Naschmarkt tickets & tours | Price comparison

Naschmarkt

TicketLens lets you:
Search multiple websites at onceand find the best offers.
Find tickets, last minuteon many sites, with one search.
Book at the lowest price!Save time & money by comparing rates.
Naschmarkt, often called the belly of Vienna, stretches along the Wienzeile between Karlsplatz and Kettenbrückengasse, where produce stalls, spice counters, long lunches, and the cult Saturday flea market all crowd into one of the city's liveliest strips.

For a first visit, start with a guided food tour, because tastings plus local context help you cut through the choice overload and find the best bites faster. Book now.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Guided food tours

Best for first-time visitors who want tastings, market stories, and a clear route through Naschmarkt without decision overload.
Vienna: Naschmarkt Food Tasting Tour
4.5(323)
 
Go to offer
Vienna: Naschmarkt Guided Food Tour
4.4(154)
 
Go to offer
Nabiel's Vienna Cooking Class
4.9(235)
 
viator.com
Go to offer
Peters Naschmarkt Enjoyment walks
4.9(43)
 
viator.com
Go to offer

More guided tours

Use this for additional guided Naschmarkt formats when you still want local context, but the main tasting-led picks are not the right fit.
Vienna: Naschmarkt Culinary Tour
 
tiqets.com
Go to offer

6 tips for visiting the Naschmarkt

1
Choose weekdays or Saturday on purpose
If your priority is produce shopping and easier movement, go on a weekday morning. If your priority is atmosphere, old finds, and people-watching, choose Saturday when the flea market joins the main strip. Picking the day for your actual mood keeps Naschmarkt exciting instead of chaotic.
2
Let a food tour do the first filtering
If this is your first food-focused stop in Vienna, a guided tasting format makes more sense than improvising every choice on arrival. You get stories, samples, and a cleaner first lap through the market. That way you learn the rhythm quickly and save your independent wandering for later.
3
Walk one full lap before lunch
If you sit down at the first tempting table on the Wienzeile, you will miss how much the market changes a few stands later. Do one complete pass first, especially around midday, then choose where to linger. This small discipline saves you from buyer's remorse and turns lunch into a real decision.
4
Use Kettenbrückengasse as your easiest anchor
If the market itself is your priority, arrive via Kettenbrückengasse on the U4 and start from that end. Use Karlsplatz instead only when you plan to continue toward Vienna State Opera or Albertina. Matching the station to your next move cuts backtracking and keeps the stop smoother.
5
Reset at the new Marktraum
If Saturday starts feeling too loud near the flea market edge, drift toward the newer Marktraum by Kettenbrückengasse. The regional-stall side gives you a calmer reset before you dive back into the denser lanes. This is the easiest little pressure-release valve on a busy visit.
6
Pair one nearby stop only
For a realistic half day, pair Naschmarkt with one follow-up like Museumsquartier, Vienna State Opera, or Haus des Meeres, not three. The market already expands through browsing, lunch, and detours you did not plan. One clean add-on keeps the day generous instead of rushed.

How to plan a Naschmarkt stop in Vienna

Naschmarkt is easy to enter and surprisingly easy to overdo. The best visit depends on whether you want shopping, lunch, or a guided tasting route.

Choose between guided tasting and self-guided browsing

Best for first-time visitors: choose the guided food tour, because it turns a visually busy market into a readable tasting route with real local context. Best for repeat visitors: go independently, do one full lap, and then commit to the stalls or lunch stop that actually won you over. Make that decision before you arrive, and the whole strip feels calmer. Book now.

Use weekday mornings for shopping and Saturdays for atmosphere

Weekday mornings are the cleaner choice when you want produce, spices, and less crowd friction on the Wienzeile. Saturday is the louder, more theatrical version of Naschmarkt, because the flea market near Kettenbrückengasse widens the experience beyond food. Choose the rhythm that matches your intention, and you will enjoy the market much more.

Build one compact pair around Naschmarkt

A smart sequence is Naschmarkt plus Museumsquartier if you want a food-and-art half day, or Naschmarkt plus Vienna State Opera or Albertina if you want to stay on the central classical axis. Families and less museum-heavy travelers can instead pivot toward Haus des Meeres. One continuation is enough. The market rewards breathing room more than checklist speed.

History and atmosphere at Naschmarkt

The market feels lively now because several layers of Vienna still sit on top of one another here: old trade habits, a long Wienzeile strip, and fresh public-space changes near the east end.

From 1774 origins to the 1916 move

Naschmarkt goes back to 1774, but the strip you walk today opened at its current site in 1916. That timeline matters because the market still feels stretched like an urban corridor rather than enclosed like a hall. You are moving through a piece of working city fabric, not a staged food court.

Why the name Naschmarkt stuck

Around 1820, the name Naschmarkt became common, and in 1905 it became official. That story still suits the place. Even now the market works best when you treat it as a strip for curiosity, treats, and drifting appetite rather than a purely efficient shopping errand.

What Marktraum and Naschpark changed

The newer east side near Kettenbrückengasse now adds the Marktraum with regional and seasonal stalls, while the former parking area has become Naschpark. That makes a difference in practice: repeat visitors get a fresher reason to return, families get a softer reset point, and hot days feel less punishing than they used to. It is still the same famous market, just with a more generous edge.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a ticket for Naschmarkt?

No. Naschmarkt itself is a public market and entry is free. The paid products on this page are optional guided tours, mainly food-focused formats.
Read more.

When is the best time to visit Naschmarkt?

Weekday mornings are usually best if you want easier browsing and produce shopping. Saturday is best when you want the full market mood, because the flea market adds much more movement and spectacle.
Read more.

How long should I plan for a first visit?

A good first window is about 60 to 90 minutes for a self-guided pass. Plan closer to 2 to 3 hours if you add lunch, the Saturday flea market, or a guided tasting.
Read more.

Is the Saturday flea market part of the same visit?

Usually yes. The flea market sits next to the market near Kettenbrückengasse, so most visitors naturally fold both into one walk on Saturday. It changes the mood from pure food browsing to much wider treasure hunting.
Read more.

Is Naschmarkt worth visiting if I do not plan to shop?

Yes. Naschmarkt still works as a strong atmosphere stop for food watching, lunch, and people-watching, especially if you want one less formal break between museums and central sights.
Read more.

Are guided tours worth it for Naschmarkt?

Usually yes on a first trip. The best-fit products here are guided food tours, which help you taste more deliberately and understand the market faster than a purely improvised first pass.
Read more.

Which nearby TicketLens POIs pair best with Naschmarkt?

A strong art-and-food pairing is Museumsquartier. If you want a more classical central route, continue toward Vienna State Opera or Albertina. Pick one follow-up, not all of them, so the market still feels like a real stop.
Read more.

Do restaurants stay open later than the market stalls?

Yes. The sales stands close earlier, while restaurants and bars can run later into the evening. That makes Naschmarkt more flexible if you want to browse earlier and come back for dinner.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Market sales stands currently run Monday to Friday from 6 am to 9 pm and Saturday from 6 am to 6 pm. Restaurants and bars can run Monday to Saturday until 11 pm, and on Sunday and holidays from 9 am to 9 pm. The flea market by Kettenbrückengasse runs Saturday from 6:30 am to 3 pm; on December 24 and December 31 it ends at 12 noon, and on December 25, December 26, January 1, and January 6 it does not run.

address

Naschmarkt
Wienzeile, between Getreidemarkt and Kettenbrücke
1060 Vienna
Austria

how to get there

The most useful U-Bahn anchors are Kettenbrückengasse on U4 and Karlsplatz on U1, U2, and U4. Use Kettenbrückengasse if the market is your main stop; use Karlsplatz if you want an easier continuation toward the center. Both ends let you walk the market as one clean strip.
How useful was this page?
Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0.
Language
English
Currency
© 2020-2026 TicketLens GmbH. All rights reserved. Made with love in Vienna.