Greater Poland (Wielkopolska)
Town Hall goats (Ratusz, Stary Rynek)
Poznań's signature spectacle: two mechanical billy goats butt heads twelve times above the Renaissance town hall clock at noon — when to stand, where to look, and what's inside the Ratusz the rest of the day.
Where
Poznań, Poland
Opening hours
The goats appear once a day at 12 noon, every day, weather and maintenance permitting. The Stary Rynek below is open access at any hour. The town hall's city history museum keeps its own daytime hours and is usually closed one day a week. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.
Tickets
Free — no ticket needed to watch the noon goats from the square. The museum inside the Ratusz costs a small entry fee, around 12 zł per adult at the time of writing, with concessions and a free day in some weeks.
Time needed
Five to ten minutes for the spectacle if you arrive a few minutes before noon; an hour more if you go into the city history museum afterwards.
In short
Visiting Town Hall goats (Ratusz, Stary Rynek)
Every day at noon, two mechanical billy goats emerge above the clock on Poznań's Renaissance town hall and butt heads twelve times while a crowd watches from the Stary Rynek below. It is the city's defining quirk, free to see and over in a couple of minutes — so arrive early for a clear view. The rest of the day the Ratusz houses the city history museum.
The noon ritual
Every day at 12 noon, a small crowd gathers in the Stary Rynek, faces tilted up at the Renaissance town hall. On the chime, two little mechanical billy goats appear above the clock and butt heads twelve times. That’s it — and that, somehow, is exactly the point. The goats are the thing Poznań is best known for, tied to a folk tale about two animals that escaped a cook and clattered up the tower, and the city has built a happy ritual around them.
Be clear-eyed about the scale: it lasts a couple of minutes and you are sharing it with phones held aloft. But it costs nothing, the anticipation is part of the charm, and watching the crowd is half the entertainment. Arrive a few minutes early and find a spot a little back from the facade so the clock sits cleanly in view rather than craning over heads. It happens daily, though maintenance or repairs can occasionally pause it.
The Ratusz the rest of the day
The goats are a footnote to the building beneath them. The Ratusz is one of central Europe’s finer Renaissance town halls, and inside it holds the city history museum, with ornate ceilings worth the small entry fee — around 12 zł per adult last we checked, with concessions and varying hours, so confirm on the official site as it usually closes one day a week.
Around it spreads the Stary Rynek, ringed with colourful merchant houses and pavement cafes. The smart plan is to be in the square before noon for the goats, then linger over coffee or lunch and let the afternoon unspool. Come back in the evening, when the cellars below the houses open as bars and restaurants and the square shifts from sightseeing to going out.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Poznań city guide.