Hungarian Parliament Building
The Hungarian Parliament Building is Europe's third-largest legislative building, a Neo-Gothic masterpiece that took 17 years to complete in 1904.
About Hungarian Parliament Building
The Hungarian Parliament Building is Europe's third-largest legislative building, a Neo-Gothic masterpiece that took 17 years to complete in 1904. Your 45-minute tour covers the grand central staircase under Zsolnay ceramic decorations, the Holy Crown of St. Stephen in the dome hall (Hungary's actual crown jewels), and the ornate upper house chamber with its red leather seats and gilded ceiling. The building stretches 268 meters along the Danube, and its 96-meter dome matches St. Stephen's Basilica by deliberate design.
Inside feels like walking through a palace rather than a government building. The main staircase with its red carpet and gold railings sets an imperial tone, while stained glass windows cast colorful light across marble columns. Your guide explains Hungarian history while you crane your neck at the intricate ceiling work. The crown jewels room is surprisingly intimate, and the upper chamber feels frozen in time with its original 1904 furnishings.
Honestly, it's worth the 6,900 HUF for non-EU citizens (3,500 HUF for EU citizens). The exterior night photos everyone takes are better than the interior tour, but you can't see those crown jewels anywhere else. Book at jegymester.hu exactly three weeks ahead for summer visits, slots disappear fast. Skip the gift shop, it's overpriced postcards and magnets.
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