Most cruise ships dock at Czerniaków Terminal or anchor in the Vistula River with tender service to the city center.
Quick Facts: Port of Gdańsk (primary cruise port serving Warsaw) | Poland | Gdańsk Cruise Terminal (Nabrzeże Pomorskie / Westerplatte Pier) | Dock | ~340 km to Warsaw city center | UTC+1 (CEST UTC+2 in summer)
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Important planning reality check: Warsaw is not a coastal city — it sits roughly 340 km inland from the Baltic Sea. Cruisers reach it via the Port of Gdańsk, meaning Warsaw is strictly a full-day trip (8+ hours), requiring a very early start and either a pre-booked private transfer or a fast train. If your ship is only in port for 6 hours or fewer, Gdańsk’s own Old Town is the smarter call. Plan accordingly before committing your shore day to Warsaw.
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Port & Terminal Information
The main cruise terminal in Gdańsk is located at Nabrzeże Pomorskie (Pomeranian Quay), near the Westerplatte peninsula and the Gdańsk Shipyard district. Some larger ships also use the Gdańsk Deepwater Container Terminal area, so confirm your exact berth with your ship’s daily newsletter the evening before.
Ships dock directly — no tender required — which saves you 20–30 minutes compared to tender ports. The terminal has basic facilities: a tourist information kiosk (staffed on peak days), a small ATM, and Wi-Fi in the terminal building. There is no official luggage storage at the terminal itself, so travel light on Warsaw day trips.
Check your exact berth location and plan your overland route using Google Maps.
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Getting to the City

Warsaw is a serious commitment from Gdańsk. Every option below applies to the Gdańsk port → Warsaw journey.
- On Foot — Not applicable for Warsaw. Within Gdańsk itself, the Old Town (Długi Targ) is walkable in about 20–25 minutes from the terminal.
- Train — The fastest and most independent option. Take a taxi or tram from the port to Gdańsk Główny (Gdańsk Central Station, ~10 min, ~25–35 PLN by taxi). Trains run regularly; PKP Intercity Express (EIC/EIP) covers Gdańsk → Warsaw Central in 2 hrs 45 min–3 hrs. Tickets cost 80–150 PLN (~$20–38 USD) each way. Book in advance at intercity.pl. Total round-trip transit: ~6 hours minimum.
- Taxi/Private Transfer — A private transfer Gdańsk port → Warsaw hotel costs roughly $90–130 USD each way and takes 3–3.5 hours by road. Pre-booking is essential; a Warsaw arrival private transfer on Viator 🎟 Book: Warsaw Chopin Airport (WAW) to Warsaw – Arrival Private Transfer removes all guesswork from the return leg.
- Ship Shore Excursion — Worth it here if you’re nervous about the logistics. Ships run fully escorted Warsaw day tours with guaranteed return times — that peace of mind matters when the train timetable is your only backup. Compare ship pricing against Viator’s Warsaw tours before booking.
- Rental Car — Technically possible but not recommended. Parking in central Warsaw is a headache and the time you lose driving equals the time you’d spend sightseeing.
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Top Things to Do in Warsaw, Poland
Warsaw rewards curious visitors — it’s a city literally rebuilt from rubble after WWII, and every street corner carries that weight and resilience. Here are the highlights worth your shore day.
Must-See
- Old Town Market Square / Rynek Starego Miasta (free) — Warsaw’s UNESCO-listed Old Town was 85% destroyed in WWII and painstakingly reconstructed by hand from historical records and Canaletto paintings. Walk the cobblestones, find the mermaid fountain (Warsaw’s symbol), and absorb the surreal beauty of a city that refused to disappear. 45–60 min.
- Warsaw Rising Museum / Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego (~25 PLN / ~$6) — One of the most powerful museums in Europe, dedicated to the 1944 Warsaw Uprising. Visceral, moving, and essential context for understanding Poland. Book a guided tour on GetYourGuide to get the full story. 2 hours.
- Royal Castle (Zamek Królewski) (30 PLN / ~$8) — Fully reconstructed after wartime destruction, this castle at the edge of the Old Town houses opulent royal apartments and the famous Canaletto room — the same paintings used to rebuild the city. 1–1.5 hours.
- Palace of Culture and Science (free outside, 25 PLN observation deck) — Love it or hate it, this Soviet-era skyscraper defines Warsaw’s skyline. The 30th-floor observation deck gives you the best panoramic view in the city. 30 min.
- Łazienki Park & Palace on the Water (park free; palace 35 PLN) — Warsaw’s most elegant park, dotted with peacocks, the open-air Chopin monument (free summer Sunday concerts), and a 17th-century palace reflected in a pond. 1–1.5 hours.
Beaches & Nature
- Vistula River Boulevards (Bulwary Wiślane) (free) — The wide, pedestrian-friendly riverbanks are where locals actually hang out on warm days — food trucks, kayak rentals, beach bars on the eastern shore. A 30-minute walk from the Old Town and genuinely lovely in summer. 30–45 min.
Day Trips
- Żelazowa Wola — Chopin’s Birthplace (~60 km west of Warsaw; admission ~25 PLN) — The composer’s actual birth cottage, set in manicured gardens with live piano recitals on weekends. Best reached by pre-arranged private car. 3–4 hours including travel.
Family Picks
- POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews (30 PLN / ~$8) — One of the world’s best Jewish history museums, located in the former ghetto district. The Jewish Warsaw tour on Viator 🎟 Book: Jewish Warsaw (~$88, 3 hours) puts this in meaningful context for all ages. 2 hours.
- Copernicus Science Centre (45 PLN adults / 35 PLN kids) — Hands-on science museum with hundreds of interactive exhibits — genuinely fun for families and a smart choice if summer heat is getting to the group. 1.5–2 hours.
Off the Beaten Track
- Praga District (free) — Cross the Vistula to Warsaw’s gritty, artsy east bank neighbourhood. Street art, independent galleries, Soviet-era architecture, and zero tourist coaches. 1 hour wandering.
- Neon Museum (Muzeum Neonów) (~20 PLN) — A quirky collection of rescued communist-era neon signs from across Poland. Small, fast, and oddly captivating. 30 min.
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What to Eat & Drink

Warsaw’s food scene has exploded in the last decade — you’ll find everything from Michelin-starred tasting menus to outstanding street pierogi — but the best shore-day strategy is staying in the Old Town and Śródmieście (city centre) neighbourhoods where everything is walkable. The Warsaw Food Tasting Tour with Delicious Poland 🎟 Book: Warsaw Food Tasting Tour with Delicious Poland (~$110, 2.5 hours) is genuinely one of the best ways to eat through the city if you have time.
- Pierogi — Poland’s iconic dumplings, stuffed with potato-and-cheese, meat, or wild mushroom; look for Zapiecek restaurants in the Old Town; 20–35 PLN for a plate
- Żurek — sour rye soup served in a bread bowl with hard-boiled egg and sausage; the ultimate Polish comfort dish; 18–28 PLN
- Bigos — hunter’s stew of cabbage, meat, and mushrooms; heavy, warming, and deeply Polish; 25–40 PLN
- Obwarzanek — ring-shaped street bread, the Warsaw cousin of a bagel; sold from carts for 2–3 PLN
- Craft beer — Warsaw has a serious craft scene; look for PiwPaw bars in Śródmieście; 18–25 PLN per pint
- Wódka — try Żubrówka (bison grass vodka) with apple juice at any bar; 15–20 PLN a shot
- Zapiekanka — open-faced toasted baguette with mushrooms and cheese from street stalls; 10–15 PLN and deeply satisfying
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Shopping
Nowy Świat and Chmielna Street are Warsaw’s main shopping corridors — lined with Polish amber jewellery shops, linen boutiques, and local brand stores. The Old Town has concentrated souvenir shopping that skews touristy but delivers quality amber, hand-painted pottery (boleslawiec-style), and Chopin memorabilia. For a proper market, Hala Mirowska (open daily, ~10 min from Old Town) is a covered food market beloved by locals with fresh produce, meats, and pickles.
Buy: Baltic amber (verify it’s real with the salt-water test), Polish linen, artisan pottery, and flavoured vodkas. Skip: generic “I ❤ Warsaw” merchandise and cheap wooden toys near the castle — they’re imported.
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How to Plan Your Day
- 4 hours ashore: This timeline doesn’t work for Warsaw — use your time in Gdańsk’s Old Town instead.
- 6–7 hours ashore: Still tight. Take an early express train to Warsaw, sprint through the Old Town
🎟️ Things to Book in Advance
These highly-rated experiences fill up fast — book before you arrive to avoid missing out.
This page contains affiliate links. If you book through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Planning a cruise here?
Viking River Cruises, Uniworld, Emerald Waterways & more sail to Warsaw.
Getting Around from the Port
Uber and local taxis available at terminal; direct service to Old Town
Pre-booked tours through cruise line with guided city highlights and hotel pickup
Buses 107, 111, or 157 run from terminal area to city center; affordable local option
Private car hire with English-speaking driver for flexible exploring beyond Old Town
Top Things To Do
Old Town Warsaw (Stare Miasto)
UNESCO World Heritage Site featuring colorful Renaissance buildings, cobblestone streets, and historic charm reconstructed after WWII. Home to cafes, shops, museums, and the iconic Warsaw Mermaid statue.
Book Old Town Warsaw (Stare Miasto) from $5⚡ Popular — books out early. Reserve before you sail.
Royal Castle (Pau0142ac Kru00f3lewski)
Stunning official residence of Polish monarchs with opulent interiors, royal chambers, and art collections spanning centuries. Offers panoramic views of the Vistula River and Old Town from its terraces.
Book Royal Castle (Pau0142ac Kru00f3lewski) from $10Warsaw Uprising Museum
Powerful interactive museum documenting the 1944 Warsaw Uprising with personal stories, artifacts, and multimedia exhibits. Essential for understanding modern Polish history and resilience.
Book Warsaw Uprising Museum from $8POLIN Museum of Polish Jewish History
World-class museum exploring 1,000 years of Polish Jewish life through exhibits and archaeological artifacts. Features stunning architecture and the renowned 'wooden synagogue' core exhibition.
Book POLIN Museum of Polish Jewish History from $12Vistula River Walk & Modern Districts
Scenic riverside promenade with parks, beaches, and cafes offering views of both historic and contemporary Warsaw architecture. Perfect for leisurely strolling and experiencing local life.
Book Vistula River Walk & Modern Districts on ViatorPractical Tips for Cruise Passengers
- Polish currency is Zloty (PLN); ATMs widely availableu2014USD/EUR exchanged at poor rates. Cards accepted in most establishments.
- Old Town is compact and walkable, but wear comfortable shoes on cobblestone streets; allow time for security queues at museums.
- Book shore excursions early if time is limited; public transport requires navigation and language skills for first-time visitors.
- Most museums have reduced hours on Mondays; plan accordingly to maximize limited port time.
- Tap water is safe to drink; cafes and restaurants in Old Town convenient but pricieru2014venture into side streets for authentic dining.
Frequently Asked Questions
Walking is not practical from Czerniaku00f3w Terminal as it's 10-15 km from Old Town. Use taxi, organized excursion, or public transport for easier access.
Typical port stay is 12-16 hours, allowing 4-6 hours for shore exploration after disembarkation and pre-departure return requirements.
Visit the UNESCO Old Town and Royal Castle for iconic Warsaw culture and history, or choose the Warsaw Uprising Museum for deeper historical insightu2014both capture Poland's remarkable resilience.
Book your Warsaw shore excursion in advance to maximize time exploring this historic capital and avoid missing your ship's departure.
Compare sailings and book with no fees — best price guaranteed.




