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Budapest

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Gate8 Global Team

Budapest deserves 3-4 nights, not a rushed layover. The city splits across the Danube into Buda (hilly, the Castle District, quieter) and Pest (flat, downtown, nightlife, most hotels) — stay in Pest near a metro line for convenience, and spend one day exploring Buda's hills. One day for the Parliament and river views, one for a thermal bath, one for the Jewish Quarter and ruin bars. Budget roughly $50-90/day per person before accommodation.

Budapest gets called 'the Paris of the East' by tour guides who've clearly never priced a Paris hotel room. It's cheaper, it's less crowded, and honestly, the Danube views from Buda's hills give Paris's river a run for its money. Here's how to actually spend three or four days here without wasting one of them figuring out the tram map.

How many days do you need in Budapest?

Three to four nights is the sweet spot. One day for Pest's landmarks (Parliament, St. Stephen's Basilica, the Jewish Quarter), one for Buda's hills (Castle District, Fisherman's Bastion, the funicular), and at least one half-day reserved purely for a thermal bath — it's not a bolt-on activity here, it's one of the actual reasons to visit. A fourth day covers day-trip options or a second bath.

Buda or Pest — where should you stay?

SideCharacterBest for
Pest (flat, east bank)Downtown energy, most restaurants, ruin bars, nightlifeFirst-timers, most hotel budgets, easy metro access
Buda (hilly, west bank)Castle District, quieter residential streets, river viewsCouples wanting quiet, longer stays, a change of pace
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Book a hotel within walking distance of an M1, M2, or M3 metro line in Pest. Budapest's public transport is excellent and cheap (a 24-hour travel pass runs about $8), and staying near a line means you're never more than 20 minutes from anywhere that matters.

View across the Danube in Budapest
Budapest's Danube waterfront, looking toward the Castle District

What's actually worth your time

  1. The Hungarian Parliament Building — best photographed from the Buda side of the Danube at golden hour; book an interior tour a few days ahead if you want to see the Crown Jewels.
  2. Fisherman's Bastion and Buda Castle — a free, sweeping viewpoint over the whole city, best reached via the funicular or a short uphill walk.
  3. A thermal bath — Szechenyi is the classic first-timer choice; see our full baths guide for the honest comparison (Gellert is currently closed).
  4. The Jewish Quarter and ruin bars — converted courtyard bars built into crumbling old buildings, unique to Budapest and genuinely fun at night.

Getting around

The metro (four lines, including Continental Europe's oldest, the M1) plus trams and buses cover the whole city cheaply and reliably. Trams 2 and 4/6 in particular hug the Danube and the Grand Boulevard and are worth riding for the views alone, not just as transport.

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Hailing a taxi on the street — Budapest's taxi overcharging scam is notorious. Use the Bolt app instead, which shows the fare upfront (see our money & safety guide).
  • Skipping a thermal bath because it sounds touristy — locals go regularly, and it's genuinely one of the best things about the city, not a gimmick.
  • Trying to see Buda and Pest thoroughly in one day — the hills and the flat downtown have completely different paces; rushing between them wastes both.

Find a place near a metro line — it makes the whole trip easier

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Where to stay in Budapest — hotels

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Questions people actually ask

How many days should I spend in Budapest?
Three to four nights is ideal — enough for Pest's landmarks, a day exploring Buda's hills, and unhurried time in a thermal bath, which is genuinely worth building a half-day around.
Is Budapest expensive?
No — it's one of the more affordable major European capitals. A sit-down meal runs $8-18 per person, a 24-hour transit pass is about $8, and mid-range hotels are noticeably cheaper than equivalent options in Vienna, Paris, or Amsterdam.
Should I stay in Buda or Pest?
Pest, for most first-time visitors — it's flatter, has the bulk of restaurants and nightlife, and sits on the metro network. Buda is quieter and hillier, better suited to a slower second visit or travelers prioritizing calm over convenience.

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