REVIEW · BUDAPEST
Budapest: Dandar Thermal Bath Full-Day Admission
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Hungaria Koncert Ltd. · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Thermal water with a calmer local feel. Dandar Thermal Bath puts you in a restored Art Nouveau building and lets you spend a full day moving between indoor and outdoor mineral pools. It is the kind of bath day where you can go slow, warm up, cool down, and do it at your own pace.
I like the focus on thermal water with minerals and trace elements, because it makes the whole day feel genuinely restorative. I also like that your admission gives you access to saunas and steam rooms, so you can shape the experience around comfort, not just swimming laps.
One key consideration: plan ahead for essentials like towels and footwear, because there may be no rental option on site and buying them there can cost more than you expect.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Actually Plan For
- Dandar Thermal Bath in an Art Nouveau Building
- Your Full-Day Ticket: Pools, Saunas, and Steam Rooms
- How to Spend the Day in the Thermal Water (Indoor + Outdoor)
- Heat Workouts: Saunas and Steam Rooms Without the Fuss
- Massage and Beauty Treatments When You Want More
- Crowd-Level Expectations and How to Find a Quieter Moment
- What to Bring: Towels, Slippers, and Locker Space
- Comfort, Size, and Condition: Worth Your Time?
- Price Check: Is $22 Good Value in Budapest Baths?
- Should You Book Dandar Thermal Bath Full-Day Admission?
- FAQ
- What does the full-day admission include?
- How long is the ticket valid?
- What facilities are available at Dandar Thermal Bath?
- Do I get access to cabins or lockers?
- Should I bring my own towel and slippers?
- How much does it cost?
- Who operates the experience?
- What is the cancellation window for a refund?
- Can I reserve now and pay later?
Key Things I’d Actually Plan For

- Art Nouveau setting: a beautiful building that turns bathing into something special
- Mineral-rich thermal pools: indoor and outdoor pools filled with thermal water
- Saunas and steam rooms included: more than just soaking
- Locker or cabin access: you can stash your things without stress
- Quieter, locals-style vibe: aim for off-peak moments to keep it calm
- Bring your own towel and slippers: on-site purchase may be pricey
Dandar Thermal Bath in an Art Nouveau Building

Dandar sits in a restored Art Nouveau building in Central Hungary, and you feel that the moment you arrive. The space has that old-world bath atmosphere, but it is presented in a modern, comfortable way. For a lot of people, that mix is the point: you want the ritual of a traditional thermal bath without rough edges.
What I like about this kind of setting is that it changes your mindset. You are not rushing from one tourist stop to another. You are giving yourself permission to slow down and treat the day like a wellness session.
And since this is full-day admission, you can keep returning to the water as you warm up and cool down. That matters, because thermal baths work better when you can repeat the cycle.
A few more Budapest tours and experiences worth a look
Your Full-Day Ticket: Pools, Saunas, and Steam Rooms

This is not a one-pool experience. Your ticket covers full-day access to the bath facilities, including indoor and outdoor pools with thermal water, plus saunas and steam rooms.
That full set matters for two reasons.
First, it lets you build a day that fits your body. If you want mostly soaking, you can do that. If you like heat and steam, you can spend more time there. Second, having multiple heat zones helps you feel like you are getting something for the day, not just paying for entry and hoping the water does all the work.
You also have access to massage and beauty treatments on site. Your admission covers using the facilities, while those treatments may be an add-on depending on what you choose. Either way, it is good to know the option exists if you want to make the day feel more pampering than plain bathing.
How to Spend the Day in the Thermal Water (Indoor + Outdoor)

The core of Dandar is simple: thermal water, mineral content, and the indoor-outdoor layout. The bath offers pools filled with thermal water that is rich in minerals and trace elements, and you get to experience that across different temperatures and spaces.
Here is a practical way to structure your time without overthinking it:
Start with indoor pools if you want an easy first step. The indoor area tends to feel like a gentler warm-up, especially if you are arriving from the street. Then switch to an outdoor pool when you feel ready. Even without chasing extremes, the change in air and setting can make the thermal water feel different.
After you’ve spent a while in the pools, give yourself time to dry off and transition to the heat areas. That is where saunas and steam rooms can add to the comfort. Thermal bathing is as much about rhythm as it is about soaking.
You can also treat the day like a set of short returns. Warm up in the water, step away briefly, then come back. Full-day admission is what makes that realistic. One hour would be rushed. A full day lets you settle in.
Heat Workouts: Saunas and Steam Rooms Without the Fuss
Dandar includes saunas and steam rooms as part of admission, which turns the day into a proper thermal routine. If you like the classic pattern—soak, then heat, then cool down—this is the sort of place where you can actually do it.
The best part is that you do not need to plan a complicated schedule. You can keep it simple and focus on how you feel.
Also, pay attention to comfort. One review noted the facility could use some upgrading, which is a reminder that this is not a brand-new spa campus. The experience is still centered on the thermal water and the included heat zones. But if you are the type who needs everything to feel freshly renovated, manage expectations.
Massage and Beauty Treatments When You Want More
The bath offers a range of massage and beauty treatments, and that gives you an option if you want a stronger wellness payoff. You can treat it as a bonus, not a requirement.
If you enjoy having a plan for the day, you can slot a treatment after you’ve already warmed up in the pools. That way your body is ready for the next step. If you prefer total freedom, you can wait and decide once you see how you feel that day.
Either way, it is useful to know the services exist. Not every thermal bath day includes that level of on-site options, and having it nearby can save you from leaving the property just to get a treatment.
Crowd-Level Expectations and How to Find a Quieter Moment
The whole point of choosing Dandar, for many people, is the chance to avoid the most crowded, tour-group rhythm. The experience is positioned as a place to bathe with locals and keep things calmer.
How do you actually make that real?
- Arrive with a flexible mindset. If you hit peak periods, you can still enjoy the water, but your quiet moments may be shorter.
- Use the spaces you have. The indoor pools, outdoor pools, saunas, and steam rooms create natural “switch points” where you can move away from any busy pocket.
One review described it as calm and good, with a feeling of getting out of the tourist stream. That matches the promise of a more relaxed day. Another review said you might find it less spacious than you expected, so being strategic about when you move between areas can help.
What to Bring: Towels, Slippers, and Locker Space

This is the most important practical note from the experience.
One booking experience flagged that on-site there is no rental setup for towels and slippers—only sales—and the price for those items was reported as more expensive than the entry cost itself. That is a big deal, because a thermal bath day can turn into a surprise shopping trip.
My advice: bring your own towel and slippers so you stay in control of your budget. Even if you do not mind buying a small item or two, the risk here is paying more than you expect for essentials you probably already have at home.
Good news: your admission includes cabin or locker usage, so you should be able to keep your belongings organized while you bathe. That is exactly what you want on a full-day soak, since you will likely change rooms more than once.
Comfort, Size, and Condition: Worth Your Time?
Dandar can feel like exactly the right size for a full-day thermal reset, but it is not the biggest bath complex you can find in the region. One comment suggested the facility could be larger, and another noted parts might need upkeep.
So here is how I’d frame it for your decision: if you want a mega-bath experience with endless corridors and constant new spaces, you might feel like you’ve explored most areas sooner than you hoped. If you want a slower, more local-feeling thermal day where you can repeat the pools and heat zones without constantly changing your plan, you will likely enjoy the pace.
The good sign is that the thermal focus stays strong: mineral-rich pools, plus saunas and steam rooms included. The main payoff is not a giant attraction map. It is the thermal water routine.
Also, one odd note worth respecting: there was a report that the place was closed. I cannot predict that outcome, but it is enough of a red flag that I’d suggest you confirm opening hours before you commit to the day. If your schedule is tight, build in a backup option.
Price Check: Is $22 Good Value in Budapest Baths?
At about $22 per person for full-day admission, the value depends on how you use the day. If you treat it like a quick soak—one pool, a brief steam, then out—you might feel like you could have spent less time elsewhere.
If you actually do what this bath is set up for, the price starts making sense. You get access all day to indoor and outdoor thermal pools, plus saunas and steam rooms. That combination matters more than people realize. You are not paying for one activity; you are paying for a whole thermal routine.
You also get cabin or locker usage, which is a small line item that can save you hassle once you are on site.
One more value angle: the calmer, locals-style atmosphere is part of why people choose Dandar. When a bath feels less like a line and more like a routine, that experience quality is worth money too.
Should You Book Dandar Thermal Bath Full-Day Admission?
Book it if you want a full day built around thermal water, not a rushed checklist. I’d especially recommend it if you like the idea of avoiding the most crowded bath-bubble and spending time with a more local feel. The included saunas and steam rooms make this a strong choice for a real heat-and-soak day.
Skip or reconsider if you are traveling with only a minimal bag and you’d rather not plan for towels and footwear. Bring what you need, because on-site purchases may not be rental-friendly and could cost extra. Also, check opening hours if you have a strict itinerary, because at least one report indicated it can be closed.
If you do book, I’d go with a simple goal: take your time. Do multiple short cycles between the pools and heat areas and let the day be the activity. That is where Dandar tends to deliver its best feeling.
FAQ
What does the full-day admission include?
Full-day admission includes access to the Dandar Thermal Bath facilities for the day, plus cabin or locker usage.
How long is the ticket valid?
Your ticket is valid for 1 day.
What facilities are available at Dandar Thermal Bath?
You can use indoor and outdoor thermal pools, as well as saunas and steam rooms. Massage and beauty treatments are also available on site.
Do I get access to cabins or lockers?
Yes. Cabin or locker usage is included with your admission.
Should I bring my own towel and slippers?
You should plan on bringing your own towel and slippers. One booking experience reported there was no rental and items were only sold, with sales priced higher than the entry cost.
How much does it cost?
The price is listed as $22 per person.
Who operates the experience?
The experience provider is Hungaria Koncert Ltd.
What is the cancellation window for a refund?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Can I reserve now and pay later?
Yes. You can reserve now and pay later, keeping travel plans flexible.



























