From Budapest to the Puszta: Three Weeks Discovering Every Corner of Hungary — 21-Day Itinerary   Recently updated!


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From Budapest to the Puszta: Three Weeks Discovering Every Corner of Hungary — 21-Day Itinerary

From Budapest to the Puszta: Three Weeks Discovering Every Corner of Hungary — 21-Day Itinerary

Three weeks in Hungary is enough to truly immerse yourself — not just to see the highlights but to understand what makes this country tick. This extended itinerary covers everything: the capital’s thermal bath culture and ruin bar scene, the Danube Bend’s dramatic river valley, the wine regions of Eger and Tokaj (the latter a UNESCO World Heritage site), the vast emptiness of the Hortobágy puszta, the southern cities of Szeged and Pécs with their Ottoman and Mediterranean influences, the villányi reds and balatoni whites, a quiet week on the shores of Lake Balaton, and the charming towns of Szentendre and Visegrád within easy reach of Budapest. Young travellers can live like locals for €30/day; those with a taste for wine and comfort can enjoy extraordinary value at €65–80/day. This is Hungary without rush, without compromise, and without missing anything essential. Estimated budget: €1,100–1,700 per person excluding accommodation.

21-Day Itinerary Overview

Route: Budapest (4) → Szentendre/Visegrád (1) → Eger (2) → Tokaj (2) → Debrecen/Hortobágy (2) → Szeged (1) → Pécs/Villány (3) → Lake Balaton (3) → Budapest region (2) → Departure (1)

Best for: Deep Hungary immersion, slow travellers, wine enthusiasts, digital nomads, couples on an extended trip

Budget: €1,100–1,700 per person (excluding accommodation)

Direction: Large anti-clockwise loop — Budapest → Danube Bend → Eger → Tokaj → Great Plain → South → Balaton → Danube Bend return → Budapest

Day-by-Day Itinerary

Day 1: Budapest Arrival — Andrássy & Ruin Bars

Arrive and check into Pest accommodation. Afternoon: walk Andrássy Avenue from Deák Square past the Opera House to Heroes’ Square and City Park. Evening: Jewish Quarter ruin bar crawl — Szimpla Kert, Instant, and Kőleves. These three give you the full spectrum from eclectic to music-focused to food-oriented.

Accommodation: Pest (4 nights). Hostel €12–20, hotel €40–70/night.

Pro Tip: Get a 7-day BKK travel pass (€18) — it covers your entire Budapest stay plus the Szentendre HÉV on Day 5.

Day 2: Buda Castle, Parliament & Széchenyi Baths

Morning: cross the Chain Bridge to Buda Castle (funicular up, walk down). Matthias Church, Fisherman’s Bastion, Hungarian National Gallery. Midday: Parliament Building tour (book ahead). Afternoon: Széchenyi Thermal Bath — spend 3-4 hours in the 15 pools. Evening: Danube sunset cruise.

Entry costs: Parliament €13, Matthias €5, National Gallery €5, Széchenyi €18–22, cruise €12–20.

Pro Tip: The 72-hour BKK pass (€15) is worth it for Budapest days alone. Pair it with the Budapest Card for free entry to many museums.

Day 3: Pest — Market Hall, Gellért Hill & Jewish Quarter

Morning: Great Market Hall for food and crafts. Danube promenade to the Shoes memorial. Hike Gellért Hill for 360-degree city views (30 min). Lunch at a café on the Buda side. Afternoon: explore the Jewish Quarter’s street art scene — Karády Street has some of the best murals. Evening cooking class: learn to make goulash and chimney cake.

Entry costs: Market Hall free, Gellért Hill free. Cooking class €30–45.

Pro Tip: The cooking class is worth the cost — you’ll learn techniques and recipes you can recreate at home. Many include a market tour.

Day 4: Budapest — Museum Day & Thermal Freedom

A flexible day. Choose from: the Hungarian National Museum (Hungary’s history from the Magyars to modern day), the Museum of Ethnography (fascinating exhibits on Hungarian folk culture), or the Hospital in the Rock (a Cold War-era nuclear bunker under Buda Castle). Afternoon: your choice of a second thermal bath — Gellért Baths (Art Nouveau splendor, smaller but beautiful) or Rudas Baths (a 16th-century Turkish bath with a stunning dome pool). Evening: dinner at a traditional restaurant.

Entry costs: Museums €4–8 each. Gellért Baths €16–20.

Pro Tip: Rudas Baths still has its original 16th-century Turkish octagonal pool with a star-lit dome — a more authentic thermal experience than the tourist-packed Széchenyi.

Day 5: Danube Bend — Szentendre, Visegrád & Esztergom

A day trip north of Budapest to the Danube Bend, where the river dramatically turns south through a scenic valley. Take the HÉV suburban train from Budapest to Szentendre (40 min) — a charming artists’ town with cobbled streets, Serbian Orthodox churches, and excellent cafés. Continue by bus to Visegrád (30 min) to see the medieval royal palace and the hilltop citadel with spectacular Danube views. If time permits, continue to Esztergom for Hungary’s largest basilica. Return to Budapest by train in the evening.

Transport: HÉV to Szentendre (covered by BKK pass), bus to Visegrád €3.

Entry costs: Visegrád Citadel €4–6, Esztergom Basilica free (treasury €3).

Pro Tip: Szentendre is lovely but gets crowded by 11 AM. Arrive by 9 AM to enjoy the empty streets and riverfront before the day-trippers arrive.

Day 6: Budapest to Eger — Castle & First Wine

Train from Budapest Keleti to Eger (1h40min, €6–9). Check into your guesthouse. Afternoon: Eger Castle — 2 hours exploring the medieval fortress and its sweeping views. Evening: introductory wine tasting at the Valley of the Beautiful Women — start at cellar #27 (Tóth Ferenc) for an excellent Bikavér.

Accommodation: Eger (2 nights). Guesthouse €20–35/night.

Entry costs: Castle €6–8.

Pro Tip: Stock up on wine at the valley cellars — a bottle of excellent Egri Bikavér costs €5–10 at the source versus €15–20 in Budapest.

Day 7: Eger — Thermal Bath, Bükk & Deep Wine

Morning: Eger Thermal Bath (Turkish bath + modern pools). Late morning: bus to Szilvásvárad (30 min) for the Szalajka Valley hike — trout ponds, waterfall, and beautiful forest. Return by 4 PM for a serious wine afternoon at the Valley of the Beautiful Women — visit 4-5 cellars, comparing different producers’ Bikavér and Csillag blends. Buy bottles to take to Tokaj.

Entry costs: Thermal bath €10–15, bus €3.

Pro Tip: Ask the cellar owners for food recommendations — many work with local caterers who bring cheese and sausage platters to the cellars.

Day 8: Eger to Tokaj — UNESCO Wine Region

Train from Eger to Tokaj (via Miskolc, 1h45min, €6–10). The Tokaj wine region is Hungary’s most famous — a UNESCO World Heritage site since 2002. Check into your accommodation in Tokaj town. Afternoon: explore the historic town at the confluence of the Tisza and Bodrog rivers. Visit the Tokaj Museum to understand the Aszú winemaking process. Evening: dinner at a restaurant on the main square with a glass of Tokaji Aszú.

Accommodation: Tokaj (2 nights). Guesthouse €22–38/night.

Entry costs: Tokaj Museum €3.

Pro Tip: Tokaji Aszú was known as the “Wine of Kings, King of Wines” — Louis XIV of France was famously a fan. Don’t leave without trying at least a 3-puttonyos Aszú.

Day 9: Tokaj Wine Country — Cellar Tour & Tasting

Full day exploring the Tokaj wine region. Visit 3-4 cellar doors in the surrounding villages: Tarcal, Mád, and Tolcsva are the key wine villages. The region’s volcanic soil produces unique Furmint, Hárslevelű, and Sárga Muskotály grapes. The Tokaji Aszú is the star — a sweet wine made from botrytised grapes, aged in underground cellars for years. Book a tour at a major producer like Disznókő or Patricius for an in-depth understanding of the Aszú process.

Transport: Local buses €2–3 each way. Wine tours €15–25.

Wine tasting: €5–12 per cellar.

Pro Tip: The underground cellars of Tokaj maintain a constant 10-12°C with high humidity and distinctive black mould on the walls — this is essential for Aszú aging.

Day 10: Tokaj to Debrecen — Hortobágy Puszta

Train from Tokaj to Debrecen (1h45min, €5–8). Drop luggage, then bus to Hortobágy (45 min). Spend the afternoon on the great puszta: Nine-Hole Bridge, Hungarian Grey Cattle, horse show with csikós, and birdwatching (Hortobágy is a crucial stopover for migrating cranes). Stay for sunset — the golden light over the endless plain is one of Hungary’s most memorable experiences.

Accommodation: Debrecen (2 nights). Hostel €12–20, hotel €30–50.

Hortobágy: Bus €4–6, puszta show €10–15, visitor centre €4–6.

Pro Tip: In September-October, Hortobágy is one of Europe’s best places to see the common crane migration — thousands of birds gather here before flying south.

Day 11: Debrecen — Great Reformed Church & Aquaticum

A relaxed day. Morning: climb the Great Reformed Church’s south tower, visit the Déri Museum (don’t miss the Munkácsy exhibition). Explore the lovely university campus. Afternoon: Aquaticum Thermal Bath — enjoy the 18 pools in Nagyerdei Park. This is one of Hungary’s most pleasant thermal experiences and far less crowded than Budapest’s famous baths.

Entry costs: Tower €3, Déri Museum €4–6, Aquaticum €12–18.

Pro Tip: Nagyerdei Park surrounding the Aquaticum is a 400-hectare forest park — perfect for a pre-bath walk.

Day 12: Debrecen to Szeged — Paprika Capital

Train from Debrecen to Szeged (via Budapest, 3h, €12–18). Check in and spend the afternoon exploring Szeged’s Art Nouveau boulevards — Kárász Street, the Reök Palace, and the Votive Church. Visit the Paprika Museum. Climb the church tower (352 steps) for a panoramic view over the Great Plain. Evening: Hági Restaurant for the best halászlé in Szeged.

Accommodation: Szeged (1 night). Guesthouse €20–35.

Entry costs: Votive Church + tower €6–7, Paprika Museum €3.

Pro Tip: The Szeged Votive Church at sunset, viewed from Belvárosi Bridge over the Tisza, is one of Hungary’s most beautiful urban views.

Day 13: Szeged to Pécs — Zsolnay & Mosque Church

Train from Szeged to Pécs (2h, €8–12). Check into your Pécs accommodation (3 nights). Afternoon: Zsolnay Quarter — explore the transformed porcelain factory, museum, and artist studios. Then visit the Mosque Church — a 16th-century Ottoman mosque with a cross on its dome, a uniquely Hungarian fusion of religions.

Accommodation: Pécs (3 nights). Guesthouse €18–30/night.

Entry costs: Zsolnay Museum €4–6, Mosque Church €3.

Pro Tip: Pécs is sunnier and more relaxed than any other Hungarian city. Allow yourself to slow down — the city rewards lingering in its squares and cafés.

Day 14: Pécs — UNESCO Necropolis & Mecsek Hike

Morning: Early Christian Necropolis — the 4th-century Roman burial site with original frescoes is the highlight of Pécs. Afternoon: hike into the Mecsek Hills from Tettye — the Misina Peak trail (2h) leads to the TV Tower with panoramic views. Evening: dinner on Széchenyi Square.

Entry costs: Necropolis €8–10, TV Tower €2.

Pro Tip: The Cella Septichora (the seven-apsed memorial hall) is the most impressive part of the necropolis — request the audio guide for the full archaeological context.

Day 15: Villány Wine Region Day Trip

Full day in Villány (35 km south of Pécs). Bus from Pécs (40 min, €3). Villány produces Hungary’s finest red wines — the Villányi Portugieser, Kékfrankos, and Cabernet Sauvignon are world-class. Visit 5-6 cellars along the main street: Gere Attila, Polgár Pince, Bock József, and Vylyan for modern-style wines. Lunch at a wine garden. Return to Pécs for a relaxed evening.

Transport: Bus €3 each way.

Wine tasting: €4–10 per cellar.

Pro Tip: Villány’s Cabernet Franc is increasingly recognised as world-class. Ask at Polgár Pince for their single-varietal Cabernet Franc — it’s stunning.

Day 16: Pécs to Lake Balaton — Keszthely & Festetics

Train from Pécs to Keszthely (via Budapest, 4h, €15–22). Check into accommodation. Afternoon: Festetics Palace — one of Hungary’s finest Baroque palaces. Evening: a short bus to Hévíz for a sunset float in the world’s largest natural thermal lake (33-36°C). The water lilies and steam create an otherworldly atmosphere.

Accommodation: Keszthely/Hévíz (3 nights). Guesthouse €25–45/night.

Entry costs: Festetics €8–12, Hévíz €14–18.

Pro Tip: The Festetics Palace library with 86,000 volumes is one of the most beautiful palace libraries in Europe — don’t rush through it.

Day 17: Badacsony Wine & Northern Shore Cycling

Ferry from Keszthely to Badacsony (30 min, €3–4). Rent a bike (€8–15/day) and cycle the northern shore trail from Badacsony to Balatonfüred — 25 km of stunning lakeside cycling with vineyard stops. Taste the rare Kéknyelű on Badacsony, swim at Csopak beach, and arrive in Tihany for sunset views from the abbey. Return to Keszthely by train or bus.

Bike rental: €8–15. Available in Badacsony.

Wine tasting: €5–8 per cellar.

Pro Tip: If the full 25 km cycle sounds ambitious, break it in Badacsony with lunch at Laposa Bistro — their terrace has the single best view on the entire lake.

Day 18: Lake Balaton — Relaxation Day

A proper slow travel day. Morning: swim at a Balaton beach — Keszthely’s beach is sandy and gentle. Afternoon: revisit Hévíz for a longer thermal lake experience, or take a ferry to Tihany for a gentle walk through the lavender fields and a coffee at the abbey café with the panoramic lake view. Evening: fresh fish dinner at a lakeside restaurant.

Beach entry: €2–5. Ferry: €2–3.

Pro Tip: Balaton’s water is shallow and warms up to 25-28°C in summer. The best swimming is at sandy-bottomed beaches, not pebbled ones.

Day 19: Balaton to Budapest — Szentendre & Visegrád

Morning train from Balatonfüred to Budapest (2h, €7–10). Instead of heading straight into the city, get off early at the Danube Bend towns. Visit Szentendre (already covered on Day 5 for depth) or Visegrád’s castle. Alternatively, head straight to Budapest and check into a different neighbourhood — stay in Buda this time for a new perspective. Evening: explore the Buda side’s quieter restaurants and bars.

Accommodation: Budapest — Buda side (3 nights). Guesthouse €18–30/night.

Pro Tip: Staying in Buda (around Batthyány Square or Castle Hill) gives you a completely different experience of Budapest — quieter evenings and sunrise views over the Parliament.

Day 20: Budapest — Shopping, Culture & Farewell Bath

Last full day. Morning: revisit the Great Market Hall for serious souvenir shopping. Afternoon: choose a museum you missed — the Museum of Applied Arts (stunning Art Nouveau building with Zsolnay ceramics) or the Budapest Pinball Museum (quirky and fun). Late afternoon: a final soak at Rudas or Gellért Baths — the choice is yours. Evening farewell dinner: Café Kör for classic Hungarian-Jewish cuisine in a cosy setting.

Entry costs: Museum of Applied Arts €6, Pinball Museum €8 (free play). Baths €16–20.

Pro Tip: The Museum of Applied Arts’ Zsolnay collection is the largest in the world and complementary to the Pécs Zsolnay Quarter experience.

Day 21: Budapest Departure

One final morning in Budapest. A walk along the Danube promenade one last time, or a coffee at a terrace café overlooking the Chain Bridge. Pick up last-minute paprika and Tokaji from the market. Head to the airport or Keleti station, carrying 20 days of Hungarian memories.

Pro Tip: Bus 100E from Deák Ferenc Square goes directly to Budapest Airport every 10 minutes and accepts the BKK pass for a small supplement (€1.50).

Budget Summary: 21-Day Complete Hungary Itinerary

Estimated Total: €1,100–1,700 per person (excluding accommodation)

  • Intercity trains & buses: €130–190
  • Budapest transport (7-day pass + occasional): €25
  • Ferry crossings (Balaton): €15–25
  • Sights & entry fees (museums, castles, churches): €100–150
  • Thermal baths (5-6 visits): €80–110
  • Wine tastings (Eger, Tokaj, Villány, Badacsony): €80–150
  • Food & drinks (21 days): €420–630
  • Cooking class: €30–45
  • Miscellaneous: €120–200

Best Season: May-June or September-October offer the best combination of pleasant weather, open attractions, and fewer crowds. July-August is hot but excellent for thermal baths and Balaton swimming.

Recommended For: Deep Hungary immersion, wine and spa enthusiasts, slow travellers, digital nomads wanting to experience the whole country

Disclaimer: Prices are estimates and may vary by season. Car rental (€25–40/day) significantly simplifies the Pécs–Balaton and Tokaj–Debrecen connections. See MAV.hu for current train schedules. This itinerary is for general reference only.