Plan Your Visit
Next performance
Götterdämmerung
Sunday, June 14
Nearest transit
Karlsplatz U-Bahn station (U1, U2, U4 lines); Staatsoper tram stop (1, 2, D lines)
Editorial picks within walking distance
Café Landtmann
Innere Stadt
Staatsoper (State Opera House)
Historic clientele including Gustav Mahler; perfect pre-opera ritual location
“Arrive 90 minutes before show time to secure a prime terrace seat with opera house views.”
Daily 7am-midnight; book ahead for groups
Do & Co
Innere Stadt
Staatsoper (State Opera House)
Exceptional Austrian and international cuisine; views over historic Vienna
“Reserve the window tables for performances at nearby venues; they offer prime people-watching during intermission walks.”
Daily 11am-midnight; reservations essential
Figlmüller
Innere Stadt
Staatsoper (State Opera House)
Monster-sized, thin-as-paper Wiener schnitzel; local institution status
“Go 30 minutes before your show time—they honor reservations but walk-ins can expect a short wait that still gets you to the opera on time.”
Tue-Sun 11am-10:30pm; closed Mondays
Post-show bars & late-night options
Motto am Fluss
Innere Stadt
Musikverein & Staatsoper
Craft cocktails; creative clientele; perfect post-show scene
“Head here after late performances for live music and late-night mingles with performers from the surrounding venues.”
Daily 6pm-2am; busier Thu-Sat
Schwarzes Kamel
Innere Stadt
Staatsoper (State Opera House)
Oldest wine bar in Vienna; exceptional Austrian wines; vintage ambiance
“Arrive 45 minutes pre-show for a quick glass and charcuterie plate; the bartenders work fast and know the local arts scene.”
Mon-Fri 8am-10pm, Sat 10am-10pm; closed Sun
Tips from the regulars
Entrance
Data gap: specific entrance locations and street addresses not provided. The Staatsoper is located in the 1st Bezirk (Vienna's historic center) on the Ring; the main entrance faces the Ringstrasse. First-time visitors should approach from Stephansplatz or via the U-Bahn U1/U2/U4 stations.
Intermission
The Schwind Foyer is accessible without a ticket on performance evenings—a significant advantage for standing-room patrons or those arriving early. The foyer's frescoes and architectural detail reward exploration. The Staatsoper's bar service during intermission is efficient; however, the standing-room audience (567 places, €4-10, released 80 minutes before curtain) creates significant crowd density. The most educated and passionate opera audience in existence occupies the Stehplatz; intermission conversation in the standing-room section is often more musically informed than in the seated house.
Accessibility
Data gap: no accessibility information provided (wheelchair access, elevator locations, accessible seating policy, contact details). The Staatsoper's website and box office should be consulted directly for current accessibility accommodations.
Transit, parking & directions
Public Transit
The Staatsoper is directly accessible via U-Bahn U1, U2, and U4 (Karlsplatz station, approximately 2-minute walk). Tram lines 1, 2, D, and 71 stop at Oper. The Ringstrasse is the primary orientation point. Ride-share drop-off is available on the Ring itself.
Parking
Data gap: no parking information provided. Vienna's 1st Bezirk is car-restricted; public transit or taxi/ride-share strongly recommended. The Staatsoper is immediately adjacent to the Musikverein and within walking distance of the Konzerthaus.
Parking Garage Staatsoper
Staatsoper (State Opera House)
Proximity to Staatsoper; secure underground facility; reliable availability
Parkhaus Künstlerhaus
Musikverein & Konzerthaus Wien
Central location for multiple venues; reasonable rates; modern facilities
Nearby highlights, venues & landmarks
Wiener Staatsoper (Vienna State Opera)
1st Bezirk
“The Stehplatz (standing room) — 567 places from €4-10, released 80 minutes before curtain — offers the most educated and passionate opera audience in existence. Queue from 90 minutes before for prime central-parterre standing. The Schwind Foyer is accessible without a ticket on performance evenings.”
Volksoper Wien
9th Bezirk
“The Rote Bar inside the Volksoper is open on performance evenings and is where the ensemble gathers after shows. For performers working at the Volksoper, this bar is your communal living room. The atmosphere is warmer and less ceremonial than the Staatsoper — more laughter, more visible emotion from the audience.”
Theater an der Wien
6th Bezirk
“Productions here tend toward smaller casts, period instrument orchestras, and directors who work in the historically informed performance space. The house attracts a knowledgeable audience that comes specifically for this repertoire. For countertenors, sopranos, and instrumentalists in the early music world, the Theater an der Wien is the most important Viennese stage.”
Musikverein (Großer Saal — the Golden Hall)
1st Bezirk
“Stehplatz in the Großer Saal (standing room at the rear and sides) is €7-10 and released before the concert. The Brahms-Saal (600 seats) is an equally beautiful but more intimate room for chamber music. If you have the opportunity to attend an open rehearsal of the Vienna Philharmonic, take it regardless of the program.”
Konzerthaus
3rd Bezirk
“The Schubert-Saal is one of the finest chamber music rooms in Vienna — intimate enough for a Schubert quartet to feel entirely present, large enough for a small orchestra. The Konzerthaus's programming calendar rewards checking regularly: the contemporary and jazz series bring performers and ensembles that the Musikverein does not typically present.”
Burgtheater
1st Bezirk
“The stairwells contain early ceiling paintings by Gustav Klimt and Ernst Klimt — accessible on guided tours of the building. The Burgtheater offers public guided tours when not in rehearsal. The Akademietheater (opposite the Konzerthaus) is a more intimate 500-seat space where experimental and smaller-scale work is produced under the Burgtheater umbrella.”
Zentralfriedhof — Section 32A: Composers' Grove
11th Bezirk (Simmering)
“Take tram 71 from Schwarzenbergplatz (near the Ring) to Zentralfriedhof Tor 2 (Gate 2), approximately 20 minutes. The Composers' Grove is well-signposted from the gate. The graves are modest — stone markers in a garden setting. Brahms's grave is particularly plain. The weight of the names against the simplicity of the stones creates an effect that is difficult to describe and impossible to forget.”
Mozarthaus Vienna
1st Bezirk
“The museum (admission approximately €12) takes you through the apartment on the second floor with period documentation of the Figaro composition. Allow 45 minutes. The building is around the corner from Stephansdom, in the tight medieval street grid of the 1st Bezirk. The adjacent Café Haag is the logical recovery stop.”
Café Central
1st Bezirk
“A Melange (€5.50) entitles you to this table for as long as you need it. The coffeehouse's Apfelstrudel is house-made. The cardboard figure of Trotsky at the chess table in the corner is historically accurate — he played chess here before WWI. Order from the full menu if you are hungry; the Gulasch and the Palatschinken are both excellent.”
The Naschmarkt
4th/6th Bezirk
“The Saturday flea market at the western end (from approximately Kettenbrückengasse westward) is one of the finest in Europe — furniture, books, records, silver, art. Arrive early for the best items. The market's food stalls offer an excellent, affordable breakfast if you arrive before 9 AM: Semmel with Liptauer, Turkish börek, and strong coffee from the Turkish stalls are €5 total.”
Stephansdom (St. Stephen's Cathedral)
1st Bezirk
“Organ recitals at Stephansdom are regular and often free. Check the cathedral's schedule; the acoustics make even a short recital program in this space an extraordinary experience. The south tower can be climbed (admission approximately €6) for views across the entire city — the Ring, the Prater's Riesenrad, the Wienerwald hills.”
Palais Lobkowitz — Eroica-Saal
1st Bezirk
“The Austrian Theatre Museum (admission approximately €6) is itself worth visiting — the archive of Austrian theatrical history, including Burgtheater documentation, opera designs, and performance records going back centuries. The museum's collection of theater designs, costumes, and photographs constitutes one of the most important archives of European performance history.”
Stadtpark (City Park)
Innere Stadt
Staatsoper (State Opera House)
Johann Strauss statue; scenic walks; peaceful setting in the heart of the city
“Performers often walk here to decompress after morning rehearsals; find quiet corners by the river pavilion for vocal warm-ups.”
Open daily 6:30am-10pm; free entry
Staatsoper (State Opera House)
Innere Stadt
Staatsoper (State Opera House)
Historic opera house; world premieres; architectural grandeur; Vienna Philharmonic connection
“Arrive early to explore the grand lobbies and staircase; the ornate interior rivals any performance on stage.”
Box office open daily 9am-6pm; 45-minute guided tours available
Musikverein (Vienna Concert Hall)
Innere Stadt
Musikverein Wien
Vienna Philharmonic home; New Year's Concert broadcast; perfect acoustics; architectural beauty
“Attend the famous New Year's Concert (book a year in advance) or catch afternoon Philharmonic rehearsals if open to the public.”
Guided tours available most days 10am-3pm; advance booking recommended
Konzerthaus Wien
Wieden
Konzerthaus Wien
Three concert halls; diverse programming; art deco architecture; contemporary repertoire
“The chamber music series here often features up-and-coming soloists; tickets are easier to secure than Musikverein performances.”
Box office open Mon-Fri 9am-6pm, Sat 10am-2pm; tours by appointment
Ronacher
1st Bezirk
“For performers in the musical theater world, the Ronacher is the Vienna equivalent of a Broadway house — the premiere destination for major productions, with production values and institutional support at the highest level. The VBW organization also manages the Theater an der Wien and the Volksoper, creating a coherent producing organization across three Viennese stages.”