Get in touch with us

We will be happy to answer your telephone inquiries from 9:00 to 16:00 on weekdays.

You can also contact us by email at touristinfo@visitbratislava.com.

 


UFO watch.taste.groove.
“Floating” on the pillar of the SNP Bridge (Slovak National Uprising Bridge), this restaurant offers a pretty unconventional experience, from where you…
Summer archbishop’s palace
The palace was built by Archbishop Forgách in 1614 on the site of vineyards as a summer residence of the Ostrihom archbishops.…
Museum of Clocks – House at the Good Shepherd

Housed within one of Bratislava’s finest rococo buildings, this exhibition of antique timepieces covers clockmaking from the late 17th to the late 19th century.

Chatam Sofer Memorial

This memorial was named after the main pressburg’s Rabbi Moshe Schreiber, also known as Chatam Sofer, who was one of the leading personalities of european judaism in the 19th century.

Blue Church

Officially known as the Church of St Elizabeth of Hungary, but commonly referred to simply as ‘the Blue Church’ for obvious reasons, this is Bratislava’s most appealing art nouveau building.

Slovak National Theatre

Bratislava’s opera house – known officially as the historical building of the Slovak National Theatre – is a Neo-Renaissance-style building opened in 1886 as the City Theatre, according to the design of Viennese architects F. Fellner and H. Helmer.

Kino Film Europe
Kino Film Europe is located on the Pisztory Palace premises, an eclectic building that served as a museum for Vladimír Iľjič Lenin…
Bratislava Castle

The castle, on a hill above the old town, dominates the city of Bratislava.

Zichy Palace

This neo-classical palace, formerly owned by Count Franz Zichy.

Old Town Hall

The history of the Old Town Hall dates back to the beginnings of the mediaeval town in the 13th century.

Slavín

The gigantic Slavín war memorial is visible from much of the city. On a hill overlooking the castle, it commemorates the city’s liberation by the Red Army in April 1945.

Reduta

This sumptuous building, dating from 1911-1915, was built in eclectic style on the former site of a baroque granary from the 18th century.

Primate’s Palace

The Primate’s Palace (1778-1781) was built on property originally belonging to the archbishop of Esztergom. The facade of the palace is in strictly classical style.

Palffy Palace

This palace was built in the middle of the 19th century by Count Jan Pálffy, who was then Bratislava’s highest official. Today the building serves as one of the buildings of Bratislava City Gallery

Leopold de Pauli’s Palace

This palace was built for the main administrator of imperial property on the king’s estate, Leopold de Pauli, in 1775-1776.