private Apartments route, and 30–45 minutes each for the Crown Treasury, the Armoury and Lost Wawel. With the free courtyards and ramparts, a half-day covers the hill comfortably.
Accessibility
The hill is reached by a cobbled ramp and the historic interiors involve stairs and uneven floors; some routes are easier than others. Contact us before booking if mobility is a concern and we will confirm the current arrangements with the castle for your chosen exhibition.
Photography
Photography for personal use is permitted in the exhibitions without flash or a tripod. A few specific rooms or temporary exhibitions may restrict it, so watch for the signs as you go.
Food
Cafés operate on the hill itself, and the streets below — Kanonicza, Grodzka and the riverside boulevards — are lined with restaurants. The Kazimierz district, a 10-minute walk south-east, is Kraków's best eating quarter.

About our service

Wawel Castle Tickets acts as a facilitator to help international visitors purchase timed-entry tickets for Wawel Royal Castle, which is managed as a Polish state museum. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service, and our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, the operator's ticket site is bilety.wawel.krakow.pl (in złoty).

Frequently asked

Which Wawel ticket should I book?

If you book one thing, book the Castle (State Rooms + Royal Private Apartments) — both palace floors, the Sigismund Augustus tapestries and the carved-heads ceiling in one timed visit. The Crown Treasury (Szczerbiec and the regalia), the Armoury and Lost Wawel (the archaeology under the palace) are separate, shorter exhibitions you can add. We decode the whole menu so you only book what you'll actually use.

What's the difference between the State Rooms and the Royal Private Apartments?

They are the two floors of the royal residence. The State Rooms are the ceremonial halls — including the Deputies' Hall with its ceiling of carved wooden heads — and the Royal Private Apartments are the monarchs' living quarters, hung with Flemish tapestries. Our castle ticket covers both floors together in one timed entry.

Is Wawel Hill free to enter?

Yes — and we'll say so plainly. The hill, the courtyards (including the Renaissance arcaded courtyard) and the views over the Vistula are free to walk during opening hours. What requires a ticket is the interiors: the State Rooms and Apartments, the Crown Treasury, the Armoury and the underground exhibitions. Our service is for those interiors.

Is Wawel Cathedral included in these tickets?

No. The cathedral — where Polish kings were crowned and buried, with the Sigismund Bell in its tower — stands beside the castle but is run by a separate church operator with its own tickets. We don't sell it, but it's right next door and easy to add to your visit on the day.

Are the tickets for a specific time slot?

Yes. Wawel's exhibitions are timed-entry with daily visitor caps. You choose a date and entry time at checkout, and your ticket is valid for that slot. Arrive on the hill 15–20 minutes early — it's a short uphill walk from the gates to the courtyard entrances.

How far in advance should I book Wawel tickets?

The operator releases timed slots only about a month ahead, so very early booking isn't possible — but within that window the popular slots go fast. The State Rooms + Apartments route sells out first, especially summer mornings and weekends. Book as soon as your Kraków dates are fixed.

Is there a free day at Wawel Castle?

Yes, and we'd rather you hear it from us: on Mondays the castle opens selected exhibitions free of charge (the selection changes by season). The catch is that free tickets are issued only in person at the ticket office on the day, from a limited pool, first-come-first-served — queues form early and selling out is normal. If your schedule is flexible and you're happy to queue, it's a genuine option. Our service is for guaranteed, pre-booked timed entry on the day you choose.

How do I receive my ticket?

As a PDF e-ticket by email, with a scannable code. Show it on your phone at the entrance to your exhibition — no printing or collection needed. We also send a 5-minute audio history of the castle the day before your visit.

How long does each exhibition take?

The State Rooms + Royal Private Apartments route takes 60–90 minutes. The Crown Treasury, the Armoury and Lost Wawel take roughly 30–45 minutes each. Pairing the castle floors with one smaller exhibition makes an unhurried half-day, with time for the free courtyards and ramparts.

What are the Sigismund Augustus tapestries?

A vast set of Flemish tapestries commissioned from Brussels workshops by King Sigismund II Augustus in the mid-16th century — one of the largest single tapestry orders ever placed. 137 survive, after a history that includes looting by Russia, return to Poland in 1921 under the Treaty of Riga, wartime evacuation to Canada, and homecoming by 1961. They hang in the State Rooms and Apartments.

What is Szczerbiec?

The coronation sword of the Polish kings — used at coronations from 1320 to 1764 and one of the very few pieces of the royal regalia to survive the Prussian seizure of 1794. It is the centrepiece of the Crown Treasury, displayed in the castle's Gothic chambers.

What is Lost Wawel?

The archaeological exhibition beneath the castle, built around the remains of the Rotunda of Sts. Felix and Adauctus from around the turn of the 10th and 11th centuries — among the oldest stone buildings in Poland. Excavated objects of medieval daily life and scale models reconstruct the vanished buildings of the hill.

Can I see the Wawel dragon's den?

The Dragon's Den (Smocza Jama) is a natural limestone cave in the side of the hill, tied to Kraków's founding legend of the Wawel dragon; its exit leads to the riverside, beside the famous fire-breathing dragon statue. It opens seasonally with its own simple entry arrangement on the hill — ask us when you book and we'll tell you the current setup for your dates.

Why book through you rather than directly?

Three honest reasons: the operator's booking system runs in złoty only, Wawel's many separate exhibition tickets genuinely confuse first-time visitors, and there's no English-language support if something goes wrong. We match you to the right exhibition, charge cleanly in euros or your own currency, and a real human answers in English (and 11 other languages) before, during and after your visit. If you're comfortable with all that yourself, the operator's site works fine — we say so openly.

Can we change our time slot?

Timed tickets are issued for a fixed slot, and the operator's change rules are restrictive — so tell us your plans carefully before we book. If your plans shift, reply to your confirmation email as early as possible and our concierge team will tell you honestly what can and can't be done.

Is Wawel suitable for children and visitors with limited mobility?

Children love Wawel — the dragon legend, the underground, the armour. For limited mobility, be aware the hill is reached by a cobbled ramp and the historic interiors involve stairs; some routes are easier than others. Contact us before booking and we'll confirm the current accessible arrangements for your chosen exhibition.