Budapest’s world-famous Christmas fair opens with horrific prices – PHOTOS
Blikk, a Hungarian tabloid, visited the world-famous Budapest downtown Christmas fair at the Vörösmarty Square yesterday, following its opening, and found horrific prices. Of course, that is relative. The prices might be high for a Hungarian purse and average income but may look low to foreign eyes.
We wrote HERE that Budapest’s Vörösmarty Square Christmas fair would open earlier than expected. The popular fair has been welcoming visitors since yesterday. The statue of Vörösmarty in the centre of the square is covered in a transparent “snow globe”, and an LED wall was built around the statue, which serves as a multimedia information point. In addition to the information content, visitors can participate in a community game activated by a QR code, HellóMagyar wrote.
Blikk, a Hungarian tabloid with the highest readers’ number, visited the fair and found high prices. Traditional Hungarian dishes like stuffed cabbage cost HUF 7,000 (EUR 18.5), while shashlik is HUF 5,000 (EUR 13.2), a slice of strudel is HUF 1,800 (EUR 4.75), flódni is HUF 1,900 (EUR 5). Some sellers ask for an extra HUF 400 (EUR 1) to wrap up the food. Meanwhile, hot tea costs HUF 1,000 (EUR 3), while hot chocolate HUF 2,200 (EUR 6.5), and you must pay HUF 1,350 (EUR 4) for a glass of hot wine. HERE is a recipe for stuffed cabbage, provided you want to prepare it at home.
Christmas fair at the heart of Budapest: delicious but expensive
One of the most popular dishes is traditional Hungarian goulash soup. In a plastic bowl, it costs HUF 4,500 (EUR 12), but you must pay HUF 8,500 (EUR 22.5) for a kettle. HERE we collected the 5+1 best places to try goulash.
Renátó Vida, a kitchen’s chef, said foreign tourists adore it and order it frequently. Their most expensive dish is beef. It costs HUF 9,900 (EUR 26.1), but is enough for two. Of course, side dishes cost extra. Grilled vegetables cost HUF 4,000 (EUR 10.5), and french fries and cabbage are cheaper. Tócsni costs HUF 2,500-3,000 (EUR 7-8) and is a perfect garnish to beef stew. HERE is a recipe.
Andrea and Litzia came from Italy and paid EUR 50 for two portions of tócsni, a stew and some french fries. They were surprised when they heard how much they had to pay and thought the prices were too high at the Christmas fair. But they added to the journalist of Blikk that the food was delicious. The tabloid highlighted that a seller said 490 out of 500 guests are foreigners.
Desserts are around HUF 3,000 (EUR 8). One of the most popular ones is steamed dumplings.
There is a cumpulsory cheap menu for those who cannot afford the expensive ones
If you do not have that much money, you can ask for a small menu for HUF 1,500 (EUR 4). For example, you may eat chicken stew with vegetables and fried potato for that price. It is a rule this year that customers must find hot meals for that much, but sellers do not advertise that.
Roasted chestnut costs HUF 2,500 (10dkg), last year it was HUF 2,200. One of the sellers said they could not raise prices as much as they should have, considering the price hike of Italian chestnut.
Importantly, you cannot pay in cash at Vörösmarty Square. That is a difference between that and the Christmas Fair in front of Saint Stephen’s Basilica (Advent Basilica), where you can use your paper money.
Read also:
- Where to find the best Christmas markets in Hungary – Check them out in THIS article
- Another shopping chain to be closed on 24 December in Hungary – Read more HERE
Here is a video of this year’s Christmas fair:
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8 Comments
Victor Orban – just this week, tells us, the Hungarian Inflation rate is in single digit figures.
Absolute rubbish, driven by propaganda from a Government, that to talk spread falseness of fact, never candour, non existent.
Why go to Budapest when you can go to the Vienna Christmas market for the same or lower price? Some people are going to come once and not come back but maybe they don’t expect return customers. I never eat or drink anywhere around Vorosmarty ter or Vaci utca. It’s just a tourist trap. You really have to know where to go in Budapest now to get a decent meal and not overpay. I can’t fathom how people who live there can afford anything. Even the price of a litre of milk is more than you pay in N. America. The only things that I find cheaper are meat and alcohol which is great if you want to live like a carnivorous boozer.
Absolutely Larry.
We have lived 5 minutes from Vorosmarty ter for number of years.
Just a tourist “rip off ” area.
Quality of Food is appalling and price just blatant robbery.
Know where to go in Budapest, but besides the tourist “rip offs” and they do it to us when Hungarians travel, if you don’t do your homework, is that its Hungarians ripping off Hungarians in lots of cases which is disgraceful.
Take your platinum credit cards to the Christmas Fair at Vorosmarty ter as the cost for a single is expensive let alone for a Family which is atrocious.
Let’s be fair by saying every city has tourist traps. It’s just somehow things have changed so badly in Hungary with prices. I did have one of the best steaks I have had at a non-descript place on Ferenciek tere this year. It was ten times better than what I got at a fancy place where I paid through the nose and left hungry.
I don’t know what everyone is kvetching about. People can vote with their feet (and wallets). If it’s too expensive for you, don’t buy it. The vendors put up these prices because, clearly, there are still people willing and able to pay. Why is that a problem, let alone one, according to good old Norbert up there, caused by Mr. Orban?! (Although, for Norbert, even him stubbing his toe on the coffee table is Orban’s fault!) Trying to make a profit by jacking up prices has been a tried-and-tested technique of purveyors of everything for millennia all over the world!
The whole thing is targeted at tourists. I’ve never even visited it in 15 years -let alone buying food there.
A similar article appears in the newspaper every year.
that is why last 2 years we go to Vienna and Slovakia for Christmas eve