Warsaw city tour
Warsaw City Tour
Warsaw also shows the tragic story of Polish Jews who have made a significant contribution to the history of the city, presented in the film by Roman Polański, ‘The Pianist’. The testimony of their heroism and martyrdom is illustrated by the memorabilia and remnants of the former ghetto in the Museum of Polish Jews ‘Polin’ near the monument of the Ghetto Heroes.
In 1980, it was decided to inscribe the historical center of Warsaw on the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage List. Warsaw is one of the exceptional places that should be preserved for future generations. Let us show you our city, so that it remains in your memory forever.
Our Warsaw city tour includes most of above sights. All depend on duration of the tour.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
- Suggested departure time: up to client's wish
- Tour duration: 3 hours
- Sightseeing available in English, Russian, German, Italian, French and Spanish
- The price per trip * applies to the cost per person and is given in Polish zlotys
- Possibility to pay in foreign currency (€, £, $) at the current NBP exchange rate
Price per person in PLN | 1 PERSON | 2 PEOPLE | 3 PEOPLE | 4 PEOPLE | 5 PEOPLE | 6 PEOPLE |
1000 | 600 | 500 | 400 | 350 | 300 | |
VEHICLE |
*PRICE INCLUDES:
- care of an English-speaking guide during the visit. Tours available in French, Spanish, German, Russian and Italian on request and for an additional fee of 250 PLN
- bottled water
- in-car WiFi
- passenger insurance
- a high-class car with an English-speaking driver during the visit
- for groups larger than 6 people, the service is priced individually
- Price does not include taxes
Krakow tour from Warsaw
Krakow, one of the most beautiful Polish cities, has a long history of traditions which reaches back even further than a thousand years. Everyone who visited this city at least once will not forget the atmosphere of the old castle walls, the Wawel Hill with the dragon's cave, stretching just above the lazily flowing Vistula, a charming market with the outstanding St. Mary's Church and lots of greenery.
Krakow and Wieliczka tour from Warsaw
When in Krakow, take the opportunity to visit 15-kilometre away Wieliczka to see one of the most popular tourist attractions in Poland - the Salt Mine. It is the only mining facility in the world that has been open all the time from the Middle Ages up until now.
Krakow and Auschwitz tour from Warsaw
When in Krakow, you have to visit 70-kilometer away Oswięcim where the Auschwitz-Birkenau Concentration Camp was used to be. In 1979, the camp was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List as a place associated with the Holocaust and mass genocide. Founded as a labor camp, it later became a place of terror and extermination.
Wroclaw tour from Warsaw
Wroclaw is the historical capital of Silesia, one of the largest and oldest cities in Poland, located on both sides of the central Oder River on the Silesian Lowland. Before the World War II, there were 303 bridges in the city, currently there are about 220. In the first post-war years, under the slogan ‘all Poland is rebuilding the capital’, it became, like other cities of the Recovered Territories, a place of robbery organized by the state.
Kazimierz Dolny tour from Warsaw
Kazimierz Dolny is one of the most valuable and charming places in Poland. This city is known for its connection with art and artists. Many painters have their own galleries and workshops here; there are also open-air painting workshops organized. Kazimierz is a unique place because of its cultural heritage and long tradition of painting, literary and creativity.
Lodz tour from Warsaw
Lodz is a remarkable city located in central Poland, only a 90-minute drive from Warsaw, at the intersection of the main highways and central railway lines. The hamlet was first mentioned in the 12th century but its development occurred in the 19th century when the gord became a real power to the extent that it become the second largest and one of the richest metropolis in Poland.
Majdanek tour from Warsaw
German concentration camp in Lublin, coloquially called Majdanek, was created by the decision of Heinrich Himmler. Built in the autumn of 1941, the camp was initially called Kriegsgefangenenlager der Waffen SS Lublin - a prisoner-of-war camp, and in February 1943 it was renamed Konzentrationslager Lublin - a concentration camp.
Treblinka tour from Warsaw
The Treblinka extermination camp was created on the order of Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler in 1942. However, from 1940 there was a penal camp for the Polish population (‘Treblinka I’) in the northern part of the Warsaw District, which in 1941 was transformed into a labor camp.
Wolf's Lair tour from Warsaw
In the heart of Masuria on the North of Poland, in the deep forest, there are ruins of what used to be Adolf Hitler’s headquarters. Built in Gierloz in 1940-44, it attracts tourists with its dark atmosphere and a warning closed in the walls of the damaged buildings. Hitler named it ‘Wolf’s Lair’ as a reference to his pseudonym ‘Her Wolf’, which he used to sign articles in the 1920s.