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.
Exploring the buildings that housed Jews for a brief time during the Holocaust offers a window on a tumultuous period.
Natural caves exist throughout Hungary, but a cave system in the small town of Tapolca has an especially memorable method of exploration.
The Great Hungarian Plain is Europe’s answer to the American West – complete with rough-and-tumble herdsmen, horses trained to lie flat on command and a history of highwaymen.
Take advantage of the Hungarian city’s thermal waters, as the Romans first did almost two millennia ago.
From Bucharest to Budapest, the third annual European Backpacker index found that travelling to the previously pricey continent is actually less expensive than you would think.
Using the river as a compass, you can explore many of the city’s best sights.