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Budapest Thermal Baths: The Perfect Spa Day Itinerary

Budapest sits on more than a hundred hot springs, and soaking in its grand bathhouses is the city's defining experience. Here is how to plan a full thermal day — Széchenyi in the morning, Lukács or a beer spa in the afternoon, Rudas at sunset — with the best-rated tickets and spa packages to book.

At a glance

  1. 1Széchenyi before the crowds
  2. 2Lukács or a beer spa
  3. 3Rudas rooftop at sunset
  4. 4Riverside wind-down

Morning: Széchenyi before the crowds

Start at Széchenyi, the biggest and most photographed of Budapest's bathhouses — 18 pools fed by natural hot springs, including the famous outdoor lagoons where regulars play chess in 38°C water. Arrive before 9am to beat the tour groups and catch the steam rising in the morning light. A pre-booked ticket with a locker or cabin, from around €30, walks you straight past the ticket queue.

Afternoon: Lukács or a beer spa

For round two, pick your pace. Lukács is the bath locals actually use — quieter, cheaper and over a century old, its courtyard lined with marble plaques left by grateful bathers. Or book a beer spa session: a private wooden tub of warm water, hops and malt with unlimited pours from the tap beside you, from around €60. Either fits neatly between a long lunch and the evening.

Sunset: Rudas and the rooftop

End the day at Rudas, an Ottoman bathhouse from the 1550s where an octagonal pool steams under a dome pierced by coloured glass. The modern wellness wing holds the real prize: a rooftop panorama pool looking straight across the Danube — spectacular at sunset. Parts of Rudas keep single-sex sessions on some weekdays, and late-night bathing runs on Friday and Saturday, so check the schedule before you go.

What to bring — and what to skip

Pack a swimsuit and flip-flops; towels and robes can be rented on site, and a swimming cap is only needed for the lap pools. If the art nouveau Gellért was on your list, check ahead — it has been undergoing a major renovation, and Lukács is the classic alternative locals recommend. Between soaks, drink plenty of water: two or three hours in 38°C pools is more tiring than it sounds.

Thermal bath day — FAQ

Which thermal bath in Budapest is best?
Széchenyi is the biggest and most famous, with 18 pools and the iconic outdoor lagoons; Rudas adds Ottoman atmosphere and a rooftop pool over the Danube; Lukács is the quieter, cheaper local favourite. First-timers usually start with Széchenyi.
How much do Budapest thermal baths cost?
Expect roughly HUF 10,000–13,000 (about €26–34) for a day ticket with a locker at the major baths. Pre-booked tickets cost slightly more but skip the ticket queue, and beer spa sessions start from around €60.
Do I need to book Budapest thermal baths in advance?
For Széchenyi in peak season, yes — pre-booked entry saves real queue time — and beer spa tubs sell out days ahead. Lukács and weekday visits are usually easy to walk into.