REVIEW · VIENNA
Vienna: Lower Belvedere Entry Ticket & Temporary Exhibitions
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Österreichische Galerie Belvedere · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Vienna’s Lower Belvedere makes Baroque look effortless. This timed entry ticket gets you into Prince Eugene’s former residence, the Lower Belvedere Palace, plus the Orangery and Palace Stables where temporary exhibitions rotate during your visit.
What I like most is the way the Lower Belvedere setting turns art viewing into a full “palace day,” not just a museum stop. Two favorites for me are the Baroque state rooms planned for Prince Eugene’s representative life, and the gardens and viewpoints that frame both palaces in a way you can actually enjoy at a relaxed pace.
One consideration: this is self-guided, and an audio guide isn’t included. Also, the famous Klimt work The Kiss sits at Upper Belvedere, and it’s not included in this ticket.
In This Review
- Key Things To Know Before You Go
- Lower Belvedere Palace: Why This Ticket Works as a Vienna “Big Day”
- Price and Value: Is $17 Worth It?
- Your Timing Plan: How to Use the 1-Day Valid Ticket
- Meeting Point and Entry Reality: Self-Guided Means You Drive
- Inside the Palace Rooms: Baroque Art of Living
- Palace Stables and Medieval Treasures: A Great Place to Start Your Favorites
- Gardens and Palace Views: Why the Outdoor Time Feels Different Here
- Temporary Exhibitions: The Real Reason to Pick a Date
- What About Guides and Audio?
- What Not to Bring: Small Rules That Affect Your Comfort
- Who This Experience Suits Best
- Practical Booking Advice: When to Choose This Ticket
- Should You Book This Lower Belvedere Ticket?
- FAQ
- What does the ticket include?
- Is a guided tour included?
- Is an audio guide included?
- Does this ticket include the Klimt permanent exhibition The Kiss?
- How long is the ticket valid?
- Are pets allowed inside?
- Where do I enter and when should I arrive?
Key Things To Know Before You Go

- Prince Eugene’s 1716 Baroque palace: A residence designed for display, not just storage.
- Lower Belvedere + Orangery + Palace Stables: A single ticket covering multiple wings and uses.
- Temporary exhibition lineup changes: You’ll see rotating shows across painting and sculpture periods.
- Middle Ages and Renaissance highlights: Including a study collection experience and medieval treasures.
- A calmer visit than Upper Belvedere: The Lower side often feels less crowded for garden time.
Lower Belvedere Palace: Why This Ticket Works as a Vienna “Big Day”

Lower Belvedere is one of those Vienna stops that keeps earning its reputation. You’re not just walking through rooms with paintings on the walls—you’re stepping into an actual Baroque residence concept. The palace was completed in 1716 and shaped the look of the larger Baroque ensemble around Vienna at the time, so your visit makes visual sense as you move from interior spaces to the outdoor setting.
With this ticket you also have an easy structure: palace rooms first, then the Orangery and Palace Stables spaces, then the gardens. That order matters. When you start in the palace, you get the logic of Prince Eugene’s lifestyle rooms and representative design, and when you step outside afterward, the gardens start to feel like part of the same story—not a separate add-on.
It’s also good value for art lovers who want variety in one price. At $17 per person for Lower Belvedere entry plus temporary exhibitions in multiple locations, you’re paying less for breadth than many “single building” museum tickets in Europe.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Vienna
Price and Value: Is $17 Worth It?

At a glance, $17 sounds straightforward. The real question is what you get for that money—and here you get a lot in one ticket bundle.
Included in your entry:
- Entrance to the Lower Belvedere
- Entry to the Orangery
- Entry to the Palace Stables
- Access to the temporary exhibitions on view in those areas
Not included:
- An audio guide
- A tour guide
- The Klimt permanent exhibition at Upper Belvedere, including The Kiss
- Transportation, plus food and drinks
So the value calculation depends on your priorities:
- If you want architecture + gardens + rotating art spaces, $17 is a strong deal.
- If your #1 goal is The Kiss, you’ll need to plan Upper Belvedere separately (this ticket won’t cover it).
Your Timing Plan: How to Use the 1-Day Valid Ticket

This ticket is valid for 1 day, but entry is tied to a chosen time slot. The practical move is simple: pick a time that matches your energy, not just your calendar.
Here’s what I recommend:
- Arrive at the entrance meeting point about 15 minutes early so you don’t lose your time slot.
- Give yourself time to move slowly through palace rooms before you head to the gardens and outside viewpoints.
Because there’s no tour guide, your pacing is yours. That sounds basic, but in major museums it’s a big difference. If you’re the kind of person who likes to linger in rooms with a few key works (instead of rushing through everything), you’ll be happier here than in a rigid group format.
Meeting Point and Entry Reality: Self-Guided Means You Drive
The meeting point is the admission entrance, and the experience ends back where you started. That means you don’t need to chase a meeting-up spot in the garden or at a café. You show up, scan in, and start walking.
Since there’s no guide, your success depends on how you choose where to spend your attention. The palace and grounds are beautiful, but “beautiful” can also mean “easy to get distracted.” Plan a loose route so you don’t bounce randomly between rooms.
A helpful approach:
- Spend your first stretch in the state rooms and major interior galleries.
- Move to the Orangery and Stables next, where the show format can feel different from the palace rooms.
- Finish in the gardens so the day ends with space and views.
If you’re tempted to stop for snacks, note food and drinks aren’t allowed inside the spaces covered by this activity. You’ll want to plan meals elsewhere.
Inside the Palace Rooms: Baroque Art of Living

Lower Belvedere was designed for Prince Eugene with representative state rooms—rooms meant to impress. When you’re inside, you’ll feel that in the structure. Even if you don’t know Baroque vocabulary, you can recognize the intention: the building is organized to create drama through scale, layout, and flow.
Look for how the rooms connect and how the design pushes you onward. This is one of the big reasons I think this ticket works well: you’re not only seeing paintings and objects; you’re walking through the visual rules of a Baroque residence.
What makes this part worthwhile for real-life visitors:
- It helps you understand why Baroque art often feels theatrical.
- It gives you context for how art and architecture functioned together in an elite home.
- It sets up the gardens outside as more than a pretty walk.
If you love architecture and “what the building is trying to do,” this is the heart of the visit.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Vienna
Palace Stables and Medieval Treasures: A Great Place to Start Your Favorites

One of the most appealing highlights is the Palace Stables, where you can find treasures from the Middle Ages. This is the kind of detail that’s easy to overlook if you treat a palace as purely decorative.
Here’s the reason it matters: it changes the tone of your museum day. A Baroque palace can make you expect Baroque-only content. Instead, you’re meeting medieval and transitional periods in a setting that still feels tied to Prince Eugene’s world.
The ticket also includes a study collection focus on Middle Ages and Renaissance, so if medieval art is your soft spot, you’ll probably find it satisfying rather than just “some background rooms.” If you’re traveling with someone who likes different periods, this Stables area is a good compromise point.
Gardens and Palace Views: Why the Outdoor Time Feels Different Here
The gardens at the Belvedere are famous for a reason. They’re often the best payoff for people who think they’ll spend “just a little time outside.” The gardens are where you get to slow down, take in scale, and see the palaces from angles that feel purposeful.
I especially like the way the viewpoints work if you want photos without feeling like you’re in a photo bottleneck. You also get the sense of walking through the design system of the whole estate, not just getting air.
One practical tip: if you’re doing more than one Belvedere building on your day, keep the Lower Belvedere in your plan for a calmer pace. The Lower side has a reputation for feeling less crowded than Upper Belvedere, and that makes it easier to enjoy the gardens without feeling rushed.
Also, if you’re tempted by both palaces, the walk between them is short—around 7–8 minutes—so you can add Upper Belvedere later if you want The Kiss.
Temporary Exhibitions: The Real Reason to Pick a Date

What makes this ticket more than a “same every day” museum visit is the temporary exhibition schedule. These shows can shift your entire day, especially if you don’t plan to revisit the collection soon.
You may see exhibitions like:
- Study Collection Middle Ages and Renaissance (ongoing)
- The World in Colors – Slovenian Painting 1848–1918 (January 30, 2025 to May 26, 2025)
- Gustav Klimt. Pigment & Pixel (February 20, 2025 to September 7, 2025)
- RADICAL! Women Artists and Modernism 1910–1950 (June 18, 2025 to October 12, 2025)
- Cézanne, Monet, Renoir. French Impressionism from the Museum Langmatt (September 25, 2025 to February 8, 2026)
- Franz Xaver Messerschmidt – More than Character Heads (October 31, 2025 to March 8, 2026)
A smart strategy: don’t try to see everything just because it’s there. Pick one temporary exhibition as your “main event,” then let the rest support it. If you choose a main show first, you’ll spend your time more intentionally, and you’ll notice details you would otherwise skip.
What About Guides and Audio?
This entry ticket doesn’t include an audio guide or a guided tour. That doesn’t mean you’ll be stuck, but it does mean you should come ready to read labels and choose your focus.
If you want a “guided feel” anyway:
- Look for on-site staff help when questions pop up.
- Use your smartphone for simple research if you’re the type who likes background before you step into a room.
Also, be aware that the Klimt permanent exhibition featuring The Kiss is at Upper Belvedere, not included here. So if Klimt is your must-see, you’ll want to plan accordingly.
What Not to Bring: Small Rules That Affect Your Comfort
Some rules are easy to forget until you’re standing at the entrance. From the ticket conditions:
- No weapons or sharp objects
- No oversize luggage
- No large bags or luggage
- No food and drinks
- No selfie sticks
- Pets aren’t allowed (assistance dogs are allowed)
These restrictions matter because they affect what you carry. If you’re touring all day with a backpack, consider traveling light. A smaller bag is easier for moving through palace corridors, Orangery spaces, and Stables areas without stress.
Who This Experience Suits Best
This is a strong fit if you like:
- Baroque architecture and palace layouts
- Art from different periods (including medieval and Renaissance focus)
- Temporary exhibitions
- Gardens and outdoor viewpoints as part of the museum experience
It’s less ideal if:
- You only care about one famous work (like The Kiss) and don’t want to go beyond that
- You strongly prefer a guided narrative or an audio guide to pace your visit
If you’re a first-time visitor to Vienna who wants one major art-and-palace day, this ticket can anchor your schedule nicely.
Practical Booking Advice: When to Choose This Ticket
Before you lock your time slot, ask yourself two quick questions:
- Do you want more than one space (palace + Orangery + Stables) in a single visit? If yes, this works well.
- Are you okay exploring without a guide? If yes, the self-paced format is a plus.
If you’re traveling with mixed interests—someone who wants palace beauty and someone who wants art history—this setup gives everyone something to point at.
Should You Book This Lower Belvedere Ticket?
Book it if you want a Baroque palace visit with serious museum value in one ticket: Lower Belvedere Palace plus the Orangery and Palace Stables, alongside temporary exhibitions and a Middle Ages/Renaissance focus.
Skip it or pair it carefully if your top priority is The Kiss at Upper Belvedere. This ticket doesn’t include it, so you’d be paying for a different piece of the Belvedere story.
My call: for most visitors, this is an efficient, high-value way to see Vienna’s Baroque grandeur and rotation of art in a setting that makes the city’s art culture feel real.
FAQ
What does the ticket include?
Your ticket includes entrance to the Lower Belvedere, the Orangery, and the Palace Stables, with access to temporary exhibitions in those areas.
Is a guided tour included?
No. This entry ticket is self-guided. There is no tour guide.
Is an audio guide included?
No. An audio guide is not included with this ticket.
Does this ticket include the Klimt permanent exhibition The Kiss?
No. The Klimt permanent exhibition including The Kiss is located at Upper Belvedere and is not included.
How long is the ticket valid?
It’s valid for 1 day. You’ll choose a time slot, and availability determines the starting times.
Are pets allowed inside?
Pets are not allowed. Assistance dogs are allowed.
Where do I enter and when should I arrive?
You enter at the admission meeting point (the entrance). Arrive about 15 minutes before your chosen time so you don’t lose your time slot.































