Festung Hohensalzburg, the medieval fortress crowning the Festungsberg at 506 metres above sea level (~150 metres above Salzburg's old town), Austria — built 1077 by Archbishop Gebhard and never taken by force in over 900 years.

Hohensalzburg Fortress Tickets — Child 6–14 — All-Inclusive + Funicular

Reduced rate · photo ID required at entry

Reserve child all-inclusive

The child 6–14 — all-inclusive + funicular option at Hohensalzburg Fortress Tickets — reduced rate · photo id required at entry. Includes same access as adult all-inclusive + funicular, plus 3 other concierge inclusions. Reserve directly — we secure the official slot the moment you confirm.

What's included

Every booking includes the elements below — handled by our concierge team before your visit and confirmed at the door.

• Same access as adult All-Inclusive + Funicular • Funicular round-trip + Magic Theatre + all museums • Children under 6: free at the gate • Skip-the-line priority entry

Who this is for

This option is designed for reduced rate · photo id required at entry. If you're booking for a different group composition, see the other tiers in our booking widget — each is matched to a specific visitor profile.

On the day

Festung Hohensalzburg is a medieval fortress crowning the Festungsberg, perched 506 metres above sea level — roughly 150 metres above the old town of Salzburg below — in central Austria. Begun in 1077 by the Salzburg prince-archbishop Gebhard von Helfenstein during the Investiture Controversy and expanded for the next five centuries, it is the largest fully-preserved medieval castle in Central Europe and was never taken by force in over 900 years of standing.

Frequently asked

What's included in the skip-the-line ticket?
The standard ticket includes priority entry to Festung Hohensalzburg plus a round-trip on the Festungsbahn funicular (up and down). Inside the fortress you have access to the courtyards, ramparts, panoramic walks, and the main exhibition rooms. The All-Inclusive tier adds the Princes' Chambers (Fürstenzimmer), the Magic Theatre with its 16th-century mechanical organ, and the Marionette Museum.
Is the funicular really necessary, or can I walk?
You can walk — the path up from the old town takes 15–20 minutes and is steep but well-maintained. Most visitors take the funicular up and walk down to save the climb but enjoy the descent. The funicular ride itself takes about a minute and is part of the experience; it has been in continuous operation since 1892, with electric traction since 1960.
How is the All-Inclusive different from the basic ticket?
Basic tickets cover the fortress courtyards, ramparts, panoramic terraces and main exhibits. All-Inclusive adds three interior attractions: the Princes' Chambers (the late-Gothic state rooms with original wooden ceilings and tile stoves), the Magic Theatre (a 16th-century mechanical organ called the Salzburg Bull that still plays), and the Marionette Museum. Worth the upgrade if you have 2.5+ hours and care about medieval interiors.
When is the best time to visit to avoid the queues?
First hour after opening (09:00 in summer, 09:30 in winter) or the late afternoon — after 15:00 the morning crowd has thinned. The pinch point is the funicular between 10:00 and 12:00 in July and August, when waits run 30–45 minutes for non-priority tickets. Skip-the-line bypasses that queue regardless of time.