Ciclismo en el Danubio de varios días desde Viena
Vienna sits on EuroVelo 6 and the classic Donauradweg, making it the natural start for one-day hops to Bratislava or week-long rides toward Budapest. Tour operators sell guided and self-guided packages with hotels and luggage transfer from roughly €900–€1,400, while independent cyclists can stage the same corridor for a fraction of the cost using WienMobil Rad, regional trains and our GPX-ready guides. This page compares both paths so you can book confidently or plan DIY.
Independent comparison — booking links may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Prices are indicative (June 2026); confirm on the operator site.
Why start on the Danube in Vienna
The city already invests in riverside cycling: the Donaukanal promenade, Donauinsel and outbound links toward Klosterneuburg and Krems are signed, flat and tourist-friendly. That makes day one low-stress even if you have just arrived by plane or train.
For multi-day trips you can sleep in Vienna one night, collect a rental or tuned bike, then roll west along the north bank or cross to the classic south-bank Donauradweg toward Slovakia and Hungary.
Bratislava vs Budapest — which trip fits you
Vienna to Bratislava is the most popular international day ride (~60–70 km): flat, scenic embankments, border formalities are simple for EU citizens, and you can return by train. Ideal for visitors with only one or two cycling days.
Vienna to Budapest is a multi-day undertaking (roughly 330–380 km depending on variants): best for cyclists comfortable with 60–80 km daily, hotel planning and occasional detours for ferries or wind.
Self-guided vs organised packages
Self-guided operators (often marketed as “Danube cycling holidays”) provide GPX tracks, hotel vouchers and luggage shuttles between stages. You still pedal independently but pay for logistics — typical week-long packages land between €900 and €1,400 per person in shoulder season.
Fully guided tours add a leader, group pace and included meals; expect higher prices and fixed departure dates. DIY travellers use our stage tables, book 3-star hotels in river towns (Krems, Melk, Linz, Győr…) and carry minimal panniers.
Gear, trains and season
May–September offers the longest days; July–August can be hot on exposed levees — start early and carry extra water. Spring and autumn are quieter but watch for headwinds after cold fronts.
ÖBB carries bikes on many regional services if you need to skip a rainy day or jump from Bratislava back to Vienna. Pack lights, a spare tube and a paper map backup because mobile signal drops in some Wachau gorges.
Sample stage plan (Vienna → Budapest, self-guided)
Distances are approximate along the signed Donauradweg / EuroVelo 6; adjust for ferries, rest days and your fitness.
| Day | Stage | Distance | Highlight |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Vienna → Klosterneuburg / Tulln | 35–45 km | Donauinsel exit, Roman ruins at Klosterneuburg |
| 2 | Tulln → Krems | 40–50 km | Wachau approach, apricot orchards |
| 3 | Krems → Melk | 45–55 km | UNESCO Wachau vineyards |
| 4 | Melk → Linz | 55–65 km | Abbey views, broader valley |
| 5 | Linz → Passau / Enns | 50–70 km | Inn confluence, Bavarian border |
| 6+ | Passau → Bratislava → Győr → Budapest | varies | Slovak & Hungarian floodplains, urban finish |
Guided & self-guided packages vs DIY
Package rows reflect typical market offers; DIY assumes you book hotels and use ÖBB for bad-weather skips.
| Option | Duration | Distance | From | Typically includes | Book / plan |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DIY — our guides + hotels | Flexible | 60–380 km | €40–80/day | Your choice of bike, hotels, no luggage shuttle | Plan with our guides |
| Self-guided Danube package (typical) | 7–8 days | Vienna → Budapest | €940+ | Hotels, luggage transfer, GPX, phone support | Check availability |
| Guided Vienna → Bratislava day tour | 1 day | ~70 km | €49+ | Guide, bike, often train return | Check availability |
| City bike tour (Vienna only) | 3 h | 15–20 km | €35+ | Highlights loop, no Danube camping | Check availability |
Preguntas frecuentes
- How long does Vienna to Budapest take by bike?
- Most cyclists allow 6–8 riding days (60–70 km per day) plus optional rest days in the Wachau. Strong riders can compress it; leisure riders often add a wine-day stop.
- Can I cycle to Bratislava and take the train back?
- Yes. ÖBB and Slovak Railways run frequent connections; buy a bike ticket in advance on busy summer weekends.
- Is the Danube path paved?
- Austria’s Donauradweg is largely asphalt or compact gravel. Sections in Slovakia and Hungary may include narrower levee paths — hybrid tyres are enough for most tourists.
- Do I need a visa for Slovakia or Hungary from Vienna?
- EU/EEA citizens do not need visas for short cycling trips. Other passports should check Schengen stay limits and ID requirements.
