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With a millennium-long history, Vienna boasts ruins and relics, masterpiece-stuffed museums and grand palaces.

It’s also a modern metropolis that’s consistently rated one of the , visible throughout its gracious Bezirke (districts) and cutting-edge cultural attractions.

With an abundance of things to do in Vienna, here’s where to begin.

Start at Stephansdom

Gothic and glorious, iconic Stephansdom and its 136m(446ft)-high Sorth Tower loom over the central Innere Stadt. While the church is free to enter, you’ll have to pay to get a close-up look at the Gothic masterworks in the central nave. An elevator whisks you up to the 21-ton Pummerin bell in the North Tower. You can also tackle the 343 steps up to the South Tower steps for views of the colorful mosaic roof tiles and sprawling city views. You’ll have a more somber experience in the subterranean , an ossuary for those who perished during the Plague.

Mosaic tiles on the roof of Stephansdom, Vienna, Austria
Ascend Stephansdom’s towers to see the elaborate roof mosaics – and the city beyond © Krzysztof Dydynski / Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±

Tour the imperial complex at the Hofburg

A show of imperial power through architecture, this 240,000-sq-m (2,583,338-sq-ft) castle complex is where the Habsburgs stacked up their endless collections of art and artifacts. The visit begins in the Sisi Museum and Imperial Apartments, then leads through a resplendent enfilade of 17 regal rooms, finishing in the frescoed, columned Prunksaal (State Hall of the Austrian National Library). Cabinets displaying the Austrian crown jewels dazzle in the Kaiserliche Schatzkammer, while the teems with 250,000 anthropological objects amassed by curious royals. The castle’s most famous current residents are the majestic Lipizzaner stallions that regularly demonstrate breathtaking feats of equestrianism at the Spanish Riding School’s baroque winter arena. Feeling blinged out? Take a cultural breather in the rose-laden Volksgarten or lounge on the Burggarten’s lawns.

Planning tip: The Hofburg sits on the Ringstrasse, a grand boulevard built after the city’s fortification walls were razed in 1850. A leisurely walk or a tram ride (lines 1 or 2) will reveal some of the city’s architectural highlights, including the neo-Renaissance Staatsoper, the Greek temple–like Austrian Parliament, the neo-Gothic Rathaus (City Hall) and the Renaissance-style University of Vienna.

A sculpture in the hall of the State Hall of the Austrian National Library, Vienna, Austria
The State Hall of the Austrian National Library shows the Hofburg’s imposing opulence © Sylvain Sonnet / Getty Images

Explore a museum wonderland

Two institutional treasures sit next to the Hofburg, on Maria-Theresien-Platz: a symmetrical pair of grandly domed buildings that house the Naturhistorisches Museum Vienna and the Kunsthistorisches Museum. In these museums’ endless galleries, the collections span seven millennia. Browse meteorites and minerals; antiquities from ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome; precious and peculiar art finds in the (cabinet of curiosities); and world-famous old-master paintings.

Just opposite, the MuseumsQuartier is a remarkable cultural district of some 11 exhibition spaces, occupying what was once the imperial stables. Two heavyweights bookend the courtyard: the Leopold Museum, with its 8300 works of Austrian modernism, and MUMOK, filled with expressive, experimental and avant-garde pieces.

Detour: The city’s more than 100 museums contain weird, wacky and wondrous displays. Think spots like the at the Central Cemetery, museums celebrating everything from to , and even tours of the and the .

People on benches in front of MUMOK, MuseumsQuartier, Vienna, Austria
After you’ve visited the galleries of the sprawling MuseumsQuartier, linger a while © Alesta / Shutterstock

Step into splendor at Schönbrunn Palace

Since stately Schloss Schönbrunn is Vienna’s most visited attraction, it pays to get on one of the first tours of the 45 opulent Rococo state rooms, dazzling ceremonial halls and sumptuous private apartments of the summer Habsburg residence and final home of Empress Elisabeth and Emperor Franz Joseph. You’ll emerge onto the grounds of the Schlosspark, still adorned with the palatial fountains, obelisks and hilltop triumphal arch Gloriette, commissioned by Maria Theresa. Founded in 1752 by her husband, Emperor Franz I Stephan von Lothringen, Schönbrunn’s Tiergarten is the oldest zoo in the world.

Sculptures at Schönbrunn Palace at sunset, Vienna, Austria
Schönbrunn Palace is glorious, both inside and out © vichie81 / Shutterstock

Admire the art at Schloss Belvedere

After he commissioned a new palace in 1723, connoisseur of the arts Prince Eugene of Savoy filled it to the brim with masterpieces. Some 50 years later, Empress Maria Theresa turned it into Vienna’s first public museum, the Imperial Picture Gallery. Three centuries on, Schloss Belvedere remains a baroque work of art in itself – and displays a collection of top-notch Austrian art from the Middle Ages to the present day. It’s also the home of Gustav Klimt’s world-famous The Kiss – just one highlight of the largest holdings of his work anywhere in the world. At Lower Belvedere, you can tour the home of the military-general prince, all marbled galleries, frescoed ceilings and gold-decked rooms. Belvedere’s free-to-enter parterre and baroque gardens are said to have been inspired by those of the Château de Versailles.

Step out at Prater Park

A former imperial hunting ground turned quintessential Vienna recreational space, the Prater is perhaps most popular for the giant °Âü°ù²õ³Ù±ð±ô±è°ù²¹³Ù±ð°ù amusement park. The 200 attractions here cover family-friendly rides, swinging adrenaline highs and the famed red Riesenrad (Ferris wheel). A new displays historical objects related to the fairground dating back to its 1766 inception, while the exhibition revives the grandeur of the Vienna World Fair, held here in 1873.

Blumenrad Ferris wheel at Prater amusement park, Vienna, Austria
At Würstelparter amusement park, the modern Blumenrad Ferris wheel complements the historic, iconic Risenrad © BABAROGA / Shutterstock

Sample Vienna’s coffee culture

Vienna’s bentwood-chair-filled, wood-paneled and chandelier-lit living rooms, the famous cafes here really do have suited waiters and live music. They’re places you linger over a coffee, newspaper in hand, and people-watch for hours. Vienna’s coffeehouse culture has been brewing since the late 1600s – but where’s the best spot to find a cup of this ? You can’t go wrong at art deco , marbled and the cosmopolitan classic , all Ringstrasse originals. Or sample the style spectrum from gilded and luminous to dusky and edgy .

Local tip: Third-wave, new-generation coffee shops and specialty roasters are as much a fixture of the Vienna coffee scene as their traditional ancestors. Top picks in the central districts include , , , , and .

 A waiter inside the landmark cafe, Café ±Ê°ùü³¦°ì±ð±ô, Vienna, Austria
Besuited waiters raise the elegance level at cafes like ±Ê°ùü³¦°ì±ð±ô © Alexanderstock23 / Shutterstock

Sip and swirl in urban vineyards

Encircled by , Vienna is the only European capital where wine is grown within the city limits. The picture-perfect hillside villages of the 19th (Döbling), especially Grinzing, are perfect for tasting both the white grape grüner veltliner, as well as Heuriger (wine tavern) culture. Can’t make it to the vineyard-covered fringes? In town, is the oldest Heuriger in Vienna, dating back to 1740. Ponder its history over a glass or two in its charming garden.

Local tip: On the last weekend of September, you can join locals for (Vienna Wine Hiking Day), a ramble across the city’s vintners and vineyards.

View over the wine fields around Grinzing, Vienna, Austria
Within Vienna’s city limits lies the wine-growing village of Grinzing © M.Pakats / Shutterstock

Meander through local outdoor markets

You’ll find it hard to find a district or neighborhood without a market and lineup of tasty pavilions at its heart. These gatherings are feasts for the senses, with samples to taste, smells to savor and the sounds of haggling lingering in the air. The city’s most popular bazaars are the 6th district’s Naschmarkt, which has 120 food stalls and a spirited Saturday flea market; the 170+ stalls representing cultures from around the world at Brunnenmarkt in the 16th; and culinary cornerstone in the 2nd.

Local tip: Lesser-known local markets are delightful, too. Vorgartenmarkt in the 2nd is a laid-back counterpart to the jostle of Karmeilitermarkt, while in the 18th is a regional farmers market with an array of chic vendors.

People at the stalls buying food at Naschmarket in Vienna, Austria
Come hungry to local markets like Naschmarkt © Jorg Hackemann / Shutterstock

Hike in the Vienna hills

If you want to venture beyond the green capital’s manicured parks and landscaped lawns, choose one of the 12 signposted (city hiking trails) that thread through the Vienna Woods, which surround the city.

Planning tip: Trail 1 tracks through vineyards to the near 500m(1640ft)-high Kahlenberg viewpoint, while number 9 takes you deeper into the expanse of Prater Park.

Relax on the Danube waterfront

When not at spectacular Alpine lakes, Viennese in the summer months can be spotted at riverside joints and sandbank hangouts along the beautiful Danube – which, thanks to centuries of engineering, has several local incarnations. Picnic on the promenade or kick back in a bar on the street-art-covered Danube Canal (Donaukanal). Snag a spot on the banks of the Old Danube (Alte Donau), a prime swimming locale – or head to the New Danube (Neue Donau) to grab a deck chair and cocktails at pop-up bar , and to get town to DJ-directed beats at .

Local tip: Along the Danube Canal, the anchored boat and the urban beach bar and silent-disco spot are both top choices.

The Copa Beach area by the Neue Donau (New Danube) 22th district of Vienna, Austria
Along the Danube, seasonal beach setups draw locals all summer long © Kirill Neiezhmakov / Shutterstock

Slide down the tallest building in Austria

Austria’s tallest structure, the 252m(827ft)-high Danube Tower (Donauturm) has been a staple of the Vienna skyline for 60 years. In addition to the panoramic viewing platform and restaurant, the tower has a new high-altitude thrill: you can now whoosh down to the viewing deck from a starting point of 165m (541ft) on Europe’s highest slide.

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Empty Stephansplatz early in the morning, Vienna, Austria

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