House of Terror
Museum
About House of Terror
Andrássy út 60 served as headquarters for both Hungary's fascist Arrow Cross Party and later the communist secret police, making it the perfect location for this unflinching examination of 20th-century authoritarianism. You'll walk through reconstructed offices where deportation lists were compiled, see surveillance equipment used to monitor citizens, and examine propaganda materials from both regimes. The museum doesn't sanitize history: original torture devices, personal belongings of victims, and testimonial videos create a genuinely confronting experience that goes far beyond typical historical displays.
The exhibition flows chronologically from the 1930s through 1989, with each floor focusing on different aspects of oppression. You'll start with the Arrow Cross period, seeing how fascists used this building to coordinate deportations of Jews and political opponents. The communist section reveals how the same spaces later housed the ÁVH secret police, complete with original furnishings and filing systems. The basement cells remain exactly as they were, with cramped spaces where political prisoners were held and interrogated.
Most visitors underestimate how emotionally draining this place is: budget three hours minimum and don't plan anything heavy afterward. Entry costs 4,500 HUF, but the audio guide (additional 1,500 HUF) provides crucial context that wall texts miss. Skip the gift shop completely, it's inappropriate given the subject matter. The elevator descent to the basement deliberately moves slowly to build dread, but you can take the stairs if you're claustrophobic.
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