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Warsaw 3-Day Essentials — Old Town, History & Chopin

Rebuilt Old Town & Royal Castle + POLIN & Warsaw Uprising museums + Łazienki Park & Chopin + Palace of Culture

Warsaw 3-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
3 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$320
Budget–luxury
$170–$710

As of 2026, the recommended Warsaw 3-day route runs Day1 Rebuilt Old Town + Royal Castle + Royal Route · Day2 POLIN + Warsaw Uprising Museum + Łazienki Park & Chopin · Day3 Wilanów Palace + Praga district + Vistula boulevards, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $320 on a mid-range budget. Three days covers Warsaw's core. Day 1 takes the UNESCO-rebuilt Old Town, the Royal Castle, and the Royal Route down to the Palace of Culture and Science. Day 2 handles the city's heavy, essential history — the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews and the Warsaw Uprising Museum — then the calm of Łazienki Park and the Chopin Monument. Day 3 adds Wilanów Palace, the Praga district across the Vistula, or a half-day trip to Żelazowa Wola. The center is walkable and the metro/tram network is cheap. Pre-book the POLIN Museum and approach the WWII sites with respect.

3-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$170

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$320

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$710

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Rebuilt Old Town + Royal Castle + Royal Route

Old Town (UNESCO) - Royal Castle - Market Square & Mermaid - Royal Route - Palace of Culture terrace

Activities

  1. 09:30 Old Town (Stare Miasto) + Castle Square 1h30

    Begin in the rebuilt Old Town — a UNESCO World Heritage site reconstructed from rubble after WWII. Start at Castle Square with Sigismund's Column, then wander the restored streets to the Market Square (Rynek) and the Mermaid Statue (Syrenka), Warsaw's symbol.

    Cost: Free to walk TIP: The whole Old Town was rebuilt from paintings and photographs after the war — that reconstruction is what UNESCO recognized. Morning light is best before tour groups arrive. Castle Square (Plac Zamkowy) is the natural starting point.
  2. 11:00 Royal Castle (Zamek Królewski) 1h30

    Tour the Royal Castle, destroyed in WWII and reconstructed brick by brick between 1971 and 1984. Inside are restored royal apartments and an art collection including works by Rembrandt and Bellotto, whose Warsaw cityscapes guided the post-war rebuilding.

    Cost: PLN 50 ($12.50); free on a designated day weekly TIP: Allow about 90 minutes for the apartments and galleries. There's a free-admission day each week — check the official site. The Bellotto paintings are a highlight: they literally helped rebuild the city around you.
  3. 13:00 Lunch — pierogi in the Old Town 1h15

    Lunch on Polish classics nearby. Gościniec Polskie Pierogi or the Old Town branch of Zapiecek serve the full range of pierogi — potato-and-cheese, meat, cabbage-and-mushroom — plus żurek and bigos.

    Cost: PLN 30-60 ($7.50-15) per person TIP: Order pierogi boiled or pan-fried, and try a bowl of żurek (sour rye soup). Old Town spots are busy and slightly pricier; a couple of streets back is cheaper. Cards accepted at both.
  4. 14:30 Royal Route — Krakowskie Przedmieście to Nowy Świat 1h30

    Walk the Royal Route south past Holy Cross Church (where Chopin's heart is interred), the University of Warsaw, and the Presidential Palace, then down the café-lined Nowy Świat boulevard. Stop for a pączek at A. Blikle (since 1869).

    Cost: Free (snacks extra) TIP: This grand boulevard links the Old Town to the modern center. Pause at Holy Cross Church to see the Chopin pillar. A. Blikle's rose-jam doughnut is the classic mid-walk treat. Plenty of cafés if you need a break.
  5. 16:30 Palace of Culture and Science — viewing terrace 1h

    Reach the Palace of Culture and Science, the 237m socialist-realist tower gifted by Stalin's USSR in 1955 — a complicated symbol of the communist era. Ride to the 30th-floor terrace for the city's best panorama.

    Cost: PLN 25-30 ($6-7.50) terrace TIP: Locals joke the terrace has the best view in Warsaw — because it's the one place you can't see the Palace itself. Late afternoon into sunset gives the finest light over the skyline.
  6. 19:30 Dinner — traditional Polish on the Royal Route 1h30

    Dinner on classic Polish cooking. Dawne Smaki ('Old Flavours') on Nowy Świat serves kotlet schabowy (breaded pork cutlet), żurek in a bread bowl, and dumplings in warm, old-fashioned surroundings.

    Cost: PLN 50-110 ($12.50-27) per person TIP: The breaded pork cutlet with potatoes and cabbage is the canonical main. Pair it with a Polish beer or a chilled vodka. Reservations help at dinner. A short walk from the Palace of Culture.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or café breakfast

Old Town / center · PLN 20-40

Coffee and pastries, or a hotel buffet before the day.

Lunch

Gościniec / Zapiecek (Old Town)

Old Town · PLN 30-60

Pierogi and żurek in the rebuilt historic core.

Dinner

Dawne Smaki

Nowy Świat · PLN 50-110

Kotlet schabowy and żurek in a bread bowl.

Transit:

Today is almost all on foot — the Old Town, Royal Route, and Palace of Culture form a continuous walking line through the center. A tram or short ride only if your feet tire.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $105 Luxury $235
DAY 2

POLIN + Warsaw Uprising Museum + Łazienki Park & Chopin

POLIN Museum - Ghetto memorials - Warsaw Uprising Museum - Łazienki Park - Chopin Monument

Activities

  1. 09:30 POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews 2h30

    Open with the POLIN Museum, on the site of the former Warsaw Ghetto. Its core exhibition traces 1,000 years of Jewish life in Poland — medieval settlement, the rich pre-war community, the Holocaust, and the present — through immersive galleries. Pre-book online.

    Cost: PLN 45 ($11); free Thursdays (permanent exhibition) TIP: Book a timed ticket online to skip the queue (busiest on free Thursdays). Allow at least 2-3 hours. Approach the Holocaust galleries with the gravity they deserve. Closed one day a week (typically Tuesday) — check the schedule.
  2. 12:15 Ghetto memorials — Monument to the Ghetto Heroes & Umschlagplatz 45min

    Just outside POLIN stands the Monument to the Ghetto Heroes; a short walk away is the Umschlagplatz memorial, marking the site from which Warsaw's Jews were deported to Treblinka. Quiet places of remembrance in the former ghetto district.

    Cost: Free TIP: These are memorials, not photo stops — keep your voice down and behave with restraint. Fragments of the original Ghetto Wall survive nearby and can be sought out. A sobering but essential part of understanding the city.
  3. 13:30 Lunch — milk bar (bar mleczny) 1h

    Lunch the local, budget way at a milk bar — a communist-era cafeteria serving cheap soups, pierogi, and cutlets. Bar Bambino (since 1957) or Bar Prasowy (since 1954) are atmospheric survivors near the center.

    Cost: PLN 15-30 ($4-7.50) per person TIP: A full meal often comes to under PLN 30. Order at the counter from a Polish-only board (use a translation app), then clear your own tray. Bar Prasowy is famous for its żurek. Cash is safest. A genuine local experience.
  4. 15:00 Warsaw Uprising Museum 2h

    The Warsaw Uprising Museum tells the story of the 1944 resistance against German occupation — 63 days of fighting that ended in defeat and the city's destruction — through artifacts, testimony, and immersive exhibits. One of Warsaw's most powerful sites.

    Cost: PLN 30 ($7.50); free Mondays TIP: Allow at least two hours; the exhibits are dense and emotional. It can be busy — going earlier in the afternoon helps. Free on Mondays. Treat it as a place of memory, not a spectacle.
  5. 17:45 Łazienki Park + Chopin Monument 1h30

    Decompress in Łazienki Park, the 76-hectare royal park of gardens, ponds, peacocks, and the Palace on the Water. Visit the Chopin Monument — on summer Sundays, free open-air piano concerts are held here at noon and 4pm (May-September).

    Cost: Free (Palace on the Water ~PLN 30) TIP: After a heavy history day, the park is a calming finish. If it's a summer Sunday, time your visit for the free Chopin concert at the monument. Watch for peacocks. The park is lovely in golden-hour light.
  6. 20:00 Dinner — Old Town or Royal Castle area 1h30

    Round off with a relaxed Polish dinner. Polka, in a Renaissance tenement near the Royal Castle, serves hearty traditional cooking — roasts and dumplings — in atmospheric surroundings.

    Cost: PLN 75-165 ($18-40) per person TIP: Polka is a more polished take on Polish classics than the daytime milk bar. Reserve ahead for dinner. For a cheaper option, the Old Town pierogi spots work too. Cards accepted.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café or hotel breakfast

Center · PLN 20-40

A quick start before POLIN's timed slot.

Lunch

Bar Bambino or Bar Prasowy

Śródmieście · PLN 15-30

Milk-bar żurek, pierogi, and cutlets — cheap and local.

Dinner

Polka

Old Town · PLN 75-165

Hearty traditional Polish cooking near the Royal Castle.

Transit:

Use trams/metro between the museums and Łazienki Park — they're spread across the center. A 24-hour ZTM pass (~PLN 15) covers all modes. The Old Town and Royal Route remain walkable on foot.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $60 Mid $110 Luxury $240
DAY 3

Wilanów Palace + Praga district + Vistula boulevards

Wilanów Palace ('Polish Versailles') - Praga across the Vistula - Vistula boulevards - farewell dinner

Activities

  1. 09:30 Wilanów Palace — the 'Polish Versailles' 2h30

    Head south to Wilanów Palace, a 17th-century royal baroque residence that survived WWII largely intact — a rare glimpse of pre-war Warsaw. Tour the opulent interiors and stroll the formal baroque gardens.

    Cost: PLN 30-40 ($7.50-10); free day weekly TIP: About 30-40 minutes from the center by bus. The interiors and gardens are the draw; allow time for both. There's a free-admission day for the palace each week. In winter, the grounds host an illuminations event.
  2. 13:00 Lunch + return toward the center 1h15

    Lunch near Wilanów or back in the center, then head toward the Vistula and the Praga district on the east bank for the afternoon.

    Cost: PLN 30-70 ($7.50-17) per person TIP: Wilanów has cafés and restaurants by the palace if you want to eat before heading back. Otherwise return to the center and eat near the river before crossing to Praga.
  3. 15:00 Praga district — Warsaw's artsy east bank 2h

    Cross the Vistula to Praga, the up-and-coming district that escaped the worst wartime destruction. Explore its pre-war tenements, courtyard shrines, street art, and converted-factory cultural spaces like the Koneser vodka-factory complex.

    Cost: Free to wander TIP: Praga feels more local and lived-in than the rebuilt center. The Koneser complex houses the Polish Vodka Museum (paid). It's a tram ride from the Old Town. A grittier, creative counterpoint to the polished west bank.
  4. 17:30 Vistula boulevards (Bulwary Wiślane) 1h30

    Return to the west-bank Vistula boulevards — a long modern riverside promenade for walking, with bars, cafés, and (in summer) lively nightlife and free ferries to the wild east bank.

    Cost: Free TIP: The boulevards are at their best on a warm evening. In summer, free ferries cross to the semi-natural east bank — a protected nature area. A relaxed way to round out the day by the river.
  5. 20:00 Farewell dinner — Old Town or Nowy Świat 1h30

    A final Polish dinner. U Fukiera on the Old Town Market Square is the splurge option for game and roasts; Restauracja Pod Samsonem in the New Town offers honest classics at gentler prices.

    Cost: PLN 60-200 ($15-50) per person TIP: Choose by budget — U Fukiera for a celebratory Market Square dinner, Pod Samsonem for better-value traditional cooking. Reserve ahead. End with a chilled vodka to toast the trip.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café or hotel breakfast

Center · PLN 20-40

Fuel up before the trip out to Wilanów.

Lunch

Wilanów café or center restaurant

Wilanów / center · PLN 30-70

A relaxed lunch between the palace and Praga.

Dinner

U Fukiera or Pod Samsonem

Old Town / New Town · PLN 60-200

A farewell Polish dinner, splurge or value.

Transit:

Buses to Wilanów (30-40 min from the center) and trams across the Vistula to Praga. A 24-hour ZTM pass (~PLN 15) covers it all. The Vistula boulevards and Old Town are walkable.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $105 Luxury $235

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Packing Checklist

Warsaw 3-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 3 days enough for Warsaw?
Yes for the core — the rebuilt Old Town and Royal Castle, the POLIN and Warsaw Uprising museums, Łazienki Park and Chopin, the Palace of Culture, and a third day for Wilanów or Praga. If you want to add Kraków and the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial, allow extra days, as that's an overnight rather than a day trip from Warsaw.
Do I need to book attractions in advance?
Pre-book the POLIN Museum online to skip the queue (busiest on free Thursdays). The Royal Castle, Warsaw Uprising Museum, and Wilanów rarely need advance booking, though buying online can be cheaper and save time. If you continue to Auschwitz-Birkenau near Kraków, reserve the guided tour well ahead — it sells out in peak season.
How should I handle the WWII and Holocaust sites?
With respect and some emotional preparation. POLIN, the Warsaw Uprising Museum, the Ghetto memorials, and the Umschlagplatz are places of remembrance — keep your voice down, follow photography rules, and avoid casual or smiling photos at memorials. These sites are central to Warsaw's identity, and the history is recent in family memory. Treat them seriously.
When should I visit?
May to September is best — mild 60-77°F (15-25°C), long days, riverside life, and the free Sunday Chopin concerts in Łazienki Park. December has festive Christmas markets but cold, short days. January to early March is cold (often around or below freezing) and grey, though cheapest. Spring and autumn are pleasant but changeable — pack layers.

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Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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