Austria Made Easy: Calm, Captivating, and ADHD-Friendly

A travel guide built for short attention spans, big imaginations, and love of structure ✨

Choose Your Home BasesMust-See, Not All-SeeSample Itinerary
Getting Around EasilyLanguage & CommunicationBack Again? Explore Austria Differently
5-Day Itinerary7-Day ItineraryList of Hotels
Food & DietFAQsDownloadables / Tools

Choose Your Home Base

Where to Stay (Pick 3 Cities Max)
  • Vienna – Museums, palaces, great transport
  • Salzburg – Charming, compact, walkable
  • Innsbruck – Nature, gondolas, less crowds
  • Hallstatt – Gorgeous lake town (ideal day trip)

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Must-See, Not All-See

Top 3 Things To Do in Each City

Keep it light. Each city has hundreds of things to see. Pick just 3 — no burnout required.

Vienna

  • Schönbrunn Palace
  • Naschmarkt (open-air market)
  • Prater Ferris Wheel

Salzburg

  • Hohensalzburg Fortress + funicular
  • Sound of Music filming locations
  • Mozart’s Birthplace

Innsbruck (Mountain Magic)

  • Nordkette Cable Car to mountain lookout
  • Explore Old Town + Golden Roof
  • Swarovski Crystal Worlds (short trip outside town)

Hallstatt (Perfect Day Trip)

  • Take iconic lake photos
  • Visit the Hallstatt Salt Mine + Slide Tour
  • Ride the Skywalk or funicular for panoramic views

Pro Tip: One “anchor activity” per day keeps things calm and enjoyable. Anything extra is a bonus, not a requirement.

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Sample 3-Day Itinerary

Simple 3-Day Itinerary – Vienna > Salzburg > Hallstatt > Vienna
DayMorningAfternoonEvening
1 – Stay in ViennaSchönbrunn Palace Café + NaschmarktFerris wheel + Relax
2 – Stay in SalzburgTrain to Salzburg (2 hours and 30 minutes)Fortress tour + gardensDinner + walk
3 – Stay in SalzburgDay trip to HallstattSalt Mine + photosTrain back to Vienna

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Getting Around Easily

Transportation Tip
  • Use ÖBB Rail app is for Austrian national railway. Use this app for ticket reservations and check schedules
  • Buy Austria Rail Pass if traveling 3+ days. You can purchase it ahead of time on Eurail’s website.
  • Trains are clean and easy to follow. You can skip the car rental and use the trains!
  • Google map shows platform numbers in Austria.

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Language and Communication

  • The official language of Austria is German. Nearly all Austrians speak Austrian German, a regional variety of Standard German
  • Austrian German is used in schools, government, signage, and media
  • In Cities like Vienna, Salzburg, and Innsbruck, you will find most people speak English for basic needs.
  • Menus and signs in tourist areas are often bilingual (German and English).
  • Use Google Translate or apps like SayHi if you need help reading signs or ordering food in less touristy areas.

Other Languages You Might Hear:

LanguageWhere / Who Speaks It
EnglishWidely spoken in tourist areas, hotels, and cities
Austro-Bavarian DialectsLocal dialects spoken in rural areas and small towns (hard to understand even for native Germans!)
SloveneIn southern Carinthia (recognized minority language)
CroatianIn Burgenland region
HungarianAlso in Burgenland, near Hungarian border
TurkishCommon among Turkish immigrant communities
Serbian/BosnianSpoken by Balkan diaspora

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Back Again? Explore Austria Differently