The upper + lower 2-in-1 option at Schloss Belvedere Tickets — both palaces, one day. Includes upper belvedere (klimt) + lower belvedere (baroque), plus 4 other concierge inclusions. Reserve directly — we secure the official slot the moment you confirm.
What's included
Every booking includes the elements below — handled by our concierge team before your visit and confirmed at the door.
• Upper Belvedere (Klimt) + Lower Belvedere (Baroque)
• Skip-the-line at both palaces
• Walk through the gardens between
• Best value for art-history visitors
• 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Who this is for
This option is designed for both palaces, one day. If you're booking for a different group composition, see the other tiers in our booking widget — each is matched to a specific visitor profile.
On the day
Schloss Belvedere is a pair of Baroque palaces in central Vienna built between 1712 and 1723 as the summer residence of Prince Eugene of Savoy, the Habsburg Empire's most successful general. Today the complex houses the Österreichische Galerie Belvedere — Austria's national gallery — best known for holding Gustav Klimt's The Kiss (1907–1908) along with the world's largest Klimt collection.
Frequently asked
What's included in the skip-the-line ticket?
Priority entry to the Upper Belvedere bypassing the ticket-office queue, plus the full permanent collection — the Klimt galleries (The Kiss, Judith I, and works from every phase of his career), the Schiele holdings, the Baroque state rooms, and the Marble Hall. The Lower Belvedere and Orangerie are not included unless you book the combo tier.
Upper only or both palaces?
Most first-time visitors do Upper only — it holds the Klimt collection, which is what people come for. The combo adds Lower Belvedere (rotating exhibitions in Prince Eugene's own apartments, often excellent) plus the Orangerie. At €45 vs €28, the combo is worth it if you have half a day and care about Biedermeier/contemporary.
When should I visit to see The Kiss with space to breathe?
09:00 opening on a weekday. Book a slot within the first 30 minutes. The first hour has the gallery nearly empty; by 11:00 there are 30+ people at a time in front of The Kiss. Evenings are also quieter (Fri until 21:00).
Is photography allowed?
Yes without flash or tripod, except in the immediate room housing The Kiss — that's a one-room ban to keep the queue moving. Other Klimts (Judith I, the Schiele rooms, the Frieze panels) you can photograph without flash. Selfie sticks discouraged throughout.