This City Known As The Venice Of Eastern Europe Is Breaking All Time Tourism Records
Everyone knows Venice for its winding canals, imposing Byzantine basilica, and grand palazzi built along busy waterways, but have you ever heard of the Eastern European Venice?
Well, there’s a bunch of cities that actually lay claim to that title, including… ahem, Saint Petersburg in Russia, but only one of these orient-leaning ‘Venices’ is actually breaking tourism records right now.
And it figures: its parent country just happens to be one of the trendiest European destinations this year, highly sought-after for its picture-perfect medieval cities, untouched Baltic coastline, and impressive safety levels (more on that later)
Lo and behold, Wrocław, Poland’s answer to La Serenissima:


Poland Has A Venice Of Its Own
Wrocław is the third-largest city in Poland, after the tourism powerhouses of Warsaw and Kraków, yet strangely enough, it never quite got the attention it deserved up until, well, now.
It’s dubbed the ‘Polish Venice’ because it’s literally built on a web of canals, all fed by the Oder River, with the city itself being comprised of over a dozen islands, and connected by something like 100+ bridges.
Now, we do have to manage our expectations here, because no city is truly the perfect Venice replica. Not even Bruges, over in Belgium, which is the closest look-alike we can think of.
Wrocław does have that ‘water everywhere’ feeling, particularly as you get close to the Historic Center, but don’t expect a gondola-only transport system or a lagoon setting. Structurally, however, it does give Venice with its bridges, water crossings, and island districts all packed into the city center.


If Venice was a sprawling metropolis home to over 641,000 residents, that is.
If you’re flying to Europe this summer and you hold a U.S. passport, travel rules for Americans have changed drastically since 2025. You are now required to be fingerprinted upon arrival to Europe, and soon enough, you’ll need a travel permit to even fly there in the first place.
Don’t get turned away at the border: use the Entry Requirement Checker to stay up to date with the fast-changing regulations.
Wrocław Is Quickly Edging In On The Top 3 Most Visited Cities In Poland
Wrocław welcomed a whopping 7 million visitors last year, which is 400,000 more than the year before, and it stopped just short of becoming one of Poland’s top 3 most-visited cities for the first time, according to Poland’s Central Statistical Office (GUS).


The top 3 was still occupied by Warsaw, Kraków, and Gdańsk, the latter being a postcard medieval city on the Baltic Coast, and probably one of the most stunning places you can visit in the Old Continent, but hey, we digress.
Wrocław Mayor Jacek Sutryk stated this was a ‘great result’, and proof that the city is becoming a ‘strong point’ on the tourist map of Poland.
In practice, the difference between overnight visitors in Wrocław and Gdańsk, its closest competitor, was only 84,000 people in 2025.
That’s nearly half the 2024 gap, so it’s closing in on the Baltic hub fast.
More Than Just Canals & Bridges
Wrocław has a lot packed into a pretty compact, walkable center, and once you start treating the “Polish Venice” nickname like a marketing label and not the whole identity of the city, you’ll quickly find out the city’s actually way more dynamic, and canals are the least interesting thing about it.
Rynek, the Market Square, is surrounded by colorful burgher houses and Baroque buildings, and at its very center stands an ornate Gothic Town Hall, crowned by an Astronomical Clock that miiiight just rival the one over in Prague.
Only a few steps away, the Church of St. Mary Magdalene is known for its soaring red-brick towers, joined at the top by the legendary Penitent’s Bridge. You can climb to the very top and stand on the bridge for panoramic views of the Old Town for only 25 zł (around $7).


We guess we should also warn you about the little, bronze, one-foot-tall pesky inhabitants of Wrocław: the Wrocław Dwarfs.
The tiny statues can be found literally everywhere, where you least expect them: trying to break into the cash machine right by an ATM, raising a beer mug at the entrance of a pub, munching on an oversized chocolate bar bigger than their whole bodies in the window of a chocolate shop. You name it.
There are over 800 of them scattered all around town, and you’ll probably end up clogging up your iCloud storage with photos of cheeky gnomes tucked away in quiet corners.
Europe’s Last Lamplighter
They’re not the only unusual thing about this city. Weirdly enough, the city’s cathedral is not located in the heart of the Old Town itself, but rather a 15-minute walk away from Rynek, on the historic island of Ostrów Tumski.


The oldest part of the city, this river island, connected to the Wrocław mainland by ornate, lamp-lit bridges, is home to Wrocław Cathedral, this monumental, soaring twin-spire Gothic marvel filled with stained glass and intricate chapels.
Wanna see something really cool, though?
Stick around ’til sunset, which in summertime is around 9 p.m., and you’ll get to see one of Europe’s last-surviving lamplighters, cape and all, walk around the island and the many bridges that connect it to the rest of the city, lighting every gas lamp by hand.
In case you’re generally anxious about staying out late in a foreign city, especially with the scary reports of rising crime levels in many European cities, Poland is definitely an outlier here.
@vinigoesglobal 📍 Ostrów Tumski —Wrocław, Poland 🇵🇱 🔐 SAVE this to your faves Cathedral Island (Ostrów Tumski) in Wroclaw is one of a few remaining places in Europe where a lamplighter still manually lights the gas-powered street lamps every day at dusk. Wearing a cape and top hat, this gentleman goes around the historic district for around 2 hours, 365 days a year, lighting 103 lamps 🎩 Starting times vary depending on season, but if you’re visiting Wrocław this winter, you should plan to be on Cathedral Island at around 3:50 pm, right before it gets dark ✨ Wrocław | Breslau | Vratislavie | Poland | Polska | Pologne | Polónia #wroclaw #wroclove #poland #polska #travel ♬ Little Things – Adrián Berenguer
Unlike Paris, London, Barcelona, violent crime has not seen an uptick in the past decade, levels of extremism are low, and even pickpocketing is a relatively-rare occurrence.
In fact, the country is so safe it scores a near-perfect 95/100 on the Traveler Safety Index, a tool which uses reports by travelers themselves to establish the safety situation on the ground across different destinations:
How Affordable Is Wrocław, Poland?


Old World charm and bridge-spanned rivers aside, there’s another reason why the Venice of Eastern Europe is drawing quite the crowds lately:
It’s significantly more affordable than the actual Venice.
Any mid-range restaurant outing in the Old Town will set you back by around $20–$25 on average, and by that we mean a three-course meal with a żurek soup for starters, a meat-heavy dish for main, a sernik cheesecake for dessert, and at least two generous jugs of beer.
It goes even cheaper at the bar mleczny, or what the Polish call “milk bars”, traditional eateries that dish up hearty, home-style Polish grub for even less.
Having been to the city myself twice, one milk bar I keep coming back to is Setka.


Hammer and sickle splattered across every wall—just for the fun of it, as Poland actually outlawed the public promotion of communist ideology years ago—vintage Soviet memorabilia everywhere, and some of the best pierogi dumplings and compote known to man.
Accommodation-wise, you can still find charming hotels from just $65 to $110 per night, while travelers on a shoestring budget can book private rooms with shared bathroom facilities in Old Town hostels from as little as $45.
By the way, Americans can fly nonstop to 3 Polish cities this summer:
No, Wrocław is not on the list, but you can easily get there by the train from any of these hubs.
Oh, and just in case you’ve been mispronouncing Wrocław in your head all along, it’s actually something like… Vrots-waf.
We don’t make the rules, Polish does.