每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
Yes — this is one of the strongest advantages of booking a private transfer. Vác is the southernmost town on the Danube Bend, and your Daytrip driver can route your day to include additional stops like Visegrád or Esztergom further north. When booking, simply add your preferred stops and your driver will handle the logistics. This kind of flexible, multi-stop itinerary is difficult to manage by public transport and nearly impossible to coordinate through a standard tour.
Your Daytrip driver picks you up directly from your Budapest hotel or accommodation and drops you at the heart of Vác — no train schedules to navigate, no luggage to haul between platforms, and no figuring out return connections on the fly. You set the pace: linger at the cathedral, spend extra time at the Tragor Ignac Museum, or simply soak up the riverside atmosphere. When you're ready to head back, your driver is there.
Three to four hours is enough to cover the major landmarks comfortably without rushing. The compact baroque town center keeps walking distances short, so you can move between the cathedral, the episcopal palace, the triumphal arch, and the riverside promenade without losing time. If you want to explore the Roman and medieval artifact collection at the episcopal palace museum in depth, or simply sit by the Danube for a while, budget closer to half a day.
Absolutely. Vác sits just 34 km (21 miles) north of Budapest along the Danube, making it one of the most rewarding and undervisited day trips from the capital. Unlike the more tourist-heavy stops on the Danube Bend, Vác rewards curious travelers with genuine depth — a 18th century cathedral modeled on St. Peter's Basilica in Rome, a triumphal arch built for an empress who never saw it, and 200-year-old mummies displayed in hand-painted coffins. It's the kind of place where history feels personal rather than packaged.
Three stops stand out. The Cathedral of Vác is an imposing baroque landmark deliberately styled after St. Peter's Basilica — its scale feels almost improbable for a town this size. The Triumphal Arch is one of Central Europe's architectural oddities: built in 1764 to welcome Empress Maria Theresa, who entered from a different direction and never actually passed through it. And the Tragor Ignac Museum houses a collection of 200-year-old mummies discovered in a hidden crypt beneath a church — fully clothed, remarkably preserved, displayed in vividly painted coffins.
Most historic Hungarian towns were shaped by a single dominant era. Vác was remade repeatedly — Roman foundations, medieval growth, total destruction during the Mongol invasion of 1241, rebuilding by German colonists, Ottoman occupation, destruction again in 1686, then a plague in 1776. Each cycle left a layer. The result is an unusually textured town where a baroque city hall sits on a medieval foundation, homes still contain 13th century cellars, and an 18th century cathedral stands where much older structures once did. That layered, accidental quality is what makes wandering Vác genuinely interesting rather than simply picturesque.