Auschwitz Tickets with Transfer from Krakow
About this activity
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Overview
If you want to learn about one of the darkest chapters of 20th century European history, you will have the opportunity with these tickets to Auschwitz from Krakow. The transfer will be made in an air-conditioned minibus from Krakow to Auschwitz, which is located about 50 kilometers away.
There you will have the opportunity to visit the two concentration camps of the Nazi period and the largest concentration camps ever built: Auschwitz 1 and Auschwitz 2 Birkenau. You will be able to visit both of them freely and manage as you wish the 8 hours of this tour.
- With this activity you will have tickets to the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, where you can learn about one of the most macabre contemporary histories of Europe.
- The transfer will be included and will take place in an air-conditioned minibus to Auschwitz.
- In this activity you will be free to manage your time as it is an unguided tour. You will also have information signs at different points of the museum to learn more about the history of the place.
What’s included
- Entrance to the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum
- Transfer from Krakow and back
- Travel in an air-conditioned minibus
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What to expect
Thanks to this activity, you will have the opportunity to learn about one of the most macabre stories of the history of Europe during the Nazi period. This is a visit to the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, where you will enter the Auschwitz 1 and Auschwitz 2 Birkenau concentration camps. You will depart from Krakow to Auschwitz in an air-conditioned minibus and at the end of the tour you will return in the vehicle to your hotel in Krakow.
In this activity you will be able to organize yourself in the way that best suits you, as you will not be accompanied by a guide. During the eight hours or so that the activity lasts, you will be able to manage your time to see the entire complex, which includes the crematoria, the so-called Wall of Death and the barracks where the Nazi prisoners lived.
The Polish government has preserved this place as a research center and also to pay tribute to the more than one million people who died there, more than 90% of them Jews, during World War II and the Holocaust.
In addition, you will have the opportunity to see different exhibits with items that were left behind during that period, such as uniforms or other objects that were used on a daily basis. You will have posters with the information you need to learn about the history of one of the most tragic places in recent history.
Also, remember that to access the complex, it is necessary to carry an identity document with you . If you do not have it, you will not be allowed access to the museum.