Heroes' Square
Heroes' Square is Budapest's grand set-piece: a huge open plaza at the top of Andrássy Avenue, anchored by the Millennium Memorial with its tall central column and a colonnade of Hungarian kings and statesmen. It is free, always open, and flanked by two art museums. Come at the right hour and it is genuinely imposing; come at noon in July and you will be sharing it with every tour bus in the city and very little shade.
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Worth it, but treat it as part of a City Park half-day rather than a standalone stop. The square is grand and free, and the M1 ride to reach it is half the fun. Go early or in the evening to skip the bus-tour crush, then walk straight into the park for the baths or Vajdahunyad Castle, which is where the day really pays off.
Worth it for
- First-time visitors wanting Budapest's signature monumental square
- Anyone combining it with City Park, the thermal baths, or the Museum of Fine Arts
- Architecture and history fans, especially via the historic M1 metro
You can skip if
- You only have a day and prefer the riverside and Castle Hill
- Big empty ceremonial plazas in full midday sun do not appeal to you
Tickets & tours for Heroes' Square
Which ticket should you buy?
What it is
The square was laid out for Hungary's 1896 millennium celebrations, marking a thousand years since the Magyar tribes settled the Carpathian Basin. At the center stands a 36-meter column topped by the Archangel Gabriel, with the seven chieftains of the founding tribes mounted at its base. Behind them, two curved colonnades hold fourteen statues of kings and national figures, from Saint Stephen to Lajos Kossuth.
In front of the column lies the Memorial Stone of Heroes, a cenotaph for the unknown dead, often with an honor guard or wreaths. It is the city's main spot for state ceremonies and protests alike. The whole thing reads as a statement of national identity built in stone.
What to see and what's around it
The square is the main event and takes maybe 20 to 30 minutes to walk and read. The two grand buildings on either side are real attractions, not backdrops. On one side, the Museum of Fine Arts holds Budapest's serious old-master collection, Spanish, Italian, and Dutch painting included. On the other, the Hall of Art (Műcsarnok) runs rotating contemporary exhibitions.
Directly behind the square, City Park (Városliget) opens up: Vajdahunyad Castle and its lake, the famous Széchenyi Thermal Bath, and the Budapest Zoo. This is the natural way to spend a half-day. Walk the square, pick one museum if it appeals, then wander into the park for the baths or the castle.
Getting there and tickets
Take the M1 (yellow) metro to Hősök tere station. The M1 is a small piece of history itself, the oldest electrified underground line on the European continent, running just below Andrássy Avenue and dropping you at the square's edge. You can also walk the full length of Andrássy from the center if the weather is good, roughly 30 to 40 minutes past grand townhouses and the Opera House.
The square is free and open around the clock; there is nothing to buy to stand in it. The museums on either side charge admission, so check current hours since both close one day a week, usually Monday. If you are doing several attractions, a Budapest Card can cover museum entry and transit and pays off quickly.
Heroes' Square: FAQs
No. The square itself is a free public plaza, open 24 hours. Only the two museums flanking it charge admission.
The M1 (yellow) metro to Hősök tere drops you right at the square. You can also walk up Andrássy Avenue from the center in about 30 to 40 minutes.
About 20 to 30 minutes for the square itself. Add an hour or two if you go into the Museum of Fine Arts, and a half-day if you continue into City Park for the baths or Vajdahunyad Castle.
Early morning for empty space and soft light, or evening when the monument is lit and the crowds have gone. Midday in summer is hot, crowded, and short on shade.
The Museum of Fine Arts is, if you care about European painting; its old-master collection is strong. The Hall of Art is hit or miss depending on the current show. Both are usually closed Mondays, so verify hours.
Yes. It is large, flat, and paved, easy for wheelchairs and strollers, and the metro station sits at the edge. Crossing the road to reach it does involve traffic, so use the crossings.
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