Warsaw
Warsaw Travel Guide
- About Warsaw
- Warsaw History
- Did you know?
- Weather in Warsaw
Getting around Warsaw
- Public transport
The Municipal Transport Board – ZTM
Telephone: 19115 in Poland only.
Website: www.ztm.waw.pl operates the bus, tram and metro network, connecting all parts of Warsaw.
Night buses converge on Ulica Emilii Plater, next to the Palace of Culture and Science. Tickets, valid for all modes of transport, are available at Ruch and Relay kiosks, post offices and some shops and hotels. It is also possible to purchase tickets on board buses, but a surcharge applies.
With every change of vehicle, you must punch a new ticket in the metal boxes inside the bus or tram, or before entering the platform on the underground. One-day passes are valid for 24 hours after you first punch the ticket.
Weekend passes and group weekend tickets (allowing up to five people to travel together) are also available. Students with an ISIC get a 50% discount and children under seven years of age travel free. Pickpockets operate on some routes (especially bus 175 to and from the airport).
- Taxis
Taxis in Warsaw are metered and can be hailed on the street, although fares are usually cheaper if the taxi is ordered by telephone. Reliable firms include:
iTaxi
Telephone: +48 737 737 737
Website: www.itaxi.pl
Halo Taxi
Telephone: +48 660 601 601
Website: www.halotaxiok.pl
Super Taxi
Telephone: +48 22 19 622
Website: www.supertaxi.pl
Unofficial taxis should be avoided; only use a taxi with the telephone number displayed on the top. Tipping is usually around 10% of the fare.
- Driving
In the past decade, traffic congestion in Warsaw has increased dramatically. Many of the city’s drivers travel at high speeds and perform dangerous overtaking manoeuvres, which may trouble nervous visitors.
Be mindful of tramway lines when driving as the tracks are not always on a separate road area. At red lights, a small green arrow indicates that it is permissible to turn right, but priority must be given to cross traffic.
At intersections without lights, traffic must stop for pedestrians once they have begun to cross at zebra crossings. Paid street parking is in effect and there are some underground car parks in the city centre. There is also 24-hour parking around the Palace of Culture and Science.
- Bicycle hire
Warsaw is a flat city and has some wonderful cycling paths especially along the Vistula River, but beware that drivers are not supportive of cyclists sharing the road with them. The city’s bikeshare scheme:
BezProblem Bike
Address: Lędzka 44, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 606 890 410
Website: www.bezproblembike.eu
Veturilo
Telephone: +48 22 19 115
Website: www.en.veturilo.waw.pl has docking stations throughout Warsaw and runs in spring, summer and autumn.
- Car hire
Book Your Car
Things to see in Warsaw
Attractions
- Getto Żydowskie (Jewish Ghetto)
What is markedly absent from Warsaw contributes as much to its history as anything that has been preserved or reconstructed. Pre-war Warsaw had a Jewish population second only to New York. After the Nazi invasion, some 450,000 Jews were rounded up and forced into the city’s so-called ghetto. A 3m (10ft) wall encircled the area, from the Palace of Culture and Science to the Umschlagplatz monument, at the corner of Ulica Stawki and Ulica Dzika. This stark monument marks the place from where Jews were despatched by train to the Treblinka concentration camp, following the Ghetto Uprising of 19 April 1943. Only three sections of the actual wall remain.
Address: Jewish Ghetto, Sienna 53, Warsaw.
Opening times: Daily 04:00-20:30.
Website: www.app.1943.pl
Admission Fees: No
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Zamek Królewski (Royal Castle)
Walking through the Royal Castle, you have to remind yourself constantly that most of it was reconstructed between 1971 and 1984, although the darker elements of the décor were salvaged from the ruins. The castle, located on a plateau overlooking the Vistula River, was built for the Dukes of Mazovia and expanded when King Zygmunt III Vasa (Waza) moved the capital to Warsaw. From the early 17th until the late 18th century, this was the seat of the Polish kings. It subsequently housed the parliament and is now a museum displaying tapestries, period furniture, funerary portraits and collections of porcelain and other decorative arts.
Address: Plac Zamkovy 4, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 223 555 170
Opening times: Tues-Sun Sat 10:00-17:00.
Website: www.zamek-krolewski.pl
Admission Fees: Yes (free on Sun).
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Pałac Kultury I Nauki (Palace of Culture and Science)
Varsovians are divided over this prime example of Socialist Realism. For decades it has been, at 231m (758ft), the tallest building in Poland and a reminder of Stalin’s bravura – it was a gift from him to the city, built between 1952 and 1955. Detractors still reckon that the best views of the city are from the top of the structure since it is the only place in Warsaw where you cannot see the Palace of Culture and Science. The viewing platform on the 30th floor at 115m (377ft) does indeed give a terrific view over Warsaw. Besides offices, the building houses a concert hall, a multiscreen cinema, three theatres and two museums.
Address: Plac Defilad 1, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 226 567 600
Opening times: Daily 10:00-20:00.
Website: www.pkin.pl
Admission Fees: No (charge for the observation deck).
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego (Warsaw Uprising Museum)
The Warsaw Rising Museum is a must-see for those with any interest in history and tales of bravery and self-sacrifice. In order to get a taste of what life in Warsaw must have been like for Varsovians during WWII, this thoroughly comprehensive museum shows examples of how residents resisted the German forces through film footage, photographs, recorded interviews, life-size dioramas, soundscapes and informative plaques, written in both Polish and English. Cityscape pictures pinpointing the handful of buildings that survived WWII are located on the museum’s elevated viewing platform; they are a grim reminder of the destruction wrought by the Nazis on Warsaw.
Address: Ulica Grzybowska 79, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 22 539 7905
Opening times: Wed-Mon 10:00-18:00.
Website: www.1944.pl
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Synagoga Nożyków (Nożyk Synagogue)
This synagogue dating from 1902 is the only Jewish house of worship in Warsaw to have survived the war as it was used as a Nazi warehouse. Other places of interest that connect Warsaw to Jewish history include the Jewish Historical Institute, the Jewish Cemetery and the Museum of the History of Polish Jews. In a shady park just opposite the museum is the rather stern Monument to the Ghetto Heroes, which is on Ulica Ludwika Zamenhofa, in the centre of the ghetto. It was erected on a heap of wartime ruins in 1948.
Address: Ulica Twarda 6, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 226 204 324
Opening times: Mon-Fri 11:00-17:00, Sun 09:30-17:30.
Website: www.warszawa.jewish.org.pl
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Muzeum Więzienia Pawiak (Pawiak Prison Museum)
This eerie old prison symbolises the oppression that has dogged Warsaw over the last two centuries. Originally built in 1839 at the order of the czar, the prison counted among its inmates many victims of the Nazi reign of terror from 1939 to1944, when it served as the largest political prison in Poland. A third of the estimated 100,000 detainees never made it out alive. The Nazis tried to dynamite the evidence of their crimes as they fled but Pawiak and its exhibits stand as a testament to Warsaw’s seemingly endless ability to suffer and survive.
Address: Ulica Dzielna 24/26, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 228 319 289
Opening times: Tue-Sun 10:00-17:00.
Website: www.pawiak.muzn.pl
Admission Fees: Yes (free on Thu).
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Pałac w Wilanowie (Wilanów Palace)
In the mid-1600s, King Jan III Sobieski commissioned Augustyn Locci to build the baroque palace and garden of Wilanów for his summer residence. Construction continued from 1677 until the king’s death in 1696. Called Vila Nova in Italian (from which the Polish name is derived), it remained popular with subsequent monarchs. Visitors can tour the interior and the gallery, which features portraits of famous Poles. Artistic handicrafts are on display in the Orangerie. Also here is the Muzeum Plakatu (Poster Museum), the first of its kind in the world. Poles have excelled in the poster arts since at least the end of WWII.
Address: ul. Stanislawa Kostki Potockiego 10/16, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 225 442 700
Opening times: Daily 10:00-16:00.
Website: www.wilanow-palac.art.pl
Admission Fees: Yes (free admission Thurs).
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Muzeum Pawilon-X (Block 10 Museum)
Housed in the Citadel, a solid 19th-century fortress northwest of the Old Town and overlooking the Vistula, this Warsaw museum was once used as a prison for political enemies of the Russian czars. The lucky inmates were shipped to labour camps in Siberia; the less fortunate were executed at Brama Straceń (Gate of Execution) on the prison grounds. The original cells are still standing and labelled with some of the prison’s more famous residents, and paintings by Alexander Sochaczewski, a former inmate transported to Siberia with 20,000 other anti-Russian insurgents in the mid-19 century, adorn the walls.
Address: Wybrzeże Gdańskie, Ulica Skazańców 25, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 228 391 268
Opening times: Tue-Sun 10:00-17:00.
Website: www.muzeum-niepodleglosci.pl
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Katedra Św Jana (St John’s Cathedral)
St John’s is thought to be the oldest church in Warsaw. Originally built in the Mazovian gothic style in the 15th century, St John’s has been remodelled many times over the centuries. It was only upgraded from a parish church to a cathedral in 1798. Destroyed during WWII, the cathedral has been reconstructed in its original style and features major gothic art works by Wit Stwosz. The cathedral was used in 1764 for the coronation of the last Polish king (Stanislaw II) and for the swearing in of the Sejm (Polish parliament) after the constitution of 1791.
Address: Świętojańska 8, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 228 310 289
Opening times: Mon-Fri 10:00-18:00.
Website: www.katedra.mkw.pl
Admission Fees: No (charge for the crypt).
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Muzeum Narodowe w Warszawie (National Museum in Warsaw)
The National Museum’s impressive collection of artworks and other items dates from ancient times to the present day and total some 800,000 pieces. Highlights include Jan Matejko’s monumental Battle of Grunwald (1878), which celebrates the Polish victory over the Teutonic Knights in 1410, and the Faras Collection of early Christian and Egyptian art, which is unique in Europe. The collection of medieval art is also remarkable – if somewhat gruesome in parts. Unusually, there are also galleries of Polish and European decorative arts. Frequent temporary exhibitions bring prized international works (from Andy Warhol to Caravaggio) to Warsaw.
Address: Aleje Jerozolimskie 3, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 226 211 031
Opening times: Tues-Sun 10:00-18:00, Thu 10:00-21:00.
Website: www.mnw.art.pl
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Park Łazienkowski (Łazienki Park)
This splendid park contains a number of palaces as well as the Chopin Monument, where the annual Chopin Festival is held each summer, with free concert recitals in the park twice on Sunday afternoon from mid-May to September) set within extensive 18 century gardens. Pałac na Wyspie (Palace on the Water) is best viewed from near the monument to Jan Sobiewski, on the bridge where Ulica Agrykola crosses the water. Dating from 1624, Zamek Ujazdowski (Ujazdowski Castle) now houses the Centre for Contemporary Art. The 1764 Pałac Belweder (Belvedere Palace) was of the residence of Poland’s presidents until 1994.
Address: Ulica Agrykola 1, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 225 060 024
Opening times: Daily 09:00-21:00.
Website: www.lazienki-krolewskie.pl
Admission Fees: No (charge for Palace on the Water and Centre for Contemporary Art).
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
Tourist Offices
- Centrum Informacji Turystycznej (Tourist Information Centre)
Address: Palace of Culture and Science, pl. Defilad 1, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 503 033 720
Opening times: Daily 09:00-18:00.
Website: www.warsawtour.pl
There are other tourist information points in Warsaw: at the airport arrivals hall (Terminal A) and the Old Town market square.
Tourist passes
- Warsaw City Card
Website: www.warsawcard.com is available via a one-off payment and is valid for 24, 48 or 72 hours.
It allows access into the city’s top ten tourist sites and the hop on/hop off bus service, as well as discounts to selected tours and restaurants.
Things to do in Warsaw
- Explore Warsaw’s beautiful bombed out buildings
The destruction of Warsaw’s famous landmarks is a sad consequence of WWI but the likes of the restored
Royal Castle
Telephone: +48 223 555 170
Website: www.zamek-krolewski.pl give an insight into the city’s former splendour. Inside, the Great Assembly Hall is wholly impressive as are the National Hall’s original artworks.
- Get sand between your toes on an inland hike
Easily accessible from Warsaw, Kampinos National Park boasts the largest inland sand dunes in Europe. You may have sand between your toes but hiking boots are recommended when walking the park’s abundant trails through pine forests alive with beavers, lynx and elk.
- Hit the slopes in the middle of summer
For skiing and snowboarding addicts
CSN Szczesliwice’s
Telephone: +48 733 755 571
Website: www.gorka-szczesliwicka.com 225m-long (738ft) all-season slope means you can do your thing even in July. Non-skiers should ride the Alpine Coaster; the exciting gravity-powered roller coaster boasts excellent views – if you can keep your eyes open.
- Join the resistance and learn of life in occupied Poland
One of the most popular and important attractions in Poland
Warsaw Uprising Museum
Telephone: +48 225 397 905
Website: www.1944.pl is unflinching in its retelling of the desperation under Nazi occupation.
Learn of the resistance fighters’ 1944 uprising and witness Warsaw’s landmarks being obliterated in response, a sobering and essential visit.
- Splash and skate at Warsaw’s water park
In summer, cool off at
Park Wodny Moczydło
Telephone: +48 225 989 400
Website: www.aktywnawarszawa.waw.pl an enormous water park in the western district of Wola with indoors and outdoors pools and waterslides. In winter, the pools are turned into giant ice-skating rinks with skates are available for rent.
Warsaw tours and excursions
Warsaw tours
- Bus tours
Mazurkas Travel and Warsaw City Tours offer three-hour tours of the main sights, including the Old Town and Royal Route, sometimes with stops at Wilanów Palace or the Royal Castle. Pick up for tours is from a variety of city hotels. Do-it-yourself tour son public transport include bus 180, operating between Powązki Cemetery and Wilanów, and bus 100, which passes by the Old Town, Citadel and Warsaw Rising Museum.
Telephone: +48 223 894 600 , +48 228 267 100
Website: www.mazurkas.com.pl
- Boat tours
Warsaw Adventure offers a pleasant and relaxing cruise on the Vistula River between May and September. The river is a great place from which to see the sights while sipping a beer. Expect to meet the symbol of Warsaw – the mermaid – while on board.
Telephone: +48 664 702 755
Website: www.warsawtraveltours.com
Warsaw excursions
- Łódź
This somewhat gritty city– it’s pronounced ‘wooch – located 140km (87 miles) southwest of Warsaw, hides a treasure trove of palatial mansions, art nouveau public buildings and museums. By all means, visit the vanguard art galleries but the Central Museum of Textiles in an early 19th-century spinning mill is where the city’s heart lies and the Jewish Quarter is worth a stroll around. Frequent trains form Warsaw complete the journey in around two hours.
Telephone: +48 426 384 000
Website: www.uml.lodz.pl
- Toruń
This UNESCO World Heritage walled medieval town is where the 16th century astronomer and mathematician Mikolaj Kopernik (Copernicus) was born. Picturesque pathways along the Vistula River lead to the ruins of the 13th-century castle of the Teutonic Knights; the gothic townhouse where Copernicus was born is located at Ulica Kopernika 17. The city is 227km (141 miles) northwest of Warsaw and can be reached by train from Warszawa Centralna station in three hours.
Telephone: +48 566 210 931
Website: www.it.torun.pl
Shopping in Warsaw
Hundreds of new shops have sprung up all over Warsaw since the political transformations of 1989. There are also licensed and illegal street vendors that offer wares ranging from cloth napkins, wooden sculptures, cooking pots and freshly picked mushrooms.
- Key areas
The main shopping streets areas lie in the maze of streets between the Palace of Culture and Science and swanky Ulica Nowy Świat. The eastern end of Aleje Jerozolimskie and the southern part of Ulica Marszałkowska are also good bets. Check out the restored Ulica Chmielna too.
- Markets
With the demise of one of Europe’s largest flea markets, known locally as the Russian Market, Warsaw’s market scene is a little bare. There are still a few spots worth visiting, however, such as Bazar na Kole (Ulica Obozowa) in the western reaches of the city, which has mountains of junk and antiques to sift through, ranging from CDs and old postcards to farm implements and WWII relics.
- Shopping centres
Shopping arcades, both in and outside of Warsaw, have become very popular, including Galeria Centrum, Ulica Marszalkowska 104/122, the biggest department store in the capital; Arkadia, Aleja Jana Pawla II 82; and the very central Złote Tarasy, Ulica Złota 59. These malls and stores have both national and internationally known brands including H&M, Levi’s and Zara, and often in-house cinemas and restaurants.
- Opening hours
Shops in Warsaw are generally open Monday to Saturday 10:00/11:00-21:00/22:00 and Sunday 10:00-21:00. Usually open seven days a week, Warsaw’s shopping centres and hypermarkets are the best places to stock up on Polish staples – such as pickled herring, preserved meats and, last but not least, vodka.
- Souvenirs
More than any thing else, arts and crafts are the main things to shop for on a visit to Warsaw. Particularly popular items that are widely available include glass and enamelware, hand-woven rugs, silverware, jewellery made with silver, dolls in regional costumes, woodcarvings and clay and metal sculptures.
Probably the best spots in Warsaw for souvenir hunting are in the Old Town, among the colourful facades and artists’ stalls. But the nationwide chain Cepelia, with four branches in the capital, including one at Ulica Marszałkowska 99/101, is a good place to start – its shops stock a good range of local handicrafts. Another much-loved item available widely is amber from the Baltic Sea. This can be sold in many forms, from large lumps to exquisitely carved necklaces.
For art, bric-a-brac, curios and the odd real antique check out the chain of shops called Desa Unicum; its most central outlet is at Ulica Marszałkowska 34/50. Bear in mind that the export of anything produced up until the end of WW11 in 1945 is strictly controlled (though the people at Desa Unicum are very familiar with the procedures and will help with the necessary paperwork).
- Tax information
Tax-free shopping in Warsaw is available to non-EU residents spending a minimum of 300 PLZ or equivalent in one transaction at participating outlets. Cash refunds are given out at airports on presentation of the tax free documents.
Warsaw Food And Drink
Food In Warsaw
- Pierogia
Polish staple, some of the best dumplings are served at Syrena Irena, with fillings such as fermented wild garlic with quark cheese, and marjoram-spiced white sausage. Polish pierogi are often filled with fresh quark, boiled and minced potatoes, and fried onions. This type is known in Polish as pierogi ruskie (“Ruthenian pierogi”).
- Pyzy – A Warsaw specialty
These soft potato dumplings, traditionally filled with minced pork or beef, have been a staple of Warsaw’s culinary landscape for generations. The dough for pyzy is made from a unique, traditional recipe, resulting in a comforting dish that’s often served with fried onions or bacon.
- Flaki – Pyzy Flaki Gorące
Head to decrepit Brzeska to Arguably the best budget meal in Warsaw, this is the essence of Poland served in a jar. Flaki or flaczki is a traditional Polish tripe stew. It is one of the many Polish soups, which represent an important part of Polish cuisine.
- Bajaderka
- ‘A andwich’ Meat or Eggs
- Honey
Raw honey directly came from the hive. You can use 100% pure, natural honey for food and medicine. The centuries-old beekeeping tradition, Poland, is known to be the top honey producer in Europe.
- Bread
Most are made of wheat and rye, but there are also breads baked with the addition of buckwheat, millet, spelt or oats. Some will surprise you with the addition of fried onions, while in others you can find raisins or cranberries.
Drink In Warsaw
- Polish Vodka
Vodka is probably the most popular alcoholic drink from Poland. Polish vodka is traditionally made from rye and while rye is still the most popular base ingredient, Poland is also noted for its potato vodka. Stobrawa potatoes are favoured as this variety has a high starch content and is therefore easier to ferment.
- J.A. Baczewski
Monopolowa Baczewski. Legendary vodka in production since 1781, it’s one of the few vodkas distilled from potatoes. Baczewski is distilled based on an original formula. Its smoothness and distinctive taste are mind-blowing.
- BEER
The four typical main ingredients of beer include water, barley, hops, and yeast.
- Książęce Złote Pszeniczne
Ksiazece Zlote Pszeniczne is a Hefeweizen style beer brewed by Tyskie Browary Książęce (SABMiller) in Tychy, Poland … Bottle from supermarket in Warsaw.
- Opis składu
Opis składu woda, słód jęczmienny, wyciągi z chmielu i zielonego jęczmienia, aromat naturalny.
- Goldwasser from Gdansk
The original recipe includes twenty herbs and spices such as cardamom, cloves, coriander, thyme, lavender and juniper, but its most distinct feature is gold – small flakes of 23 carat gold to be exact.
- Łancut likier
The Polmos Łańcut distillery is one of the oldest producers of liquors and liqueurs in Poland. In 1924 the State alcohol monopoly was funded in Warsaw.
- Starka- a typical alcohol from Szczecin
Starka is a type of distilled alcoholic beverage made from fermented rye mash. Traditionally Starka is made from natural (up to 2 distillations, no rectification) rye spirit and aged in oak barrels with small additions of linden-tree and apple-tree leaves.
Restaurants in Warsaw
Warsaw has become the epicurean epicentre of Poland inrecent years, and the city now offers an assortment of cuisines to suit all budgets, tastes and objectives. And whether the point is just lounging, power-brokering, romancing or delighting in something gastronomically unique, you’ll find it all here.
Note that there is a whole lot more to polish food than just kielbasa (Polish sausage) and sauerkraut! Polish cuisine is rich in meat and game, thick soups and sauces proliferate, and potatoes and dumplings are abundant. Every meal in Poland begins with soup such as barszcz, a red beetroot soup.
Be sure to try pierogi – ‘Polish ravioli’ – stuffed with a whole range of fillings.. They are usually boiled and then served doused in melted butter. Another speciality is gołąbki, cabbage leaves stuffed with beef, onion and rice and baked in tomato sauce. If you need a quick bite and don’t want to sit down, try a zapiekanka, a ‘Polish pizza’ made up of half a stale baguette split lengthwise and topped with melted cheese, chopped mushrooms and ketchup and best (or only) eaten after a heavy night on the town.
The Warsaw restaurants below have been grouped into three pricing categories:
Expensive (over ZL120)
Moderate (ZL40 to ZL120)
Cheap (up to ZL40)
These prices are based on an average three-course meal for one person. Tax is usually included in the price of the food and gratuity should be included at your discretion; 10% is adequate.
Expensive
- N31 Restaurant & Bar
Cuisine: Fine dining
The N31 Restaurant and Bar’s simplistic menu combines traditional Polish meals with an international touch, perfectly reflected in their meals. Despite the simplicity of the menu there is still plenty of mouthwatering dishes to chose from, including; slow cooked meats, sea food and creamy soups.
Airy, contemporary restaurant offering artful & elevated Polish cuisine alongside wine & cocktails. N31 restaurant&bar is the original restaurant of culinary master Robert Sowa. The basis is Polish cuisine with international accents, served in an original way. The highest quality products and unique flavor combinations are a reflection of the passion with which we create our dishes.
Address: Nowogrodzka 31, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 600 861 961
Website: www.n31restaurant.pl
- Boathouse
Cuisine: Mediterranean
This highly rated Warsaw restaurant is pleasantly placed on the banks of the Vistula River north of the Old Town. Its nautical theme extends not only to the décor but also the menu, where the range of Mediterranean-style dishes leans heavily in the direction of Italian cuisine. In summer there’s no better place to be than on the Boathouse’s large terrace, with a seafood platter, glass of wine and live jazz in the background.
Address: Wał Miedzeszyński 389a, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 226 163 223
Website: www.boathouse.pl
- U Kucharzy
Cuisine: Polish
One of Warsaw’s finest restaurants and dating back to the year before WWII broke out, Gessler Restauracja U Kucharzy serves peerless traditional Polish dishes and international favourites in a delightful restaurant set inside the kitchen of an elegant old hotel. Dress is smart and dining quite formal in the evening. For a more relaxed meal, come at lunch or on Sunday when there is a demonstration of noodle-making.
Address: Długa 52, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 885 886 150
Website: www.ukucharzy.pl
Moderate
- Gaga Gruzińska
Cuisine: Polish
The restaurant will surprise you with its home hospitality, generosity and signature Georgian cuisine. If you want to spend a great evening, enjoying great meals in a comfortable, warm, friendly atmosphere, accompanied by live Georgian music, and also enjoy incendiary Georgian dances, you should definitely visit Gaga restaurant.
Address: aleje Jerozolimskie 111, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 501 619 057
Website: www.gaga-rest.pl
- Bazyliszek Restauracja
Cuisine: Polish
Look out for the wrought iron dragon set above the entrance to this charming traditional restaurant on the Old Town marketplace. Although it’s popular with tourists, the food is good and served in hearty portions; the mostly meat-based dishes include schnitzel and steak, and the specialty is duck roasted in oranges and served with beetroots, crispy potatoes and cabbage. In summer, there’s an outdoor terrace.
Address: Rynek Starego Miasta 1/3, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 228 311 841
Website: www.bazyliszek.waw.pl
- Elixir by Dom Wódki
Cuisine: Polish
Set next to the Opera House, this elegant restaurant offers contemporary takes on Polish classics, accompanied by a choice over over 500 vodkas from around the world. Regional and seasonal ingredients dominate the menu, such as duck with roasted celery puree and rowanberry sauce. The adjoining bar is a great place for a drinnk before or after dinner.
Address: Ulica Wierzbowa 9/11, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 228 282 211
Website: www.restauracjaelixir.pl
Cheap
- EATERY trad.
Cuisine: Polish
Welcome at the Eatery. Discover exceptional dining at our two unique locations. Choose innovative dishes at the Eatery in the strict city center, or enjoy traditional Polish cuisine at the Eatery trad. in Powiśle by the Vistula River. Savor the flavors and ambiance of our restaurants.
Address: Wybrzeże Kościuszkowskie 31/33, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 696 364 544
Website: www.eatery.pl
- Coffee Karma
Cuisine: Sandwiches
This popular café overlooks Warsaw’s circular Plac Zbawiciela, one of the few remnants of Socialist architecture extant in the city. Its coffee is strong, its smoothies creamy and thick, and its light snacks run the gamut from healthy sandwiches to home-made cakes and cookies. Take a seat inside on winter days or grab a table outdoors in the warm summer months.
Address: Mokotowska 17, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 228 758 709
Website: www.coffeekarma.eu
- Zapiecek
Cuisine: Polish
Pierogi (filled dumplings) are probably Poland’s most famous dish, and this is the place to eat them – gluten-free, boiled or fried, filed with cheese, mushroom, spinach, meat or even as dessert with strawberries and blueberries… there’s a huge menu offering them just like grandma makes them. There are also other typically Polish main dishes should pierogies not be your thing, along with soups and potato pancakes, all at a very reasonable price.
Address: Nowy Świat 64, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 226 924 135
Website: www.zapiecek.eu
Warsaw Nightlife
Warsaw’s nightlife is one of the best in Eastern Europe, with a multitude of bars and clubs scattered across the city. The ‘hipper’ places are either truly worth visiting or too full of bravado, velvet ropes and bouncers. Posing comes in high doses in many places, so be prepared to see lots of well- (and/or barely) dressed women, with men in shirts and shoes. Big name DJs do make their way to Warsaw, and in the summer, many nightspots offer outdoor drinking areas. A good source of information on cafés, pubs and clubs in Warsaw is the monthly
- Warsaw Insider
Website: www.warsawinsider.pl
Warsaw is paradise for culture vultures. In terms of classical music, the National Philharmonic and National Opera, both based here, are the country’s most celebrated. And several of the best known theatres in the country are in Warsaw.
The Warsaw Tourist Office has a useful weekly and annual online calendar of cultural events ( Website: www.warsawtour.pl )
The English-language Warsaw Voice ( Website: www.warsawvoice.pl ) includes a weekly listing of events, as does the monthly
Warsaw Insider magazine ( Website: www.warsawinsider.pl )
In addition to the venues themselves, you can buy tickets at:
- Eventim
Telephone: +48 225 918 383
Website: www.eventim.pl
- EMPiK
Address: Złota 59, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 224 627 250
Website: www.empik.com
Bars in Warsaw
- Level 27 Bar and Club
With a stunning panoramic view of Warsaw you won’t regret staying here until dawn to watch the Sun rise over the city. Level 27 is a rooftop club located in central Warsaw with a retractable roof. Make sure to go in summer, when you can truly party under the stars.
Address: Aleje Jerozolimskie 123A , Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 733 661 094
Website: www.level27.pl
- Podwale Bar and Books
An offshoot of the legendary New York cigar and whiskey bar, this sophisticated joint is set in a historic building just off Old Town Square. The British colonial-style decor is all dim lighting and dark wood furnishings, and there’s a fine cocktail and premium whisky selection (along with some bar snacks). Watch out for regular live music and burlesque shows. Decent ventilation keeps the smoke from cigar smokers manageable, but if you’re sensitive to it you may find it a bit much.
Address: Waski Dunaj 20, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 225 599 199
Website: www.barandbooks.cz
- Same Krafty
If you’re a fan of craft beer and in Warsaw then Same Crafty is a must. This bar/pub offers one of Warsaw’s largest verities of craft beer and when asked the staff are happy to let you sample a beer before you buy. Located in Warsaw’s Old Town, just west of the Vistula River there are some great sights to match the atmosphere.
Address: Nowomiejska 10, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 793 802 523
Website: www.samekrafty.pl
- Plan B
In the southern reaches of Warsaw, Plan B attracts a young, studenty crowd with regular DJs and a bohemian air. It’s most pleasant in the warmer months when the crowd makes for the outdoors and the party takes over nearby Plac Zbawiciela, a nearby circular square that was the setting for Krzysztof Krauze’s 2006 film of that name.
Address: Aleje Wyzwolenia 18, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 503 116 154
Clubs in Warsaw
- Luztro The Home Club
As varied as the bar scene, the late night Warsaw clubs cater to the commercial music lovers, kitsch 1970s and 80s evenings, as well as hardcore electronica and trance. Popular with the crowds and gay-friendly, Luzztro hosts top DJs and is best on weekends, though you can drink here well before the bewitching hour and during the week too.
Address: Aleje Jerozolimskie 6, Warsaw.
Telephone: +482 225 45 511
Website: www.luztro.pl
- Tygmont Live Club
This club on two levels has to be the city’s most exclusive venue, offering VIP service, top-notch local and international DJs and panoramic views of the city. Arrive before 10pm to avoid the queues. An important element of every evening is the selection of alcohol, soft drinks and catering that will meet all your expectations. There is perfect access to the dance floor, where, after spending time with friends, you can indulge in dancing madness!
Address: Mazowiecka 6/8, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 660 481 890
Website: www.tygmont.com.pl
- Capitol Warsaw Club
The Capitol Club is a place created for mature guests who want to have fun. A place where modern sounds meet classic style, creating a unique atmosphere. At the Capitol Club you will immerse yourself in a variety of musical styles – from hits of the 80’s and 90’s to the latest trends that will warm you up on the dance floor. in the Club you will also find comfortable lounge areas, encouraging you to relax and chat with friends over delicious cocktails and drinks.
The Capitol Club menu offers a wide selection of drinks and snacks to diversify the night’s fun. The safety of our guests is our priority, and the experienced and professional service of the Club guarantees the perfect course of each event. Capitol Club is full of energy and positive vibes, so come and join the party – we are waiting for you every Saturday from 10 p.m.!
Address: Marszałkowska 115, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 608 089 671
Website: www.clubcapitol.pl
Live music in Warsaw
Teatr Wielki – Polish National Opera
The Teatr Wielki was turned into rubble as Warsaw succumbed to German forces at the onset of World War II. Rebuilt from ruins, the opera house reopened just over 50 years ago, in 1965. Being a thoroughly modern institution, it draws from the synergy of various ideas, goals, and aspirations. Huge 1,828-seat auditorium for major opera & ballet performances, plus a museum of theater. A graduate of the Opera Academy, an outstanding Polish soprano won one of the most important and prestigious vocal competitions in the world.
Address: plac Teatralny 1, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 226 920 200
Website: www.teatrwielki.pl
- Klub Proxima
The vast Klub Proxima is one of the most fashionable venues in Warsaw for live local and national rock performances and lesser-known foreign bands. Of course even the great and the good have to relax sometimes and Proxima has been known to host the occasional karaoke night. Steer clear unless you’re into it.
Address: Ulica Zwirki i Wigury 99A, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 228 228 702
Website: www.klubproxima.com.pl
- Stodoła
This barn (the meaning of its name) of a place has been a popular student club for decades – well before the change of regime in 1989. In fact it once served as the cafeteria for workers building the Palace of Culture and Science. It hosts events, club nights and touring bands both local and national.
Address: Ulica Batorego 10, Warsaw.
Telephone: +48 228 256 031
Website: www.stodola.pl
