Dohány Street Synagogue
The Dohány Street Synagogue is the largest in Europe and one of the largest in the world, a Moorish Revival giant from the 1850s with twin onion-domed towers and a vast, gilded interior. It anchors the old Jewish quarter and carries the weight of the wartime ghetto, with a memorial garden and a haunting metal weeping willow out back. Your ticket covers a guided tour plus the Jewish Museum and the memorial gardens, and there is a real dress code, so plan your clothing.
Photos: Acediscovery (CC BY 4.0), Bahnfrend (CC BY-SA 4.0), DarkVador79-UA (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons
Worth it, and the included guided tour and the memorial garden are what lift it above just an impressive building. The interior is genuinely grand, but the weeping willow and the mass grave out back are what stay with you. Book online, dress for the code, and avoid Saturdays. Give it the full hour-plus rather than a quick look.
Worth it for
- Anyone interested in Jewish heritage and WWII history
- Travelers drawn to grand, unusual religious architecture
- Visitors exploring the District VII Jewish quarter and ruin bars
You can skip if
- You only have Saturday free, when it is closed
- You want a quick free photo stop rather than a paid, guided, fairly somber visit
Tickets & tours for Dohány Street Synagogue
Which ticket should you buy?
What it is
Built in the 1850s in a Moorish Revival style that looks more Andalusian than central European, the synagogue seats several thousand and serves the Neolog (reform-leaning) Jewish community. The two striped towers with onion domes are the exterior signature; inside, gilded arches, a richly decorated ark, and an organ make it feel as much cathedral-scaled as synagogue, which was deliberate at the time.
The complex sits at the edge of what became the Budapest Ghetto in WWII. In the courtyard and garden behind the main hall lies a mass grave for ghetto victims and the Raoul Wallenberg Memorial Park, with Imre Varga's metal weeping willow, its leaves engraved with names of the dead. That history is inseparable from a visit here.
What to see
Inside the main hall, look up: the painted ceiling, the gilded ark, and the sheer scale are the headline. The included guided tour gives you the context you would otherwise miss. Attached is the Hungarian Jewish Museum, built on the site where Theodor Herzl, founder of modern Zionism, was born, with ritual objects and exhibits on Hungarian Jewish life and the Holocaust.
Out back, the memorial garden and the Tree of Life weeping willow are the emotional center of the visit for most people. Take your time here. Names on the leaves, the mass grave, and the surrounding ghetto streets make it land hard.
Visiting, tickets and dress code
Entry is a single paid ticket that includes a guided tour of the synagogue, the Jewish Museum, the memorial garden, the mass grave, and the weeping willow. Tours run in several languages on a rolling schedule. Lines build at midday, so book online ahead or arrive near opening.
The dress code is enforced. Shoulders and knees covered for everyone; no shorts above the knee, no tank tops, no beachwear. Men are asked to cover their heads, and a paper kippah is usually handed out free at the entrance. It is an active place of worship, so dress and behave accordingly.
Dohány Street Synagogue: FAQs
A single ticket typically covers a guided tour of the synagogue, entry to the Hungarian Jewish Museum, and the memorial gardens with the mass grave and the metal weeping willow. Tours run in several languages.
It runs on a seasonal pattern: longer hours in spring and summer (roughly 10 to 6) and shorter hours in autumn and winter (closer to 10 to 4), Sunday through Thursday, with early closing on Friday and closed Saturdays for Shabbat and on Jewish holidays. Confirm the day before you go.
Yes, and it is enforced. Cover shoulders and knees, no shorts or tank tops, no beachwear. Men cover their heads; a free paper kippah is usually provided at the door.
No. As an active synagogue it closes on Saturdays for Shabbat and on Jewish holidays. Plan around that.
Metro M2 to Astoria, or M1/M2/M3 to Deák Ferenc tér, both a short walk away. It sits at the edge of the District VII Jewish quarter, near the ruin bars.
About 1 to 1.5 hours to do the guided tour, the museum, and the memorial garden without rushing. The garden deserves unhurried time.
Explore more in Budapest
Plan your trip
- Best time to visit Budapest
- Day trips from Budapest
- One day in Budapest: the Pest core and a Buda hill at golden hour
- Two days in Budapest: the monuments first, then a slower day with a bath
- Three days in Budapest: landmarks, baths, and one day to slow down
- Budapest with kids: what actually keeps them happy
- Budapest at night: the lights, the baths, the ruin bars
- Budapest when it rains: warm water, grand rooms, good coffee
- Szechenyi vs Rudas Baths: Which Budapest Soak Is Right for You?
- Fisherman's Bastion vs Gellert Hill: Best View in Budapest?
- Danube Cruise: Day vs Night in Budapest. Which Is Worth It?
Where to next?
One short email, twice a month: handpicked experiences, hidden-gem cities, and the best windows to book them.