REVIEW · VIENNA
Vienna: 2-Hour Street Art Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Prime Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Vienna’s walls have stories if you know where to look. This 2-hour Vienna street art tour connects you with the city’s alternative culture and the artists who made it loud, bold, and personal. I like that you’re not stuck in postcards here, you’re moving through real neighborhoods where street art fits the daily rhythm.
Two things I really love: first, the insider guide context on the urban art scene, including how different artists think and work. Second, the way the tour uses multiple routes so you can get more than one flavor of Vienna, from hip districts to the Danube canal edges.
One drawback to keep in mind: street art tours depend on the route you’re assigned that day, and conditions can change (fresh pieces, painted-over spots, or weather). If you want a very specific artist wall, check the route plan sent to you in advance.
In This Review
- Key things you’ll notice on this tour
- How a 2-hour street art walk becomes a Vienna culture lesson
- Meeting point at Spittelau: what to look for
- The big names you’ll run into on Vienna walls
- Route 1: Gumpendorferstraße and the culture-space finish
- Route 2: Roßauer Lände, Danube canal edges, and Nychos-scale walls
- Route 3: Taubstummengasse, a festival district vibe, and the old factory feel
- What’s actually included (and what you still need to pay)
- The guide factor: why small details change the tour
- How to get the most out of it (without turning it into homework)
- The one big risk: route mismatch and changing surfaces
- Is it worth $45 for 2 hours?
- Who should book this Vienna street art tour?
- Should you book this Vienna 2-hour Street Art Tour?
- FAQ
- What time does the Vienna street art tour run?
- How long is the tour?
- How much does it cost?
- Where do I meet the guide?
- Do I need public transportation tickets?
- Is the tour in English and is it wheelchair accessible?
- What’s included in the price?
Key things you’ll notice on this tour

- Multiple routes so you’re not repeating the same handful of walls
- Large-scale murals tied to big names like ROA, Blu, Stink Fish, Shepard Fairey, and Nychos
- A real local feel in districts many visitors skip
- Small-group energy that lets you ask questions and share opinions
- Evening timing at 6:00 PM for nicer walking light and temperatures
- Tastings included, with typical local bites and drinks (within what’s offered on the tour)
How a 2-hour street art walk becomes a Vienna culture lesson

A street art tour in Vienna works best when it’s about more than just spotting graffiti. This one does that. You’re walking through neighborhoods where murals feel like part of the city’s conversation, not an Instagram backdrop. You’ll also hear the kind of stories that make you look twice at paint, stencils, tags, and large murals.
The setting matters. The tour runs weekly at 6:00 PM, chosen to avoid peak daytime crowds and to take advantage of evening light. That’s not a tiny detail. Walking at dusk helps you see color, shadows, and texture in a way you don’t get on a bright noon tour.
And yes, it’s built around street art history without turning into a lecture. The guides are connected to the local movement, and that shows in the way they explain why certain pieces ended up where they did.
If you’re traveling solo, with friends, or as a couple, this format also makes it easy to talk to your guide. The tour is designed around conversation, not just a one-way narration.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Vienna
Meeting point at Spittelau: what to look for

This tour starts at Spittelau metro station (U4 & U6), next to the city bike station. The guide will be wearing a yellow Prime Tours shirt. It’s a straightforward meeting setup, which matters because you’ll want to start on time and hit the best walls before they get darker.
One practical note: the exact meeting point can vary by route, and you’ll be told where to go the day before. So don’t assume every departure starts in the same exact spot. It’s still anchored around the Spittelau area, but route assignments can shift where you line up.
Also plan for walking in neighborhoods that are not all “major landmark” style. Expect streets, walls, corners, and the occasional little stretch where you’re moving from one art cluster to another.
The big names you’ll run into on Vienna walls

This tour is built around artists who’ve left marks across cities, and you’ll hear how their work translates in Vienna’s streets. The intro mentions artists such as ROA, Blu, Stink Fish, and Shepard Fairey. Your exact walls depend on the route you get that evening, but the point is consistent: you’re seeing urban art tied to both local crews and international street art legends.
You’ll also hear stories about alternative culture—what people were reacting to, what they were building, and why certain styles show up in particular districts. It’s the kind of context that keeps you from treating street art as random decoration.
If you’re the type who stops to look at texture, you’ll enjoy the technical angle too. One review highlighted learning about different techniques, which is exactly the sort of detail that makes the tour feel worth doing even if you think you already know street art.
Route 1: Gumpendorferstraße and the culture-space finish

Route 1 sends you to the 6th district, focused on street art you’ll recognize as internationally driven, but with plenty of local energy too. This is where you’re likely to see large-scale pieces by local crews, not just the “famous artist wall.”
What makes this route appealing is how it blends street art with a more community-centered ending. You finish at a large contemporary cultural space, where you can chat with the group over beer or wine. That stop is useful in a practical way: it gives you time to ask your guide follow-up questions, compare notes, and ask what you should look for on your own the next day.
Potential drawback: because this route leans into the 6th district’s artistic concentration, you may move through areas that feel more “designed for art consumption.” That’s not bad. It just means your best takeaways come from the guide’s stories and your own observation, not from chasing remote backstreets.
Route 2: Roßauer Lände, Danube canal edges, and Nychos-scale walls
Route 2 starts with the banks of the Danube canal. That water-adjacent start helps set the tone—cooler air, more of a city-stroll feel, and a sense of moving through Vienna instead of standing still to look at a mural.
This route focuses on local artists and includes large-scale walls by Nychos. If you’ve seen Nychos work elsewhere, the scale is usually what hits first, and then you notice the discipline behind it. If you haven’t, don’t worry—your guide’s explanations help you recognize what you’re seeing besides the immediate wow-factor.
Then you go by public transport to a multicultural neighborhood known for lively markets, bars, and urban art. This matters for value. You’re not just walking in a single bubble. You’re learning how Viennese street art connects to daily life—food stops, bar chatter, and the kind of regular foot traffic that keeps the city feeling alive after office hours.
Practical consideration: public transport is part of this route, so make sure you have what you need before you start (a public transport ticket is required, and it’s not included).
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Vienna
Route 3: Taubstummengasse, a festival district vibe, and the old factory feel

Route 3 is built around the 4th district and the street art scene there, with a stop connected to a street art festival area. After that, you travel by tram to an old factory area, which gives the art a different kind of stage.
One of the tour’s strongest name drops here is Shepard Fairey—you’ll see major walls associated with him on this route. You’ll also walk through a residential area to spot highlights of the alternative scene, and you may encounter works by Faile and Stink Fish as well as other artists.
Why this route can be especially memorable: factory and residential areas change the way you read art. A mural next to an industrial building feels like commentary on industry and space. A piece in a residential neighborhood reads more like a message aimed at everyday people who pass by it without needing to “visit” anything.
The only caution here is timing and comfort. Trams and residential walking can mean you’ll be on your feet a bit more. If you’re sensitive to uneven sidewalks, wear comfortable shoes and plan for some stop-and-go walking.
What’s actually included (and what you still need to pay)
This tour is 2 hours with an English-speaking live guide. It’s also wheelchair accessible, which is helpful if you want this kind of experience without a long, hard slog.
Included in the experience:
- Insider information on Austria’s urban art scene
- An entertaining walk around local neighborhoods
- A chance to taste local specialties, such as sausages, beer, and wine
Not included:
- A public transportation ticket
- Food and drinks beyond whatever is offered as tastings on the tour
Here’s the practical way to interpret that: don’t plan on this being a full meal. Expect small tastings rather than a full food program. If you want a real dinner after, you’ll be ready to do it nearby. If your stomach likes predictability, bring a snack before you go.
The guide factor: why small details change the tour
The quality of a street art tour depends heavily on the guide’s approach. This one leans hard into that human element. One review praised how a guide, Camille, stayed kind, informative, and engaged—especially in a small group, where Camille could focus on questions and include everyone’s opinions.
Another strong theme from the reviews: guides ask what you think, and they adjust the tour based on interests and needs. That’s why the tour can feel like it’s about your experience, not just a set script.
If you get a day with better weather or a route with more visible surfaces, you’ll feel it immediately. But even if the walls look familiar, the guide’s explanations are what turn “I saw a mural” into “I get why this is here and what it’s saying.”
How to get the most out of it (without turning it into homework)
You’ll enjoy this tour more if you go in with a simple attitude: look first, then listen.
A few practical tips:
- Take a photo when you first spot a piece, then keep walking and hear the story. Many murals make more sense after context.
- If you’re curious about techniques, ask. One review specifically noted learning about different methods, which suggests the guide can tailor explanations.
- Expect you’ll see both local and international influences. The fun is connecting styles to place.
- Wear comfortable shoes. You’ll cover enough ground that “pretty shoes” can become a regret.
And don’t worry if you’re not an art expert. Street art is meant to be readable. Your guide helps with the meaning.
The one big risk: route mismatch and changing surfaces
One negative review complained that the tour didn’t match the description and that the group ended up spending time around the Hundertwasser waste facility instead of focusing on the broader street art promise. That’s an extreme example, but it highlights the reality of street art tours: routes can shift, and what you get depends on your specific day.
Your best move is simple: when you receive the day-before route details, check what district you’re in and what the guide said you’ll focus on. If you’re traveling with high expectations for particular artists, this is where you set them correctly.
Also keep in mind that street art can be temporary. Fresh pieces appear and old ones fade. The tour’s value is more in the approach—how you see the city—than in any single wall being guaranteed forever.
Is it worth $45 for 2 hours?
For $45 per person, the value depends on what you want from the experience.
You’re paying for:
- A guide with insider knowledge (not just directions)
- A structured route across multiple neighborhoods
- Time saved versus DIY searching, especially with route variety
- Tastings that help break up the walk
Compared to self-guided street art wandering, you’re effectively buying context and efficiency. If your goal is to spot art on your own, you might feel this is pricey. If your goal is to understand Vienna’s street art culture and walk with someone who can explain the pieces, the price starts to feel fair.
In short: it’s a good deal if you like learning while you walk. It’s less compelling if you only want photos and don’t care about stories.
Who should book this Vienna street art tour?
This tour is a great fit if you:
- Want to see Vienna beyond the center
- Like urban art and want the meaning behind the visuals
- Prefer a short evening activity over a full-day excursion
- Enjoy neighborhood walking with a guide who will talk back
It’s also a nice choice for first-time street art fans. The guide background and technique explanations help you catch details you’d miss on your own.
Should you book this Vienna 2-hour Street Art Tour?
I’d book it if you want a guided evening that connects murals to Vienna’s alternative culture, and if you’re flexible on which specific walls you’ll see that night. The combination of route variety, large-scale street art, and guide-led context is what makes it work.
I’d be more cautious if you’re traveling with very specific demands (like expecting one exact famous mural). In that case, check the route details you get in advance and align your expectations with the district and focus of that evening.
If you’re open to being surprised by what’s on the walls tonight, this tour gives you a smart way to see the city’s edge—without spending all day hunting for the next piece.
FAQ
What time does the Vienna street art tour run?
Tours run weekly at 6:00 PM. Evening hours are chosen to avoid busy city life and to benefit from pleasant walking temperatures and better light.
How long is the tour?
The tour lasts 2 hours.
How much does it cost?
The price is $45 per person.
Where do I meet the guide?
Meet at Spittelau metro station (U4 & U6) next to the city bike station. Look for a guide wearing a yellow Prime Tours shirt. You’ll also be told the exact meeting point a day in advance depending on the route.
Do I need public transportation tickets?
Yes. A valid public transport ticket is required, and some route segments use metro or tram.
Is the tour in English and is it wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the tour guide is English-speaking, and the tour is wheelchair accessible.
What’s included in the price?
You get insider information, an entertaining guided walk around neighborhoods, and a chance to taste local specialties like sausages, beer, and wine. Public transport tickets and additional food/drinks are not included.































