Brunnenmarkt
Europe's longest street market stretches for nearly a mile along Brunnengasse, bringing authentic Middle Eastern and Balkan flavors to Vienna's multicultural 16th district.
About Brunnenmarkt
Europe's longest street market stretches for nearly a mile along Brunnengasse, bringing authentic Middle Eastern and Balkan flavors to Vienna's multicultural 16th district. You'll find Turkish spice vendors measuring out sumac and za'atar by the gram, Serbian butchers selling fresh chevapi, and produce stalls where 2kg of tomatoes costs what you'd pay for 500g at Naschmarkt. The market serves Vienna's large immigrant communities, so prices stay honest and quality stays high.
Walking the full length takes about an hour if you stop to browse, weaving between wooden stalls that spill onto the sidewalk with pyramids of pomegranates, hanging strings of dried peppers, and steam rising from fresh bread ovens. The sounds shift from German to Turkish to Arabic as you move between sections, with vendors calling out prices and neighbors catching up over coffee. Saturday mornings bring the biggest crowds when the organic farmers set up around Yppenplatz square, turning the area into a proper food festival.
Most travel guides romanticize this place, but honestly, it's a working neighborhood market first and tourist attraction second. The produce is excellent value (expect to pay 3 to 4 EUR for items that cost 8 EUR elsewhere), but skip the clothes stalls unless you need cheap basics. Come hungry and bring cash since most vendors don't take cards, and don't expect English everywhere.
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