Steam in the open-air pools of Europe's largest medicinal bath, a butter-yellow neo-Baroque palace with 15 indoor and 3 vast outdoor thermal pools fed by natural hot springs. Drifting in the steaming main pool ringed by ornate domes is THE iconic Budapest image, and there is nothing else like it in any cruise port. With the elegant Gellert Bath closed for renovation until ~2028, Szechenyi is unambiguously the marquee choice.
What to expect
You arrive at Széchenyi's butter-yellow neo-Baroque palace and step into one of Europe's most surreal thermal landscapes: 18 pools fed by natural hot springs, indoors and out. The iconic sequence unfolds as you move between the elegant 15 indoor thermal pools to ease in, then out to the vast outdoor basins where steaming water meets cool air and ornate domes frame the horizon—this drifting-in-open-air-pools moment is the defining Budapest image for good reason. The rhythm is unhurried; you control your pace entirely, moving between pools, resting in the palatial halls, and soaking in the mineral warmth. Nothing else in any cruise port compares to this sensory immersion.
Direct wins big. The ship's spa-visit optional runs ~$49-69 pp with transfer; booking direct online and taking the metro (M1 to Szechenyi furdo, door-to-door) is ~$34 -- you save roughly $20-35 pp and keep your own clock instead of a fixed group return.
Good to know
Book your full-day ticket online before arrival (~$34 weekday, ~$38 weekend; early-bird pre-9am runs ~$27) and skip the ship's spa transfer option, which costs $49–69 pp and locks you into group timing. Take the M1 metro directly from the pier to Széchenyi fürdő station—door-to-door is roughly 20 minutes and costs a few dollars, saving you $20–35 per person. Bring a locker key, towel, and flip-flops (lockers included with ticket; towel rental available onboard). Plan for a 5–6 hour soak window to truly experience the baths, and aim to be back at the pier 90 minutes before all-aboard to account for metro delays and security lines.