Kaiserliche Schatzkammer Wien
The Imperial Treasury houses the actual crown jewels of the Holy Roman Empire, including the 1,000-year-old Imperial Crown encrusted with uncut sapphires, emeralds, and pearls.
About Kaiserliche Schatzkammer Wien
The Imperial Treasury houses the actual crown jewels of the Holy Roman Empire, including the 1,000-year-old Imperial Crown encrusted with uncut sapphires, emeralds, and pearls. You'll see the Holy Lance (supposedly the spear that pierced Christ), Napoleon's cradle made of solid gold, and the world's largest cut emerald at 2,860 carats. The Burgundian rooms display the Order of the Golden Fleece regalia, while Habsburg ceremonial objects span centuries of European power.
The treasury feels intimate compared to other Hofburg attractions, with just 21 rooms winding through the palace's medieval core. Dim lighting protects the artifacts but creates an appropriately mysterious atmosphere as you move between display cases of imperial regalia. Room 2 stops most visitors cold: the Imperial Crown sits under spotlights, its medieval craftsmanship somehow more impressive than flashier modern pieces. Audio guides explain the political significance, but honestly, the visual impact speaks for itself.
Most guides oversell this as essential Vienna, but it's genuinely fascinating if you're into European history or craftsmanship. Skip the audio guide at 5 EUR, the descriptions are detailed enough. The 14 EUR entrance fee feels steep for 90 minutes, but you're seeing objects that shaped European politics for centuries. Come early or after 3pm to avoid school groups who turn Room 2 into a bottleneck.
Skip the Queue
Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.
Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.







