Co-founder of the Hungarian cult skincare line Omorovicza, Margaret de Heinrich shares her favourite thermal baths in Budapest, from the spectacular Széchenyi to the glam Gellért.
Since 1993, Memento Park has been home to Hungary's fallen and toppled communist-era statues, a graveyard to dictators that provides a place to teach and remember, but not to idealise.
Driven by his family history, Tibor Rosenstein is preserving Jewish-Hungarian cuisine through his Budapest restaurant, which has become a bucket list destination for food lovers.
Known as the ‘Hospital in the Rock’, this underground facility remained a government secret for decades.
Exploring the buildings that housed Jews for a brief time during the Holocaust offers a window on a tumultuous period.
This tram line is one of the longest and fastest of its kind in the world. And it’s entirely run by children.
The Buda and the Pest sides not only give Hungary’s capital its name, but also define the varied lifestyles and character on each side.
Few people know you can scuba dive beneath Hungary’s capital – not even the majority of locals who live above the abandoned Kőbánya limestone mine.
Take advantage of the Hungarian city’s thermal waters, as the Romans first did almost two millennia ago.