Key rules for Schönbrunn Palace visitors: photography, bag policy, security, and general etiquette.
Schönbrunn's outdoor gardens have no rules beyond ordinary public-space etiquette — they're open from sunrise to sunset and free. The palace state rooms, the Carriage Museum and the Palm House follow a standard museum rulebook. The two surprises for first-time visitors are absolutely no photography inside the state rooms (this is strictly enforced — staff in every room) and a mandatory cloakroom for backpacks and larger bags. See our visitors guide and accessibility page for related info.
A short list — the rest is normal museum etiquette
Photography and filming are strictly forbidden inside the palace state rooms — no flash, no phone cameras, no exceptions. The rule preserves the centuries-old textiles, gilded surfaces and historic wall hangings. Photography is welcome and free across the gardens, the Gloriette terrace, the Palm House interior and the Tiergarten zoo.
Backpacks, larger handbags and any bag bigger than 30×20 cm must be checked at the cloakroom just inside the turnstile — free of charge. Suitcases and luggage are not accepted at all; store them at your hotel or at the luggage office at Westbahnhof, three U-Bahn stops away on the U4.
Bag screening at the main turnstile in the Ehrenhof. Quick on weekdays, allow 5–10 minutes on summer weekends. Sharp objects, glass bottles and oversized bags must be cleared at the cloakroom before entry.
Eating and drinking are not permitted in the state rooms or in the visitor route. Café Residenz in the courtyard is the closest sit-down option. Tripods, monopods, gimbals and selfie sticks are forbidden indoors and at the Gloriette terrace — they must stay in the cloakroom.
Common questions about what's allowed