Lesser Poland (Małopolska)
Kraków
Give Kraków three or four nights inside the Planty ring or Kazimierz, book your Auschwitz and Wieliczka slots weeks ahead, and take the SKA1 train in from Balice.
Best length
3-4 nights
Airport
Kraków John Paul II / Balice (KRK), ~11km west
Airport to centre
SKA1 train ~17 min to Kraków Główny; taxi/app ~25-30 min
Best base
Inside the Planty for first-timers; Kazimierz for evenings
In short
Kraków at a glance
Kraków works best as a 3- or 4-night long weekend: base yourself inside the Planty ring or in Kazimierz, pre-book a timed Auschwitz-Birkenau slot and the Wieliczka Salt Mine weeks before you fly, take the 17-minute SKA1 train in from Balice rather than a touting taxi, and pay in złoty for everything because euros only buy you a worse rate.
The short version
- Stay inside or just outside the Planty (the green ring round the old town) for your first trip; Kazimierz is the better base for an evening-led, craft-beer stay.
- Book Auschwitz-Birkenau weeks ahead — entry is free but the timed slots sell out, and in peak hours an authorised guide is compulsory.
- Skip cheap hotels stranded out by the airport at Balice: the SKA1 train puts the old town 17 minutes from the terminal for 20 zł.
- Wieliczka Salt Mine is a half-day, ~14 km south-east — book the English guided tour rather than turning up at the gate.
- Three full days cover the Rynek, Wawel, Kazimierz, Auschwitz and Wieliczka comfortably; a fourth night lets you slow down rather than fit more in.
Kraków rewards a slow first morning and a planned afternoon. The medieval core survived the war almost intact, so the Rynek, Wawel and Kazimierz string together in a single walkable loop — but the two experiences most people fly in for, Auschwitz-Birkenau and the Wieliczka Salt Mine, sit outside the city and run on timed tickets that sell out. The classic first-timer mistake is treating them as drop-in visits, arriving to find the Auschwitz slots gone for the day, then losing an afternoon to it. Book those two before you fly, and the rest of the trip relaxes around them.
Three full days is the practical minimum: one for the old town and Wawel, one for the Auschwitz day-trip, and one for Kazimierz and Wieliczka. A fourth night buys breathing room rather than more sights. Below, the structured planning — where to base yourself between the Planty ring and Kazimierz, the SKA1 train in from Balice, what to lock in early, and a long weekend costed in pounds — picks up from here.
Plan your Kraków trip
Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.
Top things to do in Kraków
Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum
Entry to Auschwitz-Birkenau is free, but a timed online reservation is compulsory — and slots sell out two to four weeks ahead in summer, so book before you fly. In the busy hours roughly 10:00–15:00 a guided tour is mandatory, so most UK visitors take an organised coach trip from Kraków that bundles the ~1h15 transfer and an authorised English-speaking guide. Set aside a full half-day: the standard tour runs about 3.5 hours across both the Auschwitz I base camp and the much larger Birkenau site, and keep the rest of that day light.
Schindler's Factory Museum
Book a timed Schindler's Factory ticket online before you fly — slots in the museum on Lipowa 4 in Podgórze sell out days ahead in season, and there is no reliable on-the-day queue. Go in knowing what it is: a dense, occupation-era social-history museum about everyday life in Nazi-occupied Kraków from 1939 to 1945, not a recreation of the film 'Schindler's List'. Allow about 1.5–2 hours for the full one-way route, and book the English guided tour if you want the rooms explained rather than read alone.
Wawel Royal Castle
Wawel splits into two visits: the hilltop, courtyards and cathedral grounds are free to wander, but the headline exhibitions — the State Rooms, the Royal Private Apartments, the Crown Treasury and Armoury — each sell separate timed tickets that go in summer, so reserve the rooms you actually want online before you climb up. Allow 2–3 hours for the hill, more if you add the cathedral and the Sigismund Bell tower. Morning slots beat the early-afternoon coach crush, and a single combined visit is plenty — you don't need to see every exhibition.
Wieliczka Salt Mine
Book the English-language Tourist Route online before you fly — the foreign-language slots are limited and sell out days ahead in summer, and you cannot walk the mine unguided. It is a 2-hour, roughly 3 km underground walk that starts with a 380-step wooden staircase down to 64 m, so it is not one for dodgy knees. The Chapel of St Kinga, carved entirely from rock salt 101 m down, is the payoff. Allow a half-day from Kraków including the ~30-minute transfer.
Where to stay first
The areas that make a first visit easier — not an exhaustive directory.
Stare Miasto (Old Town, inside the Planty)
££ mid-rangeThe easiest first-timer base: you wake up minutes from the Rynek, Wawel and the main restaurants, and everything is walkable. It's the priciest area and the square's edge can be noisy at weekends, but it saves you time every single day.
Best for: First-timers, couples, short stays
Kazimierz
£ valueThe old Jewish quarter, now Kraków's best food-and-bar district: synagogues, milk bars, the Plac Nowy zapiekanki, and a craft-beer scene that beats the old town for value and atmosphere. A 10-15 minute walk or short tram from the Rynek.
Best for: Food-led trips, nightlife, repeat visitors
Podgórze
£ valueAcross the Vistula and quieter, with the Ghetto Heroes Square, the Schindler's Factory museum and the MOCAK art gallery. Better value than the old town and an easy bridge walk into Kazimierz, but a little further from the square at night.
Best for: History-led trips, value, calmer evenings
Stradom / Grzegórzki (near Kraków Główny)
££ mid-rangeThe streets between the old town and the main station — handy if you're arriving by SKA1 train or doing day-trips and onward rail to Warsaw. Less atmospheric than Kazimierz, but very well connected and often cheaper.
Best for: Rail arrivals, day-trippers, two-city trips
Airport to city centre
| Option | Time | Cost | Book ahead? |
|---|---|---|---|
| SKA1 train to Kraków Główny | ~17 min | 20 zł / about £4 | Best value; runs roughly every 30 min |
| Bus 208 / 252 / 902 (night) to the centre | ~40 min | 6 zł / about £1.20 | Cheapest, but slower with luggage |
| Ride-hailing app (Bolt / Uber) | ~25-30 min | usually 60-100 zł / £12-£20 | Easiest late at night or with bags |
| Marked airport taxi | ~25-30 min | about 90-120 zł / £18-£24 | Use the official rank, not touts inside |
When to go
Sweet spot: Late April to June and September to early October: mild 14-22°C days, manageable crowds on the Rynek, easier Auschwitz slots and lower prices than the July-August peak. Late spring and early autumn are the sweet spot for the squares and beer gardens.
July and August are warmest but busiest, with the old town packed and Auschwitz tickets hard to get — reserve weeks ahead. December is cold and often below freezing but magical for the Rynek Christmas market; pack proper layers. January and February are cheapest and quietest, though short, dark and cold.
What it costs
UK return flights to Kraków run from about £25-£60 off-peak on Ryanair, Wizz Air or easyJet booked ahead, climbing to £90-£180 in the school holidays or the December Christmas-market fortnight. Direct routes fly from a dozen-plus UK airports, so a regional departure like Manchester or Edinburgh is often as cheap as London.
Daily budget per person
Kraków's best everyday saver is the bar mleczny (milk bar): a bowl of żurek and a plate of pierogi runs 15-25 zł (£3-£5). Eat a few streets off the Rynek and pay in złoty, not euros — the square's edge and the few euro-accepting tills both quietly cost you more.
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