Compare Prices from All US Cities
| From | Airport | Est. Price | Flight Time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
BESTBoston | BOS | $345 | ~9h | View → |
New York | LGA | $360 | ~10h | View → |
New York | JFK | $360 | ~10h | View → |
Newark | EWR | $361 | ~10h | View → |
Philadelphia | PHL | $368 | ~10h | View → |
Baltimore | BWI | $375 | ~10h | View → |
Washington D.C. | DCA | $378 | ~10h | View → |
Detroit | DTW | $383 | ~10h | View → |
Chicago | ORD | $397 | ~10h | View → |
Minneapolis | MSP | $399 | ~10h | View → |
Charlotte | CLT | $405 | ~11h | View → |
St. Louis | STL | $419 | ~11h | View → |
Nashville | BNA | $419 | ~11h | View → |
Atlanta | ATL | $423 | ~11h | View → |
San Juan | SJU | $426 | ~11h | View → |
Orlando | MCO | $436 | ~11h | View → |
Fort Lauderdale | FLL | $443 | ~12h | View → |
Tampa | TPA | $443 | ~12h | View → |
Miami | MIA | $444 | ~12h | View → |
Seattle | SEA | $448 | ~12h | View → |
Denver | DEN | $451 | ~12h | View → |
Portland | PDX | $458 | ~12h | View → |
Salt Lake City | SLC | $463 | ~12h | View → |
Dallas | DFW | $465 | ~12h | View → |
Houston | IAH | $473 | ~12h | View → |
Austin | AUS | $479 | ~12h | View → |
Las Vegas | LAS | $494 | ~13h | View → |
San Francisco | SFO | $500 | ~13h | View → |
Phoenix | PHX | $501 | ~13h | View → |
Los Angeles | LAX | $512 | ~13h | View → |
San Diego | SAN | $516 | ~13h | View → |
About Krakow
Krakow is the deal that Western Europe travelers keep sleeping on. While Paris and Rome charge €200/night for mediocre hotels, Krakow delivers a UNESCO-listed medieval core, world-class museums, and genuinely excellent food for a fraction of the price — think $60-80/night for a solid mid-range hotel steps from the Main Market Square. The city survived WWII largely intact, which means you're walking through real 14th-century architecture, not reconstructions. Wawel Castle sits above the Vistula River, the Jewish quarter of Kazimierz is one of Europe's most compelling neighborhoods, and the salt mine at Wieliczka is a legitimate must-see 30 minutes from the city center.
For Americans, Krakow punches far above its weight culturally. Auschwitz-Birkenau is an hour away by bus and belongs on any serious traveler's itinerary — not as dark tourism but as necessary history. The Oskar Schindler Factory Museum is one of the best WWII museums anywhere, period. The Main Market Square (Rynek Główny) is the largest medieval square in Europe and remains genuinely alive, not a tourist-only bubble — locals drink coffee there on Sunday mornings just like they have for centuries.
The food scene has quietly caught up with the city's reputation. Krakow's restaurant scene in 2025-2026 has moved well past pierogi-and-done. You'll find serious Polish farm-to-table spots, excellent Georgian wine bars, Vietnamese restaurants run by Poland's substantial immigrant community, and craft beer taprooms in converted Jewish-quarter courtyards. Budget-conscious travelers can eat extremely well at milk bars (Bar Mleczny) — subsidized communist-era cafeterias that serve hearty Polish comfort food for $3-6 a plate.
Flight-wise, Krakow doesn't have US nonstops, so you're connecting through European hubs. The sweet spot for pricing is flying into Warsaw on LOT Polish Airlines from select US cities and taking the 2.5-hour train, or connecting via Frankfurt, Amsterdam, or Vienna. Prices from the East Coast regularly dip below $600 roundtrip if you set alerts right. The best months to visit are May, June, and September — warm enough for outdoor dining, uncrowded enough that the Main Square still feels authentic rather than overwhelmed.
Best Time to Fly to Krakow
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Track Krakow flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
Krakow John Paul II Airport (KRK) is 11km west of the city center. Option 1: Bus 208 or 252 (depending on terminal) runs directly to the Main Railway Station (Dworzec Główny) for 6 PLN (~$1.50) and takes 35-40 minutes — buy tickets from the machine at the stop, not on board. Option 2: The Krakow Airport Train (PKP) connects the airport to Kraków Główny station in 17 minutes for 10 PLN (~$2.50), runs every 30 minutes from roughly 5am-midnight, and is the fastest option. Option 3: Uber or Bolt runs about 50-70 PLN ($12-18) to the Old Town, 20-25 minutes in normal traffic — always use the app rather than unmarked cabs outside arrivals.
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
The UNESCO-listed medieval core centered on Rynek Główny, the massive Main Market Square. Hotels here command premium prices — expect $90-200/night — but you walk to everything including Wawel Castle, St. Mary's Basilica, and the best restaurants. Palac Bonerowski and Hotel Wentzl are the splurge picks; even budget options like Hostel Rynek are well-positioned.
The former Jewish district southeast of the Old Town is now Krakow's most interesting neighborhood for food, bars, and boutique hotels. Plac Nowy hosts a flea market on Sundays and the best zapiekanka (Polish open-face sandwich) street food. Hotels like Rubinstein Boutique Hotel occupy restored tenements; $70-120/night gets you something genuinely characterful. This is where Schindler's Factory Museum is located.
Across the Vistula from Kazimierz, this former Nazi occupation district is gentrifying fast but still has the lowest accommodation prices closest to the center — think $40-70/night guesthouses. Schindler's Factory is technically here (on the Kazimierz-Podgórze border), and the Ghetto Heroes Square (Plac Bohaterów Getta) is a sobering but essential memorial. A 20-minute walk or 10-minute tram ride to the Old Town.
Stalin-era planned socialist district 8km east of the center — a legitimate architectural curiosity that most tourists skip entirely. The communist-era apartment blocks, central square (Plac Centralny, now Plac Ronalda Reagana), and a functioning Lenin Steelworks make this unlike anywhere else in Europe. Stay here only if you're really into Soviet urban planning; otherwise visit on Tram 4 as a half-day trip from $0-15 on tours.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
$12 dorm hostel in Kazimierz, $15 food (Bar Mleczny lunch at $4, street zapiekanka $3, cheap dinner $8), $3 tram day pass, $10 one paid attraction, $15 drinks at a craft beer bar in Kazimierz
$70 mid-range hotel in Old Town or Kazimierz, $35 food (cafe breakfast $8, sit-down lunch $12, restaurant dinner $15), $5 trams/Bolt rides, $20 one museum or guided tour entry
$160 boutique hotel in Old Town (Hotel Stary or similar), $70 food (hotel breakfast $15, upscale lunch at Miod Malina $20, tasting menu dinner at Bottiglieria 1881 $35), $15 private taxis, $45 private Auschwitz tour or Wawel Royal Apartments plus extras
What to Eat in Krakow
Pierogi at Milkbar Tomasza (ul. Tomasza 24) — not a tourist pierogi factory, this is where locals actually eat. Get the ruskie (potato and cheese) and the ones with meat. Full plate costs 15-20 PLN ($4-5). The line out the door at noon is a reliable quality indicator.
Zapiekanka at Plac Nowy in Kazimierz — Poland's iconic open-face baguette with mushrooms, cheese, and your choice of toppings, cooked in a circular kiosk called a 'Rondo.' Endzior's kiosk (stall #2) has a cult following. Costs 12-18 PLN ($3-4) and is best consumed while standing in the square.
Żurek (fermented rye soup) served in a bread bowl — order it at Pod Wawelem restaurant near the castle. The sour, hearty soup comes loaded with white sausage and hard-boiled egg inside a hollowed sourdough round. This is the dish that makes people instantly understand Polish food.
Tasting menu at Bottiglieria 1881 (ul. Bocheńska 7) — Krakow's most celebrated restaurant and consistently one of the best in Poland. Chef Marcin Filipkiewicz runs an 8-10 course menu showcasing Polish ingredients with French technique. Around 350 PLN ($85) per person without wine pairings. Reserve 2-3 weeks in advance.
Obwarzanek (Krakow bagel) from street carts — a braided ring of bread covered in sesame or poppy seeds, sold from push-cart vendors across the Old Town for 2-3 PLN ($0.50). Technically distinct from a New York bagel — denser, chewier, not meant to be toasted. It's been a Krakow street food since the 14th century and has EU Protected Geographical Indication status.
Flying from the US to Krakow
Airlines & Routes
- →LOT Polish Airlines via Warsaw (WAW) from Chicago O'Hare, New York JFK, Los Angeles LAX, Miami MIA — connect to KRK on domestic LOT flight (40 min) or take the train
- →Lufthansa via Frankfurt (FRA) from most major US cities
- →Austrian Airlines via Vienna (VIE) from New York JFK, Washington Dulles, Chicago O'Hare, Los Angeles LAX
- →KLM via Amsterdam (AMS) from Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, Washington
- →Air France via Paris CDG from most major US cities
- →British Airways via London Heathrow from most major US cities
- →Ryanair connecting from London Stansted (STN) — budget option if you stopover UK
- →Wizz Air from London Luton (LTN) or other European bases — good if already in Europe
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
Krakow is extremely safe by European standards and genuinely welcoming to American tourists. The main scams are concentrated in the Old Town: unlicensed 'taxi' drivers outside the airport and train station who charge 10x the Bolt/Uber rate, and strip clubs in Kazimierz with hostesses who invite you in for a 'free drink' that costs $50. Use Bolt or Uber exclusively for cabs — both apps work well and fares are transparent. The Old Town can get rough after midnight on weekends with stag party groups (Krakow is a massive bachelor party destination for Brits), so hostels in Kazimierz tend to be quieter. Pickpocketing happens on crowded trams (lines 1, 13, 18 to Kazimierz) — use a money belt or keep cards in a front pocket. Water is safe to drink. EU 112 is the emergency number. The US Consulate is not in Krakow — the nearest US Consulate is in Warsaw (2.5 hours away), so keep your passport scanned to cloud storage.
Book your Auschwitz-Birkenau visit directly on the auschwitz.org website at least 3-4 weeks in advance — the free self-guided entry (available before 10am and after 3pm) is identical to the paid guided tour except you don't have headphones. The tour buses from Krakow add €20-30 to a trip you can do for $3 roundtrip on the PKS bus from Krakow's main bus station (Dworzec Autobusowy), which drops you at the Oświęcim bus terminal a 20-minute walk from the main gate. Show up 15 minutes before the timed entry slot you reserved and skip the queues entirely.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest way to fly to Krakow?
The cheapest route to Krakow from the US is typically from Boston (BOS), with estimated round-trip prices around $345. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.
What is the best time to visit Krakow?
The best time to visit Krakow is May, June, September, October. Late spring and early fall have warm weather, fewer crowds, and beautiful scenery. Summer (July-August) is peak tourist season. Winter is cold but Christmas markets in December are magical.
Do US citizens need a visa to visit Krakow?
Visa-free for US passport holders for up to 90 days within any 180-day period (Schengen Area).
How long is the flight from the US to Krakow?
Flight time from the US to Krakow (KRK) is approximately 9 hours from Boston. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to Europe.
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