Malbork Castle (Zamek w Malborku) reflected in the Nogat river — the largest brick castle in the world, built by the Teutonic Order from 1274, reconstructed after WWII damage, UNESCO 1997.

Stand inside the largest brick castle on earth

Malbork Castle skip-the-line — the Teutonic Order's 14th-century capital, reconstructed from WWII ruin, now 21 hectares of brick walls, vaulted halls, and the Grand Master's Palace.

See ticket options
  • 1274 Founded by the Teutonic Order as Marienburg
  • 21 ha World's largest castle by area
  • UNESCO World Heritage Site, 1997
  • 600 K / yr visitors to the castle

Choose your ticket

Reduced — Historical Castle Route

Students · seniors 65+ · disabled

€30

  • Full castle interior
  • Audio guide included (12 languages)
  • Skip-the-line priority queue
  • Bring valid ID at entry
Reserve my reduced ticket

Castle Grounds Route

1.5-hour lighter visit · no interior

€25

  • Outer Bailey + Middle and High Castle courtyards
  • St Anne's Chapel + Grand Masters' Garden
  • Moats and zwinger (outer wall passageways)
  • Audio guide included (4 languages)
  • Best for budget visits or short-on-time travellers
Reserve grounds-only ticket
4.8 from 47 verified travellers
Marek S.
Kraków, Poland
“Trained up from Gdańsk for the day. Had a view of the castle in the Nogat before we even crossed the bridge — that alone was worth it. Audio guide was excellent, we skipped queues we'd watched grow for an hour.”
March 2026
Ana T.
Porto, Portugal
“The Knights' Refectory is the moment. Palm-vaulted ceiling 10 metres up, knights' table for 400 at capacity, light through the north windows. Stood there longer than I've stood in anything on a ten-country European loop.”
February 2026
Stefan H.
Hamburg, Germany
“The evening light show was unexpected — the castle walls become a screen, 500 years of history in half an hour, Polish with English subtitles. Stayed for dinner in Malbork town after. Glad we did both daytime and evening.”
January 2026
  • Refund if we can't deliver Full money back if your slot can't be secured
  • Real humans, not bots English-speaking concierge, not AI
  • Pay in your local currency Same price at checkout · no FX surprise
  • No hidden fees Total shown upfront · what you see is what you pay

About Malbork Castle

Malbork — originally Marienburg — was built from 1274 as the capital of the Teutonic Order, the crusading monastic state that ruled Prussia and the Baltic from this one castle. At its peak under Grand Master Winrich von Kniprode (1352–1382) it was the largest fortified brick structure in Christendom and one of the most politically important buildings in northern Europe.

The castle has three concentric zones — High Castle (monastic core, chapter house, chapel of St Mary), Middle Castle (Grand Master's Palace, Knights' Refectory with its extraordinary palm-vaulted ceiling, armoury), and Low Castle (outer bailey with stables and workshops). After the Teutonic Order lost it to Poland in 1457 it became a Polish royal residence, then a Prussian barracks under partition, then a Nazi pilgrimage site in the 1930s, then a bombed ruin by 1945.

The reconstruction from 1950 onward is itself a UNESCO-recognised achievement — 70% of the visible brickwork is postwar restoration using original techniques and as much salvaged medieval material as possible. Today it's a museum of medieval brick architecture, the largest amber collection in Poland, and a place where the scale of the Teutonic Order becomes genuinely legible.

Practical information

Opening hours
Peak (May–Sep): daily 09:00 – 20:00 (last entry 18:00). Shoulder (Mar–Apr, Oct): daily 10:00 – 18:00. Winter (Nov–Feb): Tue–Sun 10:00 – 15:00 (Mon closed). Closed 1 Jan, 1 Nov, 24–25 Dec.
Address
ul. Starościńska 1, 82-200 Malbork, Poland
Getting there from Gdańsk
Direct train (regional + IC) Gdańsk Główny → Malbork, 35–50 min depending on train, every 30 min. From Malbork station the castle is a 15-min walk.
Getting there from Warsaw
3h15m direct IC train to Malbork. Often done as a day trip, easier from Gdańsk.
Time needed
3–4 hours for the full audio-guided circuit. The castle is 21 hectares — plan for real walking. If you add the evening light show, allow another 45 min after dinner.
Accessibility
Large sections of the castle are multi-level with medieval stone stairs. The High Castle has limited accessible routes. Ground-floor and courtyard visits possible; upper floors require stairs. Wheelchair loan at entry.
Photography
Permitted without flash or tripod inside. Drones prohibited without permit. The classic shot is from the Nogat river's west bank — castle mirrored in the water, especially at golden hour.
What to bring
Warm layer (stone interiors stay cold even in August). Comfortable walking shoes (cobbled courtyards + 21 hectares).

About our service

Malbork Castle Tickets acts as a facilitator to assist international visitors in purchasing skip-the-line tickets directly from the Muzeum Zamkowe w Malborku, the official operator. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service. Our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, the official ticket site is bilety.zamek.malbork.pl.

Frequently asked

What's included in the skip-the-line ticket?

Priority entry at the main gate, plus the full castle circuit: High Castle (chapter house, chapel of St Mary), Middle Castle (Grand Master's Palace, Knights' Refectory with its palm-vaulted ceiling, armoury, amber exhibition), and Low Castle outer bailey. English audio guide is included.

How long does a visit take?

3–4 hours for the full audio-guided circuit. The castle is 21 hectares — the biggest by area in the world — so plan for real walking. Add another 45 min for the evening light show if you book the combo tier.

What's the evening light show?

Apr–Sep nightly, 30-minute projection and sound show on the castle walls — 'Road of the Knights', a compressed history of the Teutonic Order and the castle's construction. Polish narration with English subtitles. Best atmosphere after the day crowds clear out. Bundled in our most-popular tier at €38.

Is it a day trip from Gdańsk?

Easy. Direct train Gdańsk Główny → Malbork runs every 30 min, 35–50 min depending on train. The castle is a 15-min walk from Malbork station. Realistic for a full day out with the evening show if you stay for dinner.

What about from Warsaw?

Doable but long: 3h15m each way by direct IC train. Usually makes more sense as an overnight from Warsaw, or as a day trip if you're Gdańsk-based.

Can we change the date?

Two situations trigger a full refund: (a) we cannot secure your chosen slot, or (b) the castle closes. Outside those, tickets are non-transferable. Reply to your confirmation email 48h+ ahead and we'll try.

Is it suitable for children?

Yes — kids 8+ tend to love the scale, the armoury, and the dungeons. The audio guide has a kids' mode. Under-7s are free at the gate. The 21-hectare walk is a lot for small legs; pace the day and use the courtyards as breaks.

Photography — any restrictions?

Permitted everywhere without flash or tripod. Drones prohibited without a museum permit. The best external shot is from the west bank of the Nogat river — the castle mirrored in water, especially at golden hour.

Is Malbork worth the day trip from Gdańsk?

Yes. The direct train is 30–50 minutes each way every half-hour, the castle absorbs 3–4 hours comfortably, and you are back in Gdańsk for dinner. For visitors interested in medieval history, brick Gothic architecture, or military history (Teutonic Order, Battle of Grunwald, WWII reconstruction), Malbork is the single most rewarding day trip from the Tricity.

How does Malbork compare to other European castles?

Malbork is the largest castle in the world by land area (~21 hectares) and the largest brick castle by any measure. It is closer in scale and atmosphere to a fortified monastic city than to a single keep — closer in feel to Carcassonne or Krak des Chevaliers than to a Loire chateau. The Knights' Refectory's palm-vaulted ceiling and the Grand Master's Palace are the architectural showpieces.

Will I understand the audio guide if I'm not interested in the Teutonic Order?

Yes — the audio guide balances political history with architecture, daily monastic life, the WWII reconstruction story, and the amber trade. Even visitors who arrive with no Teutonic Order background leave with a clear picture of why this single building mattered for two centuries of Baltic history.

Do I need to book in advance, or can I just turn up?

On weekdays outside July–August you can usually turn up and buy a ticket at the gate. On weekends in peak summer the on-the-day queue can run 30–45 minutes and the most popular morning slots sell out — pre-booking your time slot is strongly recommended. Our concierge service adds an English-speaking booking layer plus currency-of-arrival pricing.

Is Malbork Castle in Poland or Germany?

Malbork is in Poland, in the Pomeranian Voivodeship, about 60 km southeast of Gdańsk. Historically the castle was the seat of the Teutonic Order's German-speaking monastic state and was known as Marienburg until 1945; it has been Polish since the redrawing of borders after WWII. The Polish name is Zamek w Malborku.

Can children under a certain age visit free?

Yes — Muzeum Zamkowe offers free admission for the youngest children [VERIFY current age threshold on the official ticketing page; museums revise this annually]. A reduced family ticket bundles two adults with up to three children. ID may be requested for proof of age on reduced tickets.

Is the evening light show in English?

The 'Road of the Knights' evening sound-and-light show is narrated in Polish with English subtitles displayed on the projected walls. The visual storytelling — projection mapping onto medieval brickwork — works well even without language support, and the narration is paced so subtitle reading is comfortable.

What's the dress code at Malbork?

There is no formal dress code — Malbork is a museum, not an active religious site. Practical advice is layered, warm clothing year-round (the castle is unheated and stays cold inside even on hot summer days) plus closed-toe shoes with grip for the cobbled courtyards and worn medieval stone stairs.

Is Malbork suitable for a single visitor or a couple, or just families?

All of the above. The audio guide makes a self-paced solo or couple visit straightforward; the scale rewards slow exploration. Families add the costumed-knight photo-op tradition. Older visitors should note the volume of stairs and uneven cobbles — the accessible ground-level route is shorter but the castle is still 21 hectares to walk.

Why does the concierge ticket cost more than the price on bilety.zamek.malbork.pl?

We are an independent booking service for international visitors — our fee covers English-speaking concierge support, payment in your home currency without FX surprise, troubleshooting if your slot or the museum changes, and a single human point of contact. Customers who prefer to book direct in Polish or English are welcome to do so on bilety.zamek.malbork.pl; we do not resell or mark up the museum's own tickets, we add a service layer.