Skip to main content
Vienna · Alsergrund

Sigmund Freud Museum

This modest apartment on Berggasse preserved the rooms where Freud lived and worked for 47 years, developing psychoanalysis from 1891 until the Nazis forced him to flee in 1938.

Sigmund Freud Museum, Vienna · Alsergrund
Category
Museum
Duration
1h 15m
Best Time
Any time
Entry
€€
Rating
3.9 (5,254)
The place

About Sigmund Freud Museum

This modest apartment on Berggasse preserved the rooms where Freud lived and worked for 47 years, developing psychoanalysis from 1891 until the Nazis forced him to flee in 1938. You'll see his actual consultation room with the famous couch (a replica, since the original went to London), his personal library filled with first editions, and family photographs covering every surface. The waiting room where patients like the Wolf Man sat nervously before sessions has been restored exactly as it was, complete with Persian rugs and antiquarian furniture.

The experience feels intimate and slightly eerie, walking through rooms where groundbreaking therapy sessions happened. His study overflows with ancient artifacts, books in multiple languages, and the desk where he wrote The Interpretation of Dreams. The audio guide (included) provides essential context, but you'll spend most time just absorbing the atmosphere of these cramped, book-lined rooms. Everything feels frozen in 1938, down to his hat hanging by the door.

Most visitors rush through in 30 minutes, but you need at least an hour to appreciate the detail. The €12 entry fee is reasonable for what you get, though don't expect interactive displays or modern museum techniques. Skip the basement exhibition about psychoanalysis history and focus on the actual apartment upstairs where the magic happened.

Get Ticketsvia GetYourGuide · prices may vary
Book ahead

Skip the Queue

Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.

Search on Viator →Search on GetYourGuide →

Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.

The details

Practical bits

WalkingMinimal walking
The place

Getting there

Address
Berggasse 19, 1090 Wien, Austria
Neighborhood
Alsergrund
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

Start with the study and consultation room on the mezzanine level before exploring the family apartments, as these core rooms provide the most impact

Most people miss the significance of Freud's collection of ancient figurines on his desk, which he would handle during sessions to help him think

Visit on weekday mornings when tour groups haven't arrived yet, giving you space to linger in the small consultation room without crowds

Plan for about 1h 15m.

Sigmund Freud Museum is in the Alsergrund neighborhood of Vienna. The address is Berggasse 19, 1090 Wien, Austria. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Closed on Tuesday. Check the official website for holiday closures and special hours.

Around the corner

Nearby in Alsergrund

Explore all →
Cafe Josefinum
Museum

Cafe Josefinum

Cafe Josefinum sits on a busy street corner in the medical university district, serving as the unofficial canteen for broke med students and locals who've discovered Vienna's best value breakfast. You'll pay EUR 2.80 for expertly pulled espresso and EUR 6.50 to 9.50 for plates piled high with eggs, bread, ham, and cheese that'll fuel you until dinner. The real draw is the back garden: chestnut trees create natural shade over mismatched tables where you can linger for hours without dirty looks. Inside feels wonderfully ordinary, with worn wooden tables, medical textbooks scattered about, and the kind of unpretentious atmosphere that makes tourist coffee houses seem ridiculous by comparison. The daily lunch board lists traditional Austrian dishes for under EUR 10, and you'll hear more German than English from tables of students cramming for exams. Service moves at neighborhood pace, not tourist speed, which means your coffee stays hot and conversations flow naturally. Most Vienna cafe guides push you toward expensive tourist traps with EUR 5 espressos and tiny portions. Skip those entirely and come here for what locals actually drink and eat. The garden fills up fast in summer, so arrive before 11am or after 2pm. Don't expect Instagram worthy presentation, but do expect to leave satisfied and with money still in your wallet.

1-2 hoursExplore
More on Vienna

From the blog

View all →
Ready for Vienna?

Let DAIZ plan your Vienna days

Tell us how long you've got and what you're into. We'll build a day-by-day plan, with the bookable bits ready to lock in.

Plan my Vienna tripFree · no signup to start
Plan your Vienna trip