
Hungarian Food: What to Eat and What It Costs
Hungarian food is hearty, paprika-driven, and underrated: goulash (gulyas) is traditionally a soup rather than the thick stew the name suggests elsewhere, chicken paprikash is the other national staple, and langos (fried dough loaded with sour cream and cheese) is the essential street snack. A casual sit-down meal runs $8-18 per person. Tokaj, 2.5-3 hours from Budapest, produces some of the world's great sweet wines and is worth a day trip or a tasting session in the city.
Hungarian food doesn't get talked about the way Italian or Thai food does, and that's genuinely a gap in most people's travel planning. This is rich, warming, paprika-forward cooking, built for a country with harsh winters, and it's some of the best value eating in Western-adjacent Europe.
Must-try dishes
| Dish | What it is | Approx. price |
|---|---|---|
| Gulyas (goulash) | A paprika-rich beef and vegetable soup — not the thick stew the name implies abroad | $5-9 |
| Csirkepaprikas (chicken paprikash) | Chicken in a creamy paprika sauce, usually served with dumplings (nokedli) | $8-14 |
| Langos | Deep-fried dough topped with sour cream, cheese, and often garlic | $3-6 |
| Turos csusza | Pasta with cottage cheese, sour cream, and crispy bacon bits | $6-10 |
| Kurtoskalacs (chimney cake) | A rolled, sugar-crusted pastry cooked over charcoal — a classic sweet street snack | $3-6 |

Street food and market halls

The Great Market Hall (Nagycsarnok), a striking 19th-century iron-and-glass building near the Liberty Bridge, is the easiest place to try langos, sample local salami and paprika, and pick up souvenirs that aren't tourist-trap kitsch. Go on the upper floor for the food stalls, and expect it to be genuinely busy with both locals and visitors.
Hungarian wine — the real surprise

Tokaj, in Hungary's northeast, produces Tokaji Aszu — a sweet, botrytized wine made from grapes affected by noble rot, historically served at royal courts across Europe and once called 'the wine of kings, the king of wines' by Louis XIV. The region is a 2.5-3 hour drive from Budapest, making it a long but doable day trip (full-day guided tours run roughly $100-250 per person including tastings and lunch), or you can sample it at a wine bar in Budapest without the drive.
Coffee and sweets

Budapest has a genuine grand-cafe culture, a holdover from the Austro-Hungarian era — ornate, historic coffeehouses serving strong coffee alongside Hungarian pastries like dobos torte (layered sponge cake with a caramel top) and somloi galuska (a trifle-like sponge dessert). Worth an afternoon just for the atmosphere, not only the food.
Dietary needs
Vegetarian travelers do reasonably well in bigger cities — look for 'vegetarian' (vegetarianus) menu sections, though traditional Hungarian cooking leans heavily on meat and lard by default, so it's worth asking directly rather than assuming a dish is meat-free. Vegan options are more limited outside Budapest's international restaurants. Halal food is available in Budapest but not widespread elsewhere in the country — check ahead if you're traveling beyond the capital. Common allergens to watch for: dairy (sour cream is used constantly) and gluten (dumplings, pastries, and fried dough are everywhere).
What it costs, all in
| Meal type | Price per person |
|---|---|
| Street food / langos | $3-6 |
| Casual sit-down restaurant | $8-18 |
| Mid-range restaurant | $18-30 |
| Nice dinner out with wine | $35-60 |












































