Five days pairs Innsbruck with its mountains and a baroque-city contrast. Days 1-3 cover Innsbruck's core (Old Town, Nordkette, Swarovski, Bergisel, Ambras). Day 4 is a Stubai Glacier day — year-round snow and high-Alpine scenery about 45 minutes out. Day 5 is a Salzburg day trip (about 2 hours by train) for the fortress, old town, and Mozart sights. The Innsbruck Card covers the city; book the Salzburg train ahead, and check the Stubai lift status before you go.
Five days hits the sweet spot for Innsbruck — three days for the major districts, plus two days for nearby destinations that show a different side of the country. The pace stays relaxed, you get more variety in your photo album, and the day trips break up the urban intensity nicely.
5-Day Total Budget at a Glance
Budget
$495
Per person, flights excl.
Mid-Range
$1,060
Per person, flights excl.
Luxury
$2,480
Per person, flights excl.
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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule
Old Town + Nordkette cable car to Hafelekar
Golden Roof - Hofburg - Hofkirche - Maria-Theresien-Straße - Nordkette cable car to Hafelekar (2,256m)Activities
- 09:00 Golden Roof (Goldenes Dachl) & Old Town 1h30
Start at Innsbruck's emblem — the gilded oriel balcony of 2,657 copper tiles built around 1500 for Emperor Maximilian I. Free to admire from the medieval Herzog-Friedrich-Straße; a small museum inside (~€5) covers Maximilian and the building. Wander the colorful arcaded Old Town around it.
Cost: Free (museum ~€5) TIP: The roof is best photographed in morning light. The Old Town is small and walkable — lose yourself in the arcaded lanes. Grab a coffee and strudel at Café Munding or Café Katzung nearby. The City Tower (Stadtturm) next door has a climbable viewpoint. - 10:30 Hofburg Imperial Palace + Hofkirche 1h30
The Hofburg (~€10), a Habsburg palace remodeled in baroque style by Empress Maria Theresa, with grand state rooms. Next door, the Hofkirche (Court Church) holds Emperor Maximilian I's elaborate empty tomb, ringed by 28 larger-than-life bronze statues — the 'Schwarze Mander.'
Cost: Hofburg ~€10, Hofkirche ~€8 TIP: The Hofkirche's bronze-statue cenotaph is the unmissable sight here — one of Europe's finest imperial monuments. Both are a short walk from the Golden Roof. The Tiroler Volkskunstmuseum (folk art) shares the Hofkirche complex if you have time. - 12:30 Lunch — Tyrolean tavern in the Old Town 1h30
Lunch on Tyrolean classics. Gasthof Weisses Rössl (serving since 1590) or Stiftskeller (in a monastery cellar with a courtyard) for Tiroler Gröstl, Käsespätzle, and schnitzel with a local beer.
Cost: €15-25 per person TIP: Tiroler Gröstl (potatoes, meat, fried egg) and Käsespätzle (cheese noodles) are the dishes to try. Stiftskeller's beer-garden courtyard is great in summer. Reserve in peak weeks. A hearty lunch sets you up for the mountain. - 14:30 Maria-Theresien-Straße + Triumphpforte 1h
Stroll the grand boulevard south of the Old Town — the Annasäule (St. Anne's Column), elegant facades with the Nordkette as a backdrop, and the Triumphpforte (Triumphal Arch) at the far end, built by Maria Theresa in 1765.
Cost: Free TIP: This is the city's main shopping and people-watching street, framed by mountains. The view back up the street toward the peaks is a classic photo. Good for a coffee stop before heading up the cable car. - 16:00 Nordkette cable car to Hafelekar (2,256m) 2h30
Ride from the city to the top of the Nordkette: the Hungerburgbahn funicular (a Zaha Hadid design) to Hungerburg, then the Seegrubenbahn to Seegrube (1,905m) and the Hafelekarbahn to Hafelekar (2,256m) for a sweeping view over the city and the Inn Valley.
Cost: ~€44 round trip (Innsbruck Card) TIP: Go on the clearest part of the day — clouds ruin the view. Check the last descent time so you don't get stranded. Bring a warm layer even in summer; it's cold and windy at 2,256m. Stop at the Seegrube terrace for Käsespätzle or a Kaiserschmarrn. - 20:00 Dinner — modern Alpine (Die Wilderin) 2h
Dinner at Die Wilderin, a buzzy Old Town spot with a farm-and-game menu that changes weekly — locally sourced meat, seasonal plates, and a strong cocktail and wine list. A modern counterpoint to the traditional taverns.
Cost: €25-40 per person TIP: Order the seasonal specials and game dishes from the day's board. It's compact and popular, so reserve, especially at weekends. The cocktails are part of the draw. For a view-with-dinner instead, Lichtblick on the Rathaus Galerien rooftop overlooks the Nordkette.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café Munding or hotel breakfast
Altstadt · €7-14
Strudel and a Melange coffee at Tyrol's oldest confectionery (since 1803).
Lunch
Weisses Rössl or Stiftskeller
Altstadt · €15-25
Tiroler Gröstl and Käsespätzle in a historic Old Town tavern.
Dinner
Die Wilderin
Altstadt · €25-40
Modern, seasonal farm-and-game cooking with cocktails.
Old Town sights are all on foot. For the Nordkette, the Hungerburgbahn funicular starts a short walk (or one bus stop) from the center; the Innsbruck Card covers the cable cars and city transport.
DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Swarovski Crystal Worlds + Hall in Tirol
Swarovski Crystal Worlds (Wattens) - Chambers of Wonder & gardens - Hall in Tirol medieval old townActivities
- 09:30 Swarovski Crystal Worlds (Wattens) 2h30
Take the shuttle (or drive ~25 min) to Wattens for Swarovski Kristallwelten — the grass-covered 'Giant' with a waterfall mouth leading into artist-designed 'Chambers of Wonder,' plus a crystal cloud installation, landscaped gardens, and a vast shop.
Cost: ~€23 (Innsbruck Card) TIP: The shuttle and entry are both included in the Innsbruck Card. Buy timed tickets ahead in peak season. It's more art-installation than museum — allow 2-3 hours for the chambers, gardens, and the big play tower if you have kids. The shop is enormous. - 13:00 Lunch in Wattens or Hall in Tirol 1h
Lunch at the Crystal Worlds' own restaurant (Daniels Kristallwelten) or continue to Hall in Tirol for a meal in its medieval old town.
Cost: €12-22 per person TIP: If you'd rather eat somewhere local, hold lunch until Hall in Tirol, which has cafés and Gasthäuser in its old town. The Crystal Worlds restaurant is convenient but pricier and touristy. - 14:30 Hall in Tirol — medieval salt town 2h
Just 10 km from Innsbruck, Hall in Tirol has one of the best-preserved medieval old towns in the Alps — a maze of stepped lanes and merchant houses built on the medieval salt trade, with the Burg Hasegg castle and its Mint Tower (Münzerturm).
Cost: Free (Mint Tower/museum ~€10) TIP: The old town is free to wander and refreshingly uncrowded compared to Innsbruck. The Mint Museum at Burg Hasegg tells the story of the first thaler coins. It's a 10-minute regional train ride back to Innsbruck. A quieter, atmospheric afternoon. - 18:00 Return to Innsbruck + evening in the Old Town 1h30
Head back to Innsbruck (10-min train from Hall, or the shuttle). Relax with an aperitif on Maria-Theresien-Straße or by the river as the peaks catch the evening light.
Cost: Transport included / drinks extra TIP: The riverbank by the colorful Mariahilf houses and the bridges gives the classic Innsbruck-with-mountains photo at golden hour. An easy evening before dinner. - 20:00 Dinner — traditional tavern or brewpub 2h
Dinner at Restaurant Ottoburg (a 14th-century building for refined Tyrolean and game dishes) or the lively Theresienbräu brewpub for house-brewed beer and hearty pub plates.
Cost: €18-35 per person TIP: Ottoburg suits a more atmospheric, slightly upscale evening (reserve ahead); Theresienbräu is relaxed, group-friendly, and good for the house beer. Both are central. Check rest days for Ottoburg.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café or hotel breakfast
Altstadt · €7-14
Coffee and pastries before the Wattens shuttle.
Lunch
Crystal Worlds or Hall in Tirol
Wattens / Hall · €12-22
A local Gasthaus lunch in Hall's medieval old town.
Dinner
Ottoburg or Theresienbräu
Altstadt / Centre · €18-35
Refined Tyrolean game, or house-brewed beer and pub fare.
Swarovski shuttle to Wattens (included in the Innsbruck Card); regional trains link Innsbruck, Wattens, and Hall in Tirol (Hall is ~10 min by train). The Old Town is on foot.
DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Bergisel ski jump + Ambras Castle
Bergisel ski jump (Zaha Hadid) - Ambras Castle (Renaissance collections) - Old Town farewellActivities
- 09:30 Bergisel ski jump (Zaha Hadid) 1h30
Innsbruck's Olympic ski jump, rebuilt by architect Zaha Hadid into a sweeping tower-and-ramp landmark. A funicular and lift carry you up the tower (~€11) to a viewing platform and the Café im Turm 50, looking straight down the jump and over the city and the Tyrolean Alps.
Cost: ~€11 (Innsbruck Card) TIP: The view down the jump and across the city is the highlight, and the architecture is striking in its own right. It hosts the famous Four Hills Tournament each January. A short bus or tram ride south of the center. The Tirol Panorama museum is right next door. - 11:30 Ambras Castle (Schloss Ambras) 2h
On a hill southeast of the center, the Renaissance residence of Archduke Ferdinand II, holding one of Europe's oldest museum collections — the Chamber of Art and Curiosities (Kunst- und Wunderkammer), an armoury, and a Habsburg portrait gallery, set in landscaped gardens.
Cost: ~€16 (Innsbruck Card) TIP: The Chamber of Art and Curiosities and the armoury are the standouts. The gardens are lovely on a fine day and free to roam. Reachable by bus or the Sightseer hop-on bus. Allow about 2 hours. Check seasonal opening — some rooms close in winter. - 14:00 Lunch + Old Town wander 2h
Return to the center for a relaxed lunch and a final wander — the riverbank, the arcades, the City Tower viewpoint, or any Old Town corners you missed.
Cost: €12-22 per person TIP: Gasthaus Goldenes Dachl by the namesake roof is convenient, or grab a Brettljause picnic from the Markthalle by the river. Climb the City Tower (Stadtturm) for a rooftop view if you haven't. Keep it relaxed. - 16:30 Café break — strudel & Kaiserschmarrn 1h
Round off with the Austrian café ritual — apple strudel at Strudel-Café Kröll or Café Munding, or a Kaiserschmarrn at Café Katzung with a Melange coffee.
Cost: €8-15 per person TIP: Kaiserschmarrn (caramelized shredded pancake with plum compote) is the must-try Austrian dessert. The cafés' terraces by the Golden Roof are prime people-watching. A gentle finish to the Old Town. - 19:30 Farewell Tyrolean dinner 2h
A final Tyrolean dinner — Käsespätzle, Knödel, and a local beer or a glass of Austrian wine — at a favorite Old Town tavern before departure.
Cost: €18-30 per person TIP: Order whatever Tyrolean classic you haven't tried yet — Käsespätzle, Knödel with Speck, or a schnitzel. A glass of Schnaps is the local way to end the meal. Reserve in peak weeks.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café or hotel breakfast
Altstadt · €7-14
An early coffee before Bergisel.
Lunch
Goldenes Dachl tavern or Markthalle picnic
Altstadt / Centre · €12-22
A central Tyrolean lunch or a Speck-and-cheese picnic by the river.
Dinner
Old Town Tyrolean tavern
Altstadt · €18-30
A farewell plate of Käsespätzle or schnitzel with local beer.
Bergisel and Ambras are short bus, tram, or Sightseer hop-on-bus rides south/southeast of the center; the Innsbruck Card covers transport and entry. The Old Town is on foot.
DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Stubai Glacier day trip
Stubai Glacier - high-Alpine cable cars - Top of Tyrol viewing platform - glacier walk or summer skiingActivities
- 08:30 Bus to the Stubai Glacier 1h30
Take the ski/hiker bus from Innsbruck up the Stubai Valley (about 45-60 min) to Austria's largest glacier ski area. In winter it's a full ski resort; in summer it offers glacier scenery, high trails, and year-round snow at altitude.
Cost: Bus + lift pass €40-60 (varies by season) TIP: Check the Stubai lift and weather status before setting out — high-Alpine conditions change fast. The bus often connects with the lift pass. Bring full warm and windproof gear plus sunglasses and SPF; the glare on snow is intense even in summer. - 10:30 Cable cars up + Top of Tyrol platform 2h
Ride the cable cars to the glacier's high stations, up to around 3,200m, and walk out to the 'Top of Tyrol' viewing platform for a panorama across the glaciated peaks of the Stubai and Ötztal Alps.
Cost: Included in lift pass TIP: The Top of Tyrol platform cantilevers over the drop for a dramatic view — go on a clear day. It's genuinely cold and thin-aired up high; pace yourself and layer up. The Schaufeljoch and surrounding stations have easy walkways even for non-skiers. - 13:00 Mountain-hut lunch on the glacier 1h30
Lunch at one of the glacier's mountain restaurants — Käsespätzle, Kaiserschmarrn, and hearty Alpine fare with a high-mountain view, including the high-altitude Jochdohle hut, among the highest restaurants in Austria.
Cost: €14-22 per person TIP: The huts do the classic Alpine menu — Käsespätzle and a Kaiserschmarrn hit the spot at altitude. Sit on a sun terrace if the weather's clear. Carry some cash in case a hut is card-shy. Hydrate well — altitude dehydrates you. - 15:00 Glacier walk, ski, or scenic descent 2h
Spend the afternoon as you like — easy glacier-edge walks and viewpoints in summer, skiing or boarding in season, or simply soaking up the scenery before the cable-car descent.
Cost: Included in lift pass TIP: Non-skiers can enjoy the marked walkways and viewpoints; skiers get reliable snow year-round. Watch the last-lift and last-bus times carefully so you're not stranded up the valley. Conditions can close lifts on short notice. - 18:30 Return to Innsbruck + dinner 2h
Bus back down the Stubai Valley to Innsbruck and a relaxed Tyrolean dinner in the Old Town after a big mountain day.
Cost: Bus included + €18-30 dinner TIP: You'll be tired and hungry — a hearty Gröstl or Käsespätzle and a local beer is the reward. Confirm the last bus down before the afternoon slips away. A quieter evening to recover.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Early café or hotel breakfast
Innsbruck · €7-14
Fuel up before the early bus to the glacier.
Lunch
Glacier mountain hut
Stubai Glacier · €14-22
Käsespätzle and Kaiserschmarrn at altitude.
Dinner
Old Town Tyrolean tavern
Innsbruck Altstadt · €18-30
A hearty Gröstl and a local beer after a mountain day.
Ski/hiker bus from Innsbruck up the Stubai Valley (~45-60 min each way), then the glacier cable cars. Check the lift pass + bus combination and the last-bus time.
DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Salzburg day trip
Train to Salzburg - Hohensalzburg Fortress - old town & Getreidegasse - Mozart sights - returnActivities
- 07:30 Railjet train to Salzburg 2h
Take an early ÖBB Railjet from Innsbruck Hauptbahnhof to Salzburg (about 2 hours), one of Austria's most beautiful cities, the baroque birthplace of Mozart and the setting of The Sound of Music.
Cost: €30-60 round trip (book ahead) TIP: Book Railjet Sparschiene fares ahead on the ÖBB site for the cheapest tickets. Catch an early train to make the most of the day. The Salzburg station is a 15-20 min walk or short bus to the old town. Consider the Salzburg Card for the city's sights. - 10:00 Hohensalzburg Fortress 2h
Ride the funicular up to Hohensalzburg, one of Europe's largest and best-preserved medieval fortresses, perched over the city with sweeping views to the Alps. Tour the staterooms, the marionette and fortress museums, and the ramparts.
Cost: ~€16 (funicular + entry) TIP: Go early to beat the crowds and get clear views. The funicular ticket usually includes entry. Allow time on the ramparts for the panorama over the old town and mountains. It's the single best vantage point in Salzburg. - 12:30 Old town, Getreidegasse & Mozart's birthplace 2h30
Explore the UNESCO old town — the narrow Getreidegasse with its wrought-iron guild signs, Mozart's Birthplace (Geburtshaus), the cathedral, and the Residenzplatz. Lunch on Salzburg specialties along the way.
Cost: Mozart's Birthplace ~€13 TIP: Getreidegasse is the iconic shopping lane; Mozart's yellow birthplace is its centerpiece. Try a Salzburger Nockerl (a sweet soufflé) for dessert. The old town is compact and walkable. Watch the time for your return train. - 15:30 Mirabell Gardens + riverside 1h30
Cross to the Mirabell Palace and its formal gardens (a Sound of Music filming location) for the classic view back to the fortress, then stroll the Salzach riverbank before heading to the station.
Cost: Free TIP: The Mirabell Gardens frame the fortress beautifully — the postcard Salzburg shot. It's free and a short walk from the old town. Leave 30-40 min to reach the station for your train. - 17:30 Return Railjet to Innsbruck + farewell dinner 3h
Take the ~2-hour Railjet back to Innsbruck for a final Tyrolean dinner and a relaxed last evening in the Old Town.
Cost: Train included + €18-30 dinner TIP: Confirm your return time before lunch — Railjets run roughly hourly but fill up. Back in Innsbruck, a last Käsespätzle and a glass of Tyrolean wine or Schnaps make a fitting send-off.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Quick station breakfast
Innsbruck Hbf · €4-8
Coffee and a pastry before the early train.
Lunch
Salzburg old town
Salzburg · €15-28
Salzburg specialties near Getreidegasse, with a Nockerl for dessert.
Dinner
Innsbruck Tyrolean tavern
Innsbruck Altstadt · €18-30
A farewell Tyrolean dinner back in Innsbruck.
ÖBB Railjet Innsbruck ↔ Salzburg, about 2 hours each way (€30-60 round trip, roughly hourly). Walking plus the fortress funicular within Salzburg.
DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Book Innsbruck Tours & Tickets
Packing Checklist
- ✓ Passport + check Schengen rules (visa-free 90 days for many passports) and ETIAS from 2026
- ✓ Summer (Jun-Sep): light layers plus a warm windproof jacket for the cable car — it's cold at 2,256m even on hot days
- ✓ Winter (Dec-Mar): full warm gear, snow-grip footwear for icy streets, and ski clothing/rentals if hitting the slopes
- ✓ Sturdy walking or hiking shoes — the Old Town is cobbled and the mountains demand proper footwear
- ✓ Sunglasses and SPF — Alpine sun is strong at altitude year-round, and on snow in winter
- ✓ Some cash (€30-50) for small Gasthäuser, market stalls, mountain huts, and the Christmas market
- ✓ Type C/F plug adapter for Austria's 230V outlets
- ✓ Consider the Innsbruck Card (from ~€59/24h) — it covers the cable cars, Swarovski, museums, and transport
- ✓ Glacier day: full warm/windproof gear, sunglasses, and strong SPF — it's cold and the snow-glare is intense even in summer
- ✓ Book the Salzburg Railjet ahead (Sparschiene fares) and consider the Salzburg Card for the fortress and museums
- ✓ Check the Stubai Glacier lift and weather status the day before — high-Alpine conditions change fast
- ✓ Carry some cash for mountain huts on the glacier, which can be card-shy
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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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