Lesser Poland (Małopolska)
Wawel Royal Castle
How to visit Kraków's Wawel Royal Castle: which timed exhibition ticket to book, when to go, and whether the indoor rooms are worth paying for over the free courtyard.
Where
Kraków, Poland
Opening hours
Exhibitions run roughly 09:30–17:00 in summer (April–October) and 09:30–16:00 in winter, with the last entry about an hour before closing; most rooms are closed Mondays. The outdoor hill and courtyards open earlier (about 06:00) and stay open into the evening for free. Wawel Cathedral keeps its own hours, roughly 09:00–17:00 (shorter on Sundays). Always confirm your date on wawel.krakow.pl.
Tickets
Each exhibition is ticketed separately, mostly around 35–50 zł (about £7–£10) — State Rooms ~50 zł, Crown Treasury and Armoury ~40 zł, Royal Private Apartments ~50 zł. The cathedral plus the Sigismund Bell tower and royal tombs is a separate ticket of about 25–35 zł (£5–£7). The hill and courtyards are free. Under-7s usually free; concessions for students.
Time needed
2–3 hours for the hill and one or two exhibitions; add 45–60 minutes for the cathedral and the bell-tower climb.
In short
Visiting 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.
How to visit without overpaying
The thing to understand before you climb the ramp is that Wawel isn’t one ticket — it’s a free hill with a set of separately priced exhibitions bolted onto it. The arcaded Renaissance courtyard, the cathedral exterior and the long view down the Vistula cost nothing and are worth the walk up on their own. What you pay for is the indoors: the State Rooms with their wall of Flemish tapestries, the Royal Private Apartments, the Crown Treasury holding the coronation sword Szczerbiec, and the Armoury — each its own timed ticket of roughly 35–50 zł (about £7–£10).
Book the specific exhibitions you actually want online before you go up. Each has a small daily quota, and in July and August the popular rooms sell out a day or two ahead, so a same-day climb to the ticket office often means the State Rooms are gone. If you only buy one, make it the State Rooms. The cathedral, the Sigismund Bell tower and the royal tombs sit on a separate ticket of about 25–35 zł — worth it for the bell and the crypt, but it’s a tight stair climb, so skip the tower if knees are a problem.
How much of Wawel is worth paying for?
Go up first thing, soon after the exhibitions open at 09:30, or leave it to late afternoon once the coach groups have drifted off — midday in summer is the worst of both worlds, with the timed slots gone and the courtyard packed. The free hill is at its best early, and again around sunset over the river. Most rooms close on Mondays, so don’t plan your Wawel morning for one.
The hill earns the visit on the free parts alone, and you do not need all four exhibitions. One paid room — the State Rooms — plus a slow loop of the courtyard and the cathedral is the right-sized visit for most people. Pair it with the Rynek Główny and St Mary’s a few minutes north, or carry on down to Kazimierz, rather than trying to bolt a salt-mine or Auschwitz day onto the same afternoon — Wawel deserves its own unhurried half of a day.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Kraków city guide.
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