Vienna
Schönbrunn Palace
How to visit Vienna's Schönbrunn Palace: which timed ticket to book, when the morning slots beat the coach crowds, and whether the Grand Tour is worth the price.
Where
Vienna, Austria
Opening hours
Palace state rooms open daily from 09:00, closing around 17:00 in winter and to about 17:30–18:00 in summer (last entry roughly 30 minutes before). The gardens open from 06:30 and stay open until dusk; the Gloriette, maze and zoo keep their own seasonal hours. Always confirm your date on schoenbrunn.at.
Tickets
Grand Tour (40 rooms, audio guide included) about €34 (~£29); Imperial Tour (22 rooms) about €29 (~£25); Classic Pass adding the Privy Garden, maze and Gloriette about €44 (~£38). Under-6s free; reduced rates for under-18s and students.
Time needed
About 1–1.5 hours for the Grand Tour rooms, plus 1.5–2 hours for the gardens, Gloriette walk and views — half a day all in.
In short
Visiting Schönbrunn Palace
Book a timed Grand Tour slot online before you fly — Schönbrunn is Austria's single most-visited attraction and afternoon slots routinely sell out in peak season, so turning up on spec means a long wait or no entry. The state rooms are a fixed one-way route on an audio guide; the gardens, the Gloriette and the maze outside are free. Take a morning slot to beat the coach tours that pile in after lunch, allow about half a day for the palace and grounds together, and ride the U4 out rather than driving.
How to visit without queuing for nothing
Schönbrunn is the most-visited attraction in Austria, and entry to the state rooms runs on timed slots — so the mistake to avoid is rolling up mid-afternoon expecting to walk in. In summer and over the Christmas-market weeks the good slots sell out a few days ahead, and the same coach tours that fill the car parks fill the rooms from late morning. Book a timed Grand Tour ticket online before you fly and pick the earliest slot you can stomach, just after the 09:00 opening.
Choose the Grand Tour (about €34, roughly £29) over the shorter Imperial Tour — the extra rooms are the ones worth seeing, including the Rococo Great Gallery and the Napoleon and Vieux-Laque rooms. The route is one-way with an audio guide, so it moves quickly: an hour to an hour and a half inside. Don’t pay extra for anything you won’t use; the gardens, the long walk up to the Gloriette and the maze are the part most people remember, and the formal gardens themselves are free to wander.
One Habsburg palace? Make it this one
Go first thing. The rooms are calmest in the opening hour, and the gardens photograph far better in the soft early light before the crowds reach the Gloriette hill. Allow half a day all in — about an hour for the state rooms and another hour and a half or two for the grounds, the Gloriette viewpoint back over the palace to the city, and a coffee on the terrace. Ride the U4 to Schönbrunn or Hietzing rather than driving; it’s a few stops from the centre and the car parks fill early.
If you book one Habsburg palace in Vienna, make it this one — the Hofburg is grander for imperial apartments, but Schönbrunn pairs the interiors with gardens you could spend a morning in for nothing. Skip stacking it against the Belvedere on the same day; give Schönbrunn its own morning, then take the tram back into town for a coffee house in the afternoon.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Vienna city guide.
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