Seven days does the Salzkammergut properly with Hallstatt as your base. Days 1-3 cover the village, the Salzberg salt mountain, a lake boat, and the Dachstein (cable car, ice caves, 5fingers). Day 4 is the Lake District (Bad Ischl, the Gosausee). Day 5 is a Salzburg day. Day 6 visits St. Wolfgang on the Wolfgangsee and the Schafberg cogwheel railway. Day 7 is a slow final village morning and departure. A car makes the touring days far easier; check the salt-mine reopening status (closed for rebuilding until ~30 June 2026) before planning around it.
A full week is enough to actually understand Hallstatt. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.
7-Day Total Budget at a Glance
Budget
$685
Per person, flights excl.
Mid-Range
$1,470
Per person, flights excl.
Luxury
$2,600
Per person, flights excl.
Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary
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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule
The lakeside village — early light, lanes & a lake boat
Marktplatz view - village lanes - Beinhaus (bone house) - lakeshore promenade - lake boat - quiet eveningActivities
- 07:30 Sunrise at the Marktplatz lakeshore view 1h
Start before the day-trippers arrive. Walk the northern lakeshore promenade for the iconic view — pastel houses, the church spire, and the Dachstein cliffs mirrored in the lake. It's free, public, and at its calmest and most beautiful at first light.
Cost: Free TIP: The famous photo angle is from the northern end of the village looking south. This is a residential area — keep to the public path and don't photograph into homes. Morning light is best, and at this hour you may have it almost to yourself. - 09:00 Village lanes + Marktplatz + parish church 1h30
Wander the narrow lanes wedged between lake and cliff, the small central Marktplatz, and up to the Catholic parish church with its lakeside graveyard. The whole village is car-free and crossable in 20 minutes.
Cost: Free TIP: Go now, before the 10am bus crowds. The steep stone steps can be slippery when wet — wear good shoes. Stop for a coffee and a fresh roll at Café Maislinger or pastries at the historic Café Derbl. - 11:00 Beinhaus (Bone House) at St. Michael's chapel 45min
Visit the small ossuary by the parish church, where hundreds of skulls — many hand-painted with names and floral motifs — are kept, a custom born of the village's lack of cemetery space. A unique, poignant piece of Hallstatt history (small entry fee).
Cost: ~€2-3 TIP: Treat it respectfully as a place of the dead. It's a short visit but a genuinely distinctive one. Combine it with the church and graveyard right beside it. - 13:00 Lunch — lakeside fish (Bräugasthof or Gasthof Simony) 1h30
Lunch on fresh Lake Hallstatt fish — Reinanke whitefish or Saibling char — at a lakeside inn. Bräugasthof's chestnut-tree garden over the water (family-run since 1504) or Gasthof Simony's terrace are the classic settings.
Cost: €18-32 per person TIP: Bräugasthof is cash-preferred, so bring euros. Ask for a table over the water. Midday is the busiest stretch, so reserve ahead in summer or be ready for a short wait for a view seat. - 15:00 Lake Hallstatt boat ride 1h30
Take to the water for the village-and-mountains view from the lake — arguably the best angle of all. Hop a scheduled excursion boat or rent a small electric boat to potter around (the lake restricts combustion engines to stay clean and quiet).
Cost: €10-20 (excursion) / electric boat rental varies TIP: The view back at the stacked houses from the water is the photo many people miss. A calm, crowd-free perspective during the busiest part of the day. Bring a layer — it's cooler out on the lake. - 18:30 Quiet evening village + dinner 2h30
Once the day-trip buses leave by late afternoon, the village transforms — empty lanes, soft light, a different place entirely. Stroll the lakeshore again, then dinner at Seewirt Zauner on the Marktplatz or Restaurant Im Kainz.
Cost: €18-32 per person TIP: This evening calm is the whole reason to stay overnight rather than day-trip. Kitchens often stop by 9pm, so don't dine too late. A glass of Grüner Veltliner or a local schnapps caps it off.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café Maislinger
Seestraße · €3-8
Fresh rolls, cake, and coffee for an early lakeside breakfast before the crowds.
Lunch
Bräugasthof or Gasthof Simony
Lakeside · €18-32
Lake Hallstatt fish (Reinanke or Saibling) at a waterside table.
Dinner
Seewirt Zauner or Restaurant Im Kainz
Marktplatz / village · €18-32
Schnitzel, Dachstein game, or roast pork in the quiet evening village.
Everything today is on foot — the village is car-free and tiny. The lake boat departs from the village pier. Time outdoor sights for before 10am and after 6pm to dodge the day-tripper crush.
DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Salzberg — the salt mountain, high valley & Skywalk view
Salzberg funicular - salt-mine high valley - Skywalk World Heritage View - Rudolfsturm view - lakeshore eveningActivities
- 09:00 Up the Salzberg — salt mine, high valley & Skywalk 3h30
Ride the funicular up to the Salzberg for the Salzwelten salt mine — the world's oldest, with ~7,000 years of mining history, a guided underground tour with miners' slides, and the Skywalk 'World Heritage View' platform jutting over the village.
Cost: ~€49 (cable car + mine, when reopened) TIP: IMPORTANT: the salt mine, funicular, and Skywalk are closed for reconstruction until around 30 June 2026. During the closure, the operator runs a daily shuttle to the nearby Altaussee salt mine (admission included) — book that instead, or substitute the hike/viewpoints below. Always check current status before planning your day around it. - 12:30 Lunch with a view — Rudolfsturm 1h30
Lunch at the Rudolfsturm restaurant in the historic tower above the village, with a panoramic terrace looking straight down over Hallstatt and the lake — a meal that comes with one of the best vistas in the area.
Cost: €16-30 per person TIP: Access is normally via the Salzberg funicular or a roughly one-hour uphill hike; with the funicular closed for the salt-mine works (until ~30 June 2026), confirm how to reach it first. A coffee-and-cake terrace stop also works if you're not hungry. - 14:30 Salzberg high-valley walk (or the descent hike) 2h
Take the gentle trails around the salt-mining high valley — archaeological viewpoints, the prehistoric mining landscape, and big views over the lake — or walk the scenic path back down to the village (about an hour).
Cost: Free TIP: Good walking shoes for the descent. This is a fine substitute for the underground tour while the mine is closed. Carry water and a layer — it's exposed and cooler up high. The downhill path gives changing village views. - 18:00 Lakeshore evening + dinner 2h30
Back in the village for the calm evening hours. Walk the lakeshore as the light softens and the buses clear, then dinner at one of the lakeside or village inns — game or fish are the local picks.
Cost: €18-32 per person TIP: The post-5pm emptiness is the village at its best. Reserve a lakeside table in summer. Try a Kaiserschmarrn or Apfelstrudel for dessert, with an Austrian coffee.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café Maislinger or hotel
Village · €3-8
An early breakfast before heading up the Salzberg.
Lunch
Rudolfsturm (view terrace)
Salzberg · €16-30
Austrian mains or coffee-and-cake with a panoramic lake view.
Dinner
Bräugasthof or Seewirt Zauner
Lakeside / Marktplatz · €18-32
Lake fish or Dachstein game in the quiet evening village.
The Salzberg is reached by funicular from the village (closed for reconstruction until ~30 June 2026 — use the Altaussee mine shuttle or hike instead). On foot in the village otherwise.
DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Dachstein — cable car, ice caves & 5fingers
Cross to Obertraun - Krippenstein cable car - Dachstein Ice Caves - 5fingers platform - return to HallstattActivities
- 09:00 Cross to Obertraun + Krippenstein cable car 1h30
Head across to Obertraun (a short ferry, bus, or drive) and ride the Dachstein Krippenstein cable car high above the valley — the gateway to the area's mountain attractions and sweeping alpine views.
Cost: ~€38-42 cable car round trip TIP: Check the mountain webcam or forecast first — low cloud can wipe out the views entirely, so save this day for clear weather if you can. Bring a warm layer; it's cold up top even in summer. Combination tickets cover the caves. - 10:30 Dachstein Ice Caves (Rieseneishöhle) 1h30
Tour the Dachstein Ice Caves on a guided walk through glacier-ice formations and frozen chambers deep in the mountain — a striking, otherworldly experience even at the height of summer.
Cost: ~€30-40 (or combination ticket) TIP: It's genuinely cold inside (around freezing) — wear a jacket and proper shoes. There's some walking and steps. The nearby Mammoth Cave is an optional add-on if you have time and energy. - 12:30 5fingers viewing platform 1h30
Walk out onto the 5fingers, a metal viewing platform cantilevered over a sheer cliff edge with vast views across the Salzkammergut and down toward Lake Hallstatt — the area's signature thrill-photo spot.
Cost: Included with cable car TIP: Not for the faint of heart — it juts out over a big drop. Go on a clear day for the full effect. Combine with the short panoramic trails up here before heading back down. - 14:30 Lunch in Obertraun + return 2h
Lunch on the Dachstein side — Gasthaus Koppenrast in Obertraun is a calmer, cheaper option among the pines — then cross back to Hallstatt for the late afternoon.
Cost: €14-26 per person TIP: Obertraun is quieter and gentler on the wallet than the Hallstatt waterfront. Confirm ferry/bus times for the return so you're not stranded. Back in Hallstatt, the village quiets down again by evening. - 17:30 Final quiet evening in Hallstatt 2h30
A last unhurried evening — the lakeshore in soft light, a final dinner at a lakeside inn, and a slow wander through the empty lanes once the day-trippers have gone.
Cost: €18-32 per person TIP: Savor the post-bus calm. A good night to splurge on lake fish at Bräugasthof. Kitchens close by around 9pm, so plan dinner accordingly.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café or hotel breakfast
Village · €3-8
A quick breakfast before crossing to the Dachstein.
Lunch
Gasthaus Koppenrast
Obertraun · €14-26
Hearty Austrian mains in a calm, pine-set Obertraun setting.
Dinner
Bräugasthof or Gasthof Simony
Lakeside · €18-32
A farewell lake-fish dinner in the quiet evening village.
Cross to Obertraun by ferry, bus, or car for the Dachstein Krippenstein cable car, ice caves, and 5fingers. Confirm return ferry/bus times. On foot within the village.
DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Salzkammergut Lake District — Bad Ischl & the Gosausee
Bad Ischl - Kaiservilla - Konditorei Zauner - Gosausee alpine lake - Dachstein-glacier viewActivities
- 09:00 Bad Ischl — the imperial spa town 2h30
Drive or ride 30-40 minutes to Bad Ischl, the Habsburg emperors' summer spa town. Stroll the elegant center and visit the Kaiservilla, Emperor Franz Joseph's summer residence set in a large park.
Cost: Kaiservilla ~€18-22 TIP: Bad Ischl is a relaxed, genteel contrast to crowded Hallstatt, with more shops, cafés, and room to breathe. The Kaiservilla park is a pleasant walk even if you skip the interior tour. A good morning before the Gosausee. - 11:30 Konditorei Zauner — imperial coffee & cake 1h
Coffee and cake at Konditorei Zauner, an imperial-era pastry house serving Bad Ischl since 1832, famous for the Zaunerstollen chocolate-and-nut log and classic Austrian cakes in a grand old setting.
Cost: €6-15 per person TIP: Order a Zaunerstollen to take home and a coffee with cake in the historic room. This is the Salzkammergut's most storied café — a fitting Austrian coffee-house moment. Cards accepted. - 13:30 Drive to the Gosausee + lunch 2h
Head to the Vorderer Gosausee, a postcard alpine lake about an hour away, ringed by mountains with the Dachstein glacier reflected in the water. Lunch at the lakeside inn before the walk.
Cost: €14-26 per person TIP: The Gosausee is one of the region's most beautiful lakes and far quieter than Hallstatt. A car makes it easy; public transport is slower. Bring layers — it's higher and cooler. - 15:30 Gosausee lakeside walk 1h30
Walk the easy, mostly flat loop around the Vorderer Gosausee (about 1-1.5 hours) for the classic Dachstein-glacier-over-the-lake views — a serene, photogenic alpine stroll.
Cost: Free TIP: The loop is family-friendly and well marked. A cable car (Gosaukammbahn) climbs nearby if you want higher views. Save this for clear weather to see the glacier reflected in the lake. - 18:30 Return to Hallstatt + evening 2h30
Drive back to Hallstatt (about an hour) for a quiet evening in the village once the day-trippers have left — a lakeshore walk and a relaxed dinner.
Cost: €18-32 per person TIP: Time your return for the calm evening hours. Reserve a lakeside table in summer. A gentle close to a Lake District day.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hallstatt café breakfast
Village · €3-8
An early breakfast before driving to Bad Ischl.
Lunch
Gosausee lakeside inn
Gosau · €14-26
A lakeside Austrian lunch with the Dachstein-glacier view.
Dinner
Seewirt Zauner or Bräugasthof
Hallstatt · €18-32
Game or lake fish in the quiet evening village.
Bad Ischl is 30-40 min from Hallstatt; the Gosausee about an hour. A car makes linking the Lake District easiest; regional buses/trains work but are slower. On foot within each town.
DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Salzburg day trip — Mozart, fortress & Old Town
Travel to Salzburg - Hohensalzburg fortress - Mozart sights - Mirabell Gardens - Sound of Music - returnActivities
- 08:30 Travel to Salzburg 1h30
Head to Salzburg (about 1.5 hours by car, or train/bus with a change), the elegant baroque city on the Salzach. Leave early to make the most of the day in the city.
Cost: Car or train/bus fare varies TIP: A car is the most flexible; public transport involves a change and takes longer (often via Bad Ischl). Many travelers based in Salzburg do this in reverse — Hallstatt as the day trip from the city. - 10:00 Hohensalzburg Fortress + Old Town 3h
Ride the funicular up to Hohensalzburg, one of Europe's largest intact medieval fortresses, for city and alpine views, then explore the UNESCO Old Town — Getreidegasse, Mozart's birthplace, and the cathedral.
Cost: Fortress ~€16-17 TIP: Buy a fortress ticket that includes the funicular. The Old Town is compact and walkable. Mozart's Birthplace on Getreidegasse is the classic stop for music fans. - 13:30 Lunch + Mirabell Gardens 2h
Lunch in the Old Town, then cross the river to the Mirabell Palace gardens — the manicured baroque gardens famous from The Sound of Music's 'Do-Re-Mi' sequence.
Cost: €15-28 per person TIP: Salzburg has a far wider food scene than Hallstatt — a good chance for variety. The Mirabell Gardens are free and very photogenic. The Sound of Music tour sites are mostly in and around the city. - 16:00 Salzburg cafés + free time 1h30
Round out the city with a Salzburg coffee house (a Mozartkugel chocolate, an Austrian cake), riverside walks, and any sights you've saved — Mozart's Residence, the DomQuartier, or shopping on Getreidegasse.
Cost: €5-15 TIP: Salzburg's coffee-house culture rivals Vienna's. Pick up Mozartkugel chocolates as a classic souvenir. Leave time for the return journey to Hallstatt. - 18:00 Return to Hallstatt 2h
Travel back to Hallstatt (about 1.5 hours) for a final quiet evening in the village, or stay on in Salzburg if your trip continues from there.
Cost: Car or train/bus fare varies TIP: Confirm the last convenient train/bus if not driving — connections thin out in the evening. Back in Hallstatt, a last lakeshore walk in the calm evening light is the perfect send-off.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hallstatt café breakfast
Village · €3-8
A quick breakfast before the trip to Salzburg.
Lunch
Salzburg Old Town restaurant
Salzburg · €15-28
Austrian classics with far more choice than the village.
Dinner
Hallstatt lakeside inn
Hallstatt · €18-32
A final quiet-evening dinner back in the village.
Salzburg is about 1.5 hours from Hallstatt by car, or train/bus with a change (longer). On foot within Salzburg's compact Old Town; a funicular climbs to the fortress.
DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
St. Wolfgang & the Schafberg cogwheel railway
Drive to St. Wolfgang - Wolfgangsee - Schafberg cogwheel railway - lake village - returnActivities
- 08:30 Drive to St. Wolfgang on the Wolfgangsee 1h30
Head to St. Wolfgang (about an hour), a pretty lakeside village on the Wolfgangsee, known for its pilgrimage church, the famous White Horse Inn (Weißes Rössl), and the cogwheel railway up the Schafberg.
Cost: Car or bus/boat fare varies TIP: St. Wolfgang is another scenic Salzkammergut lake town, less overwhelmed than Hallstatt. You can also reach it by a combination of bus and lake boat for a more scenic approach. Aim to catch a morning Schafberg train. - 10:00 Schafberg cogwheel railway 3h
Ride the historic Schafbergbahn cogwheel railway up the Schafberg (1,783m) for a panoramic summit view over the Wolfgangsee, the Mondsee, and the surrounding Salzkammergut lakes and peaks.
Cost: ~€40-45 round trip TIP: Book ahead in summer — the cog railway is popular and timed. Bring a warm layer for the summit. Check the forecast; the view is the whole point, so save it for a clear day. Round-trip rides include time at the top. - 13:30 Lunch + St. Wolfgang village 2h
Lunch in St. Wolfgang, then explore the lakeside village — the pilgrimage church with its famous Gothic altar, the lake promenade, and the historic White Horse Inn.
Cost: €15-28 per person TIP: The Pfarrkirche (pilgrimage church) and its Michael Pacher altar are the cultural highlight. A relaxed lakeside lunch suits the pace. The village is walkable and less crowded than Hallstatt. - 16:00 Wolfgangsee lakeside time 1h30
Spend the afternoon by the Wolfgangsee — a lake boat, a swim in summer (the Salzkammergut lakes are warmer and more swimmable than deep, cold Hallstatt), or a quiet lakeside coffee.
Cost: Boat / café extra TIP: Unlike Lake Hallstatt, the Wolfgangsee is a popular summer swimming lake. A lake-boat crossing to St. Gilgen is a scenic option. A gentle, restful afternoon in the Lake District. - 18:00 Return to Hallstatt + evening 2h30
Drive back to Hallstatt (about an hour) for a calm final-stretch evening — the lakeshore in the quiet hours and a relaxed village dinner.
Cost: €18-32 per person TIP: Time the return for the post-bus calm. A good evening for a final lake-fish dinner. The village is at its best once the day-trippers have gone.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hallstatt café breakfast
Village · €3-8
An early breakfast before driving to St. Wolfgang.
Lunch
St. Wolfgang lakeside restaurant
St. Wolfgang · €15-28
A lakeside lunch by the Wolfgangsee.
Dinner
Bräugasthof or Gasthof Simony
Hallstatt · €18-32
Lake fish in the quiet evening village.
St. Wolfgang is about an hour from Hallstatt by car, or via bus and lake boat. The Schafbergbahn cogwheel railway climbs from St. Wolfgang (book ahead in summer).
DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Slow Hallstatt morning + departure
Sunrise lakeshore - a missed sight or lake boat - last coffee & cake - departure via SalzburgActivities
- 07:30 Final sunrise on the lakeshore 1h
One last dawn walk along the empty lakeshore for the village-and-mountains view in soft morning light — the scene that draws everyone here, at its calmest before the day's first buses.
Cost: Free TIP: Departure days are when the early-morning village pays off most. Keep to the public path in the residential lanes. A coffee from Café Maislinger makes it perfect. - 09:00 A missed sight or a last lake boat 1h30
Catch anything you've saved — a final lake boat for the view from the water, a return to the Beinhaus, or simply a slow coffee and cake at Café Derbl before you leave.
Cost: €5-20 TIP: Keep it light on a departure day. The lake boat is a lovely final image of the village. Café Derbl's homemade ice cream (in summer) is a nice send-off. - 11:00 Last lunch + souvenirs 1h30
A final lakeside lunch and any last souvenirs — Hallstatt is famous for its salt, so a box of the local salt or a small ceramic makes a fitting keepsake before you head out.
Cost: €15-28 per person TIP: Local salt products are the signature Hallstatt souvenir. Keep some cash for small shops. A relaxed last meal before the journey out. - 13:00 Depart via the ferry, train, or Salzburg 2h30+
Leave the village — by the lake ferry to the train station and the regional line (via Attnang-Puchheim), or by car/transfer toward Salzburg (1.5h) for an onward flight.
Cost: Ferry ~€4 + train/transfer varies TIP: The Hallstatt station is across the lake, reached by the little ferry that meets the trains. Check ferry-and-train timings carefully — they're coordinated but not frequent. Salzburg (SZG) or Vienna are the usual flight gateways.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café Maislinger or Café Derbl
Village · €3-8
A final coffee, cake, or summer ice cream.
Lunch
Hallstatt lakeside inn
Hallstatt · €15-28
A last lakeside meal before departure.
Dinner
En route / Salzburg
Salzburg / travel · €10-25
A meal on the way out or in Salzburg if continuing.
Depart via the lake ferry (~€4) to the train station and the regional line (via Attnang-Puchheim), or by car/transfer to Salzburg (~1.5h). Confirm ferry-and-train timings.
DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
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Packing Checklist
- ✓ Passport + check Schengen rules (visa-free 90 days for many passports) and ETIAS from 2026
- ✓ Layers year-round — the lake and mountains are cool and changeable even in summer
- ✓ A warm jacket for the Dachstein cable car and ice caves (near-freezing inside, even in July)
- ✓ Light waterproof jacket — rain and fog are common in this alpine-lake climate
- ✓ Sturdy walking shoes for steep village steps, lakeshore paths, and mountain trails
- ✓ Some cash in euros (€30-50) — Bräugasthof and several small spots are cash-only
- ✓ Type C/F plug adapter for Austria's 230V outlets
- ✓ Book accommodation months ahead for summer; check the Salzwelten salt-mine reopening status (closed for rebuilding until ~30 June 2026)
- ✓ A car makes the Lake District (Bad Ischl, Gosausee) and the Salzburg day far easier than regional buses
- ✓ Leave room for souvenirs — Bad Ischl's Zaunerstollen and Salzburg's Mozartkugel travel well
- ✓ Pack for changeable mountain weather across multiple lakes — layers and a waterproof
- ✓ Confirm last train/bus times for the Salzburg day if you're not driving
- ✓ St. Wolfgang day: book the Schafberg cogwheel railway ahead in summer, and bring a warm summit layer
- ✓ If you want to swim, the Wolfgangsee is warmer and more swimmable than deep, cold Lake Hallstatt
- ✓ Departure day: confirm the coordinated ferry-and-train times — they're not frequent
- ✓ Local Hallstatt salt makes a fitting, easy-to-pack souvenir
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Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.
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