Lesser Poland (Małopolska)
Wieliczka Salt Mine
How to visit the Wieliczka Salt Mine from Kraków: which route to book, the English tour times that sell out, and whether the 380-step descent is worth it.
Where
Kraków, Poland
Opening hours
Tourist Route runs daily from around 09:00, with the last entry roughly 17:00 in winter and as late as 19:00–20:00 in peak summer. Closed 1 January, Easter Sunday, 1 November and 24–25 December. Confirm your date and English tour time on wieliczka-saltmine.com.
Tickets
Tourist Route from about 145 zł (≈ £29) for an adult in the English-language guided slot; reduced about 110 zł (≈ £22) for children, students and over-65s. Under-4s free. A separate photo permit is about 10 zł (≈ £2).
Time needed
About 2 hours underground on the Tourist Route; add 30–40 minutes either side for the transfer from Kraków and the queue to descend.
In short
Visiting 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.
Which ticket to book, and when
The thing to sort before you fly is the English-language Tourist Route ticket, because you cannot wander Wieliczka on your own — every visit is a guided walk, and the foreign-language slots are far fewer than the Polish ones. In July and August those English times sell out several days ahead, so book online through the official site or a Kraków tour partner rather than gambling on the gate, where you can lose a couple of hours or be left with only a Polish-speaking group. The Tourist Route is the one to buy; the deeper Miners’ Route is a separate, more physical product most first-timers don’t need.
What people underestimate is the walking. The route opens with a 380-step wooden staircase spiralling down to 64 m, then covers roughly 3 km on foot before a lift carries you back to the surface — so it genuinely doesn’t suit weak knees, and there’s no shortcut once you’re committed. Go for a mid-morning English slot if you can, which clears the route before the afternoon coach crush, and budget a half-day all in: about two hours underground plus the ~30-minute hop from Kraków each way.
Getting there, and is it worth it?
From Kraków it’s about 14 km south-east. A booked tour or transfer that ties the round trip to a fixed English tour time is the easiest way to be sure of a slot; doing it yourself, the train from Kraków Główny to Wieliczka Rynek-Kopalnia takes around 25 minutes and drops you a short walk from the entrance — but you still need that English ticket in hand first. Don’t try to bolt it onto the same day as the Auschwitz-Birkenau trip; both are emotionally and physically full half-days, and pairing them ruins both.
It earns the ticket, no hesitation. The chambers, the salt-crystal chandeliers and above all St Kinga’s Chapel — a full church carved from rock salt 101 m down — are the real thing, not a marketing cave. Just go in clear-eyed about the stairs and the crowds, treat it as a relaxed afternoon paired with Kazimierz rather than a rushed tick-box, and skip it only if a long descent on foot is genuinely off the table.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Kraków city guide.
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