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Hundertwasserhaus Tickets, Prices & Opening Hours 2026: Visitor Guide

Hundertwasserhaus Tickets, Prices & Opening Hours 2026: Visitor Guide

Hundertwasserhaus 2026 guide: why there's no ticket for the building itself, KunstHausWien Museum Hundertwasser ticket prices, opening hours, and how to plan your visit.

10 min readBy Elena Marchetti
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Hundertwasserhaus Tickets, Prices & Opening Hours 2026: Visitor Guide

There is no ticket for the Hundertwasserhaus itself — the building is a lived-in apartment block, and its facade is free to view from the street 24 hours a day. What most people searching for "Hundertwasserhaus tickets" actually want is the adjacent KunstHausWien Museum Hundertwasser, a five-minute walk away, where standard 2026 adult admission runs €16, with the museum open daily from 10:00am to 6:00pm (last entry 5:30pm).

This guide untangles the two sites, breaks down what the museum ticket actually costs across age brackets, and covers opening hours, how long to budget, and how to get there. It's part of our full Vienna attractions guide.

What Is the Hundertwasserhaus?

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The Hundertwasserhaus is an apartment building in Vienna's 3rd district, Landstraße, completed in 1985 from a concept by Austrian artist Friedensreich Hundertwasser, realized with architect Josef Krawina. Hundertwasser was a vocal critic of the straight line, which he considered hostile to nature and human wellbeing, and the building is his best-known built statement against it: uneven floors, a facade in more than a dozen colors, irregular window shapes each framed differently, and a roof planted with grass, shrubs, and around 250 trees and bushes.

Crucially, it is ordinary public housing — around 50 apartments, still occupied by residents today. That's why there's no entrance ticket, no lobby to book into, and no way to see the interior on a standard visit: it functions like any other residential building, just one that happens to look like nothing else in Vienna. The only part of the complex open to visitors is the ground-floor Hundertwasser Village, a small arcade of shops and cafés built in the same style, which has free admission.

Hundertwasserhaus Tickets & Prices 2026

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To be direct about the thing most searches are really after: there is no admission fee for the Hundertwasserhaus, because there is nothing to buy entry to. Viewing the exterior from Kegelgasse and Löwengasse, the two streets it sits on the corner of, is free and unrestricted at any hour. The Hundertwasser Village shops at ground level are also free to browse.

What does carry a ticket is KunstHausWien — Museum Hundertwasser, the dedicated gallery of Hundertwasser's paintings and graphic work at Untere Weißgerberstraße 13, about a five-minute walk from the house. As of the museum's own 2026 visitor page, admission is priced by age and status:

  • Adult: €16.00
  • Reduced (general concession): €13.00
  • Senior (65+): €13.00
  • Student (up to 25): €7.00
  • Child/youth (up to 18): €7.00, free under 10
  • Family ticket (2 adults + up to 4 children): €27.00

Entry to the museum is also included with the Vienna Pass, if you're already holding one for other sights. A caveat worth flagging honestly: a handful of third-party listings still quote €15 for standard adult entry, likely reflecting an earlier 2026 rate — the €16 figure above comes directly from the museum's own visitor page, so confirm there before you book if the price matters to your budget.

Opening Hours & Best Time to Go

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The Hundertwasserhaus exterior has no opening hours in the usual sense — it's a public street corner, viewable any time of day or night. KunstHausWien Museum Hundertwasser, the ticketed site next door, is open daily 10:00am to 6:00pm, with last admission 30 minutes before closing at 5:30pm. The museum doesn't publish a weekly closed day, but hours can shift around Christmas and Easter, so check the official site if you're visiting during either period.

For photographing the house itself, early morning (roughly 7:30–9:30am) or the last hour before sunset gives the calmest streets and the most flattering light on the facade — Kegelgasse is a narrow residential street, and it fills with tour groups and photographers by mid-morning, particularly on weekends and in summer. Visiting the museum at opening or in the final 90 minutes before closing tends to mean noticeably thinner galleries than the midday stretch.

How Long to Plan for Your Visit

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Seeing the Hundertwasserhaus exterior and browsing the Hundertwasser Village shops takes about 20 to 30 minutes for most visitors — it's a photo stop and a short wander, not a destination that fills a morning on its own. If you add the KunstHausWien museum next door, budget another 1.5 to 2 hours for the permanent collection and whichever temporary exhibition is running, bringing a combined visit to roughly 2 to 2.5 hours.

Because the standalone stop is short, most visitors fold it into a wider day in Vienna's 3rd district or the city center rather than building a schedule around it. Our Vienna hidden gems guide covers where the Hundertwasserhaus fits alongside other lower-key stops, and the 2 days in Vienna itinerary shows how to pair it with the bigger central sights without losing a full day to transit.

How to Get to the Hundertwasserhaus

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The house sits at Kegelgasse 36-38, 1030 Vienna, on the corner with Löwengasse. Tram line 1 to the Hetzgasse stop leaves about a 2-minute walk to the building; the U3 metro to Rochusgasse works too, at roughly 8 minutes on foot. For the KunstHausWien museum specifically, tram lines 1 or O to Radetzkyplatz land you closer to the Untere Weißgerberstraße entrance than the Hetzgasse stop does.

From Stephansplatz in the historic center, it's about a 20-minute walk or a single tram ride without transfers — the Hundertwasserhaus sits just far enough from the Ringstrasse museums to need a deliberate trip, but close enough that it's an easy add-on rather than a half-day excursion.

Visit Tips: Queues, Booking & Common Mistakes

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The single most common mistake is booking a "Hundertwasserhaus ticket" through a third-party reseller expecting it to grant entry to the building — it doesn't, because the building has no entrance to grant. What you're actually buying in every case is a KunstHausWien museum ticket; reading the fine print before you pay avoids a confused, disappointed stop on your trip.

There's no queue for the house itself since there's nothing to queue for, but the narrow pavement on Kegelgasse gets genuinely crowded with tour groups and photographers by mid-morning, especially in summer — arriving early sidesteps that. For the museum, a timed-entry online booking isn't strictly required the way it is at Vienna's larger galleries, but it's worth doing during peak season (May–September) if you want to skip the walk-up ticket counter.

Don't expect to photograph interiors of the apartments — they're private homes, and residents' privacy is taken seriously; stick to the exterior and the public Hundertwasser Village arcade. If you're visiting primarily for photos, note that scaffolding or facade maintenance work occasionally covers sections of the building; there's no reliable way to check this in advance beyond recent traveler photos online.

Nearby Attractions

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The Hundertwasserhaus sits in Landstraße, the same district as the Belvedere Palace and its Klimt collection, roughly a 20-minute walk or a short tram-and-transfer away — a natural pairing if you're spending a day in Vienna's 3rd district rather than the historic center. For visitors who want more of Hundertwasser's colorful, anti-straight-line approach applied to fine art rather than architecture, the classical old-master collections at the Kunsthistorisches Museum make an interesting contrast, though it's a genuine trip across town rather than a quick add-on.

Most itineraries that include the Hundertwasserhaus also work it into a loop through central Vienna — the St. Stephen's Cathedral area is about 20 minutes away by tram and a common anchor point for a day that also takes in Landstraße's quieter, more residential sights.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you go inside the Hundertwasserhaus?

No. The Hundertwasserhaus is a private, occupied apartment building with around 50 residential units, and the interior is not open to the public. You can freely view and photograph the exterior from Kegelgasse and Löwengasse at any time, and browse the ground-floor Hundertwasser Village shops, but there's no public entrance into the apartments themselves.

How much are Hundertwasserhaus tickets?

There's no ticket for the Hundertwasserhaus building — viewing the exterior is free. The "ticket" most people are actually looking for is for KunstHausWien Museum Hundertwasser next door, priced at €16 for adults, €13 reduced or senior (65+), €7 for students up to 25 and children/youth up to 18, and free for children under 10, as of the museum's 2026 visitor page.

What are the Hundertwasserhaus opening hours?

The building's exterior has no set hours — it's a public street, viewable 24 hours a day. The adjacent KunstHausWien Museum Hundertwasser is open daily from 10:00am to 6:00pm, with last admission at 5:30pm. Hours can vary around Christmas and Easter, so check the official museum site if visiting during those periods.

How long does it take to visit the Hundertwasserhaus?

Viewing the exterior and the Hundertwasser Village shops takes about 20 to 30 minutes. If you add the KunstHausWien museum next door, budget another 1.5 to 2 hours, for a combined visit of roughly 2 to 2.5 hours.

Is the Hundertwasserhaus worth visiting?

Yes, as a short stop — it's one of Vienna's most photographed buildings and a striking piece of anti-conformist architecture, but it's genuinely a 20 to 30-minute visit rather than a half-day attraction. Most travelers pair it with the KunstHausWien museum next door or fold it into a wider day exploring Landstraße and nearby Belvedere Palace.

The Hundertwasserhaus rewards a short, deliberate stop rather than a booked ticket — the value here is a free 20-minute look at one of Vienna's strangest and most photographed buildings, not an admission you need to plan around. The confusion almost everyone runs into is assuming a ticket exists for the house itself; it doesn't, and knowing that before you arrive saves a wasted booking.

If the colorful facade earns more of your time, the KunstHausWien museum next door turns the stop into a proper 2-hour visit for €16, daily between 10:00am and 6:00pm. Either way, it's an easy, low-cost addition to a Landstraße or central Vienna day in 2026.

For current official information, see the KunstHausWien Museum Hundertwasser visitor page and the official Vienna tourism board's Hundertwasserhaus page.