Skip to content
Departly.
Hohensalzburg Fortress, Austria
Hohensalzburg Fortress

Salzburg (SalzburgerLand)

Hohensalzburg Fortress

How to visit Salzburg's Hohensalzburg Fortress: which ticket includes the FestungsBahn funicular, when to go up to beat the queue, and whether the interior museums are worth it.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026

Where

Salzburg, Austria

Opening hours

Open daily. The fortress and museums run roughly 09:30โ€“17:00 in winter (October to April) and 08:30โ€“20:00 in summer (May to September); the FestungsBahn funicular runs continuously through opening hours, with the last car up about 30 minutes before closing. Hours shift for events and the Christmas market season, so confirm your date on salzburg-burgen.at.

Tickets

All-inclusive ticket about โ‚ฌ16.30 (~ยฃ14) โ€” covers the FestungsBahn funicular up and down, the fortress museums, the Golden Hall and Princes' Chambers and the audio guide. The basic ticket without the museums and audio guide is about โ‚ฌ13.30 (~ยฃ11); walking up the Festungsgasse path and paying only at the gate is cheaper still. Reduced family and under-15s rates apply, and the SalzburgCard includes entry.

Time needed

About 2 to 2.5 hours: 30โ€“40 minutes for the ramparts and the Reckturm viewpoint, an hour or so for the Golden Hall, the Princes' Chambers and the Fortress and Marionette museums, plus the funicular ride and queue at each end.

In short

Visiting Hohensalzburg Fortress

Take the FestungsBahn funicular up from Festungsgasse behind the cathedral rather than the steep walking path, and buy the all-inclusive ticket so the funicular both ways, the fortress museums and the audio-guide circuit are covered in one go. The queue at the funicular base station builds fast from about 10am, so go up soon after opening or late in the afternoon. Allow two to two and a half hours: the ramparts and the city panorama are the real draw, with the Golden Hall and the Fortress Museum a step behind. There is no need to book a slot ahead โ€” it is a walk-up ticket, not a timed-entry sight.

Take the funicular, buy the right ticket

The clifftop fortress over the Altstadt is the one Salzburg ticket worth sorting first, and the practical decision is which ticket and how you get up. Ride the FestungsBahn funicular from Festungsgasse, behind the cathedral, rather than the steep cobbled path โ€” and buy the all-inclusive ticket (about โ‚ฌ16.30, roughly ยฃ14), which covers the funicular both ways, the fortress museums, the Golden Hall and Princesโ€™ Chambers and the audio guide in one go. The basic ticket at about โ‚ฌ13.30 drops the museums and audio guide; walking up and paying at the gate is cheaper still, but youโ€™ll have earned it on the climb.

This is a walk-up sight, not a timed-entry one, so thereโ€™s no slot to pre-book. The catch is the queue: the funicular base station backs up from around 10am in summer and over the Christmas market weeks. Go up soon after the 08:30 summer opening (09:30 in winter), or leave it until after about 4pm. If you already hold a SalzburgCard, entry is included and you skip the ticket window entirely.

What to see, and is it worth it?

Give it two to two and a half hours. The real draw is the position: the ramparts and the Reckturm watchtower give the best panorama over the old-town rooftops to the Alps, far better than any street-level view. Inside, the all-inclusive ticket adds the Golden Hall (Goldene Stube) and the Princesโ€™ Chambers, the finest of the late-Gothic interiors, while the Fortress Museum and the Marionette Museum are a modest extra rather than a reason to come. Listen out for the Salzburg Bull, the fortressโ€™s old barrel organ that booms across the town morning and evening.

Ride up, walk the walls and do the Golden Hall, and donโ€™t feel you must work through every museum room โ€” if youโ€™re short on time, the view is the point. Many people stroll back down the Festungsgasse path afterwards for the rooftop angles you miss on the way up. Pair it with the cathedral squares directly below rather than stacking another hilltop sight on the same morning.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Salzburg city guide.

More to see in Salzburg

Book the essentials

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide
See the full Austria guide

Hohensalzburg Fortress FAQs

Do you need to book Hohensalzburg Fortress tickets in advance?
No โ€” it is a walk-up attraction, not a timed-entry one, so you buy at the FestungsBahn base station or the upper gate on the day. The catch is the queue rather than sell-outs: the funicular base station on Festungsgasse backs up from about 10am in summer and over the Christmas market weeks. Go up soon after opening or after about 4pm, or buy the SalzburgCard, which includes entry and lets you skip the ticket window.
Is Hohensalzburg Fortress worth it?
Yes, mainly for the position and the view. The ramparts and the Reckturm tower give the best panorama over the Altstadt rooftops to the Alps, and the all-inclusive ticket adds the Golden Hall and the Princes' Chambers, the finest of the medieval interiors. The Fortress and Marionette museums are a modest extra rather than a highlight, so if you are short on time, do the walls and the Golden Hall and move on.
Should you walk up or take the funicular?
Take the FestungsBahn funicular. The walking path up Festungsgasse is steep and takes about 15โ€“20 minutes on cobbles, and the all-inclusive ticket already covers the funicular both ways, so walking only saves money if you buy the basic gate ticket. Most people ride up and, if they fancy it, stroll back down the path afterwards for the rooftop views on the way.

Ready to book?

Check tickets & tours

Go