The Official (and Unofficial) Rules for Visiting Auschwitz


When I visited Auschwitz for the first time, I didn’t know about the rules for visiting Auschwitz.

When I say ‘rules,’ I don’t just mean the official rules (but of course, they are important too), but also the other behaviours that I should avoid on my visit, which aren’t specified on the Auschwitz and Birkenau website.

Walking around the former death camps, surrounded by the ghosts of those who perished there, I barely even spoke to the friend that I was with.

The two of us walked around Auschwitz and Birkenau in near silence, partly because we weren’t really in the mood for conversation, and partly out of respect for those who lost their lives in this godforsaken place.



However, while most people abided by the unwritten Auschwitz rule that one should be respectful and sensitive when visiting Auschwitz, there were exceptions, and their number wasn’t insignificant.

While I was visiting Auschwitz, I witnessed people laughing and joking, taking selfies, play-fighting and posing for photographs in front of the ovens where countless people’s bodies were incinerated.

One man walked out of the crematorium crying as his wife comforted him, all the while surrounded by groups of oblivious teenagers who continued to crack jokes.

Unfortunately, for some, the need to visit Auschwitz and pay one’s respects has become overshadowed by the feeling that Auschwitz is some sort of tourist attraction.



Tour companies in Kraków bring busloads of young tourists to Auschwitz and Birkenau each day and now, rather than going to Kraków with the purpose of visiting Auschwitz and educating oneself about the horrors that occurred there, visiting Auschwitz has now become just another ‘thing to do’ in Kraków.

Young lads that have flocked to Kraków for the cheap booze and beautiful women find themselves heading to Auschwitz to “get a bit of culture” before the drinking commences.

I personally had the misfortune of talking to a group of young Canadian men who had been kicked off the bus on the way to visit Auschwitz because they were drinking.

Yes. You read that right. 

They were pre-gaming on their way to a concentration camp. 



Unfortunately, Auschwitz and Birkenau are not unique when it comes to this type of behaviour.

I’ve witnessed the same at the Berlin Holocaust Memorial (where for some reason, people simply cannot resist taking selfies), the Sachsenhausen concentration camp and the Killing Fields in Cambodia.

It boggles my mind that people would visit Auschwitz for some kind of fun day out, and I cannot comprehend the mentality of people who think that taking a SELFIE at a concentration camp is okay, but apparently these things need to be spelt out to people, and so here I am to do just that.

Read on to discover both the official rules for visiting Auschwitz, as well as the unofficial Auschwitz rules.

I’ll also tell you everything you need to know about how to visit Auschwitz and Birkenau, whether you should pay for a guided tour, and my tips for getting the most out of your visit.


The Official Rules for Visiting Auschwitz


The official rules for visiting Auschwitz are pretty much common sense.

For example, you are not allowed to bring any weapons into Auschwitz.

The official Auschwitz rules laid out by the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum and Memorial itself are the following:

  • Don’t move, remove or damage anything at Auschwitz-Birkenau
  • Behave with the ‘appropriate solemnity and respect’ and dress ‘appropriately’ (I will delve into this more later)
  • The maximum size of bags and backpacks allowed to carry on the museum grounds is 30 x 20 x 10 cm
  • Don’t consume food, alcohol or cigarettes (this includes chewing gum)
  • Don’t enter with animals (apart from guide dogs)
  • Don’t enter with any vehicles (aside from prams and wheelchairs)
  • Don’t enter with flags, posters, banners or other promotional items
  • Don’t possess any weapons
  • Don’t play music
  • Don’t use mobile phones inside the exhibition buildings
  • Don’t enter under the influence of alcohol
  • Don’t use a drone
  • Don’t use flash photography or tripods inside the buildings


As you can see, most of these Auschwitz rules are obvious – most people wouldn’t think to start playing music or visit Auschwitz while drunk – but some of them are less obvious, like the maximum bag size for example.

However, while the rules listed above are the only official rules for visiting Auschwitz, there are definitely some unofficial Auschwitz rules, or etiquette.

Here are some unofficial rules for visiting Auschwitz.


The Unofficial Rules for Visiting Auschwitz


1. Don’t Complain


Visiting Auschwitz and Birkenau takes a full day.

Your feet will hurt.

You might get cold.

Maybe you’re hungry and can’t wait to get back to your hotel for a hot meal.

Well guess what?

The prisoners of Auschwitz were also cold, hungry and in pain, and I’m willing to bet that they felt it a lot more acutely than you!

Don’t whine about your minor discomforts when walking on the very soil that so many people really suffered on.

If anything, you should be counting your blessings while walking around Auschwitz, not moaning about minor aches and pains.


2. Don’t see Auschwitz-Birkenau as a tourist attraction


Yes, you are a tourist.

Yes, you are visiting Auschwitz.

No, Auschwitz is not a tourist attraction.

I genuinely believe that we have a duty to visit sites such as Auschwitz in order to educate ourselves about what we, as humans, have done to our fellow humans.

However, it is important to visit Auschwitz for the right reasons, and if you are not visiting Auschwitz because you genuinely want to learn about the horrors of the past, it might be best that you don’t go.



For example, when I was in Krakow recently, I met a couple of English lads in a bar. When they found out that I’d spent a lot of time in the city, they asked me for recommendations on what to do, saying rather sheepishly that they weren’t really interested in the ‘cultural stuff’ that included Auschwitz.

Honestly, I applaud them for being honest, and I’m glad that they decided not to go rather than to visit for the sake of it and probably wind up behaving disrespectfully (however unintentional it may be).

Visiting Auschwitz is not the same as going to see St. Mary’s Basilica, and we should be very mindful of our reasons for visiting a sight of mass suffering.

If you are visiting because you heard it was a ‘must-see,’ you want to take some Insta-worthy shots with deep and meaningful captions, and you feel like you need to tick it off your Krakow bucket list along with the salt mines and pierogi?

If you are then don’t bother.

There are tonnes of other things to do in Krakow, and visiting Auschwitz should be reserved for people who genuinely want to pay their respects.

auschwitz rules


3. Taking Pictures at Auschwitz


Are you allowed to take photos at Auschwitz?

Yes, for the most part.

There are a couple of places where flash photography is not permitted as it damages the exhibition (but yet still people choose to flout this rule and destroy history at the same time), but on the whole, photography is okay.

HOWEVER. 

Although you can take all the photographs you want at Auschwitz, just because you could, doesn’t always mean you should. 



Some people choose to take photographs of parts of the camp that resonate with them, not to share on social media, but for their own private memories.

Some people choose not to take any photographs at all because they don’t feel comfortable.

Both of these approaches are okay.

However, some things are just objectively not okay.

For example, it is never appropriate to take a selfie at Auschwitz, and honestly the concept of wanting to be IN the photograph at all is very odd to me.



I understand that people may want to take photographs of things such as the Arbeit macht frei sign, but to actually pose in front of the train tracks or the barracks?

There is no way you can convince me that you aren’t being disrespectful.

On my visit to Sachsenhausen, I actually saw a middle-aged couple posing in front of the ovens that were used to burn the bodies of countless innocent people.

Why?

Will they frame the picture and hang it on their bedroom wall?

That type of behaviour is incomprehensible to me.

rules for visiting auschwitz
Many people take pictures of the Arbeit macht frei sign


4. Dress Appropriately


In the official rules for visiting Auschwitz, the Auschwitz memorial centre state that you should ‘dress appropriately,’ but what does that mean?

What do you wear to Auschwitz?

Would you believe me if I told you that some people walk boldly around concentration camps wearing t-shirts sporting band names such as Megadeth or Slayer?

Megadeth might be your favourite band in the world, but maybe, just maybe it isn’t appropriate to be branding yourself with words like that when you are walking around a literal death camp.

I’m not saying that you have to dress the same way you would for a funeral, but just use your brain and realise that your neon yellow Full Moon Party singlet may not be the best choice of attire for visiting Auschwitz.

Just don’t wear anything too revealing, anything offensive or anything tone deaf, and you should be fine.


5. Don’t Laugh and Joke


Who are I, the fun police?

Well, actually yes.

I don’t care if your friend just made the funniest joke in the world about something completely unrelated to Auschwitz: it isn’t appropriate to laugh.

Auschwitz is a place for quiet reflection, not for comedy.

Even if you personally don’t feel affected by the things that you see when you visit Auschwitz, just remember that other people are affected, and if somebody who has lost family members in the gas chambers sees you and your mates cracking jokes, they may feel very upset.

auschwitz rules


How to Visit Auschwitz


There are 3 main ways to visit Auschwitz.

You can:

  • Visit on a guided tour with an independent tour company
  • Visit on a self-guided tour but book through an independent tour company
  • Visit Auschwitz by yourself


Visiting Auschwitz on a guided tour


The second time I visited Auschwitz, I paid for a tour package on GetYourGuide.

There are many tour companies based in Krakow where you can walk into and buy tickets, but not all of them are great (more on that in the next point), and the booking process on GetYourGuide is so quick and easy that this is the platform I recommend.

You simply visit the website by using the link provided, select the date and time you want to go on the tour, choose whether to add on a lunch box, and pay by card.

Your tickets will then be emailed directly to you, or you can download the GetYourGuide app and access them there.



The benefits of visiting Auschwitz this way are that you can get picked up and dropped off directly from your hotel, you get an English-speaking bus driver who will give you their recommendations for restaurants in Krakow, museums to visit in Krakow etc., the journey time is just 75 minutes, you can skip the queues (which will save you a lot of time), and you will also get an English-speaking guide to take you through the camps of both Auschwitz and Birkenau, as well as a private shuttle between the camps, which are 3.5 kilometres apart.

When I booked this tour, it cost just over 20 EUR, which I think is exceptional value.


Visit Auschwitz on a self-guided tour with an independent tour company


This is what my friend and I did the first time I visited Auschwitz, and to be honest I don’t recommend it.

We simply walked into a travel agency in Krakow and asked to be booked onto an Auschwitz tour.

We had to walk to a random part of town to be picked up and dropped off, we did not have a guide in the camps (not even an audio guide, which you will be given for free if you visit Auschwitz by yourself), and the only information we were given about the camps at all was on a leaflet.

This tour cost about the same as the one I outlined above, so in my opinion, it really wasn’t worth it – we basically paid 20 quid for a return bus journey.

However, if you’re not much of a planner and there are no available tours on either GetYourGuide or the official Auschwitz website, this might be your only option.


Visit Auschwitz independently


I never intended on booking an Auschwitz tour with GetYourGuide.

I had been to Auschwitz before and felt as though it wouldn’t be too difficult to get there and back myself, saving some money.

However, when I started looking into it, the cost basically worked out to be the same, hence why I ended up booking an organised tour.

Anyway, if you want to visit Auschwitz independently, the first thing you’ll need to do is reserve your spot on the official website.

Entry to the camp itself is free, or you can pay for one of the official Auschwitz guides to take you on a tour.



When I tried booking, about 5 days in advance, there were no free self-guided slots left, so the only option was to pay for a guide.

The guided tour costs 85 PLN, or about 17 euros.

To get between the camps, you can walk or take the free shuttle bus, which is either every 10 minutes or every 30 minutes, depending on the season.

To get from Krakow to Oświęcim, you can take a bus, which takes around 1 hour and 40 minutes.

It will cost about 16 PLN (or just under 4 EUR) each way, and you can book in advance on the MDA bus planner.

It’s definitely doable, but it does involve quite a bit of planning, and if you end up paying for a guide at Auschwitz, the cost is basically the same, which is why the option I recommend is a full guided tour.


Things to Know Before You Go


As I mentioned in the intro, visiting Auschwitz and Birkenau takes an entire day, and there are definitely some things that you can do to get the most out of your experience.

Here are my recommendations on planning a trip to Auschwitz.

  • Wear comfortable shoes – You will be doing a lot of walking, as well as a lot of standing still and reading the exhibition/listening to your guide. Trust me, you’ll want to be wearing comfortable shoes.
  • Wrap up warm – Unless you’re visiting in the height of summer, it could well be chilly. Poland isn’t the warmest country, and while you will mostly be inside at Auschwitz, the Birkenau portion of the tour is all outside, and you will be outside for around an hour.
  • Bring a form of identification – This doesn’t need to be a passport, it just needs to be something with your name on it. It could be a bus pass, student card, bank card or even a letter with your name on the top. This is to make sure that the name on your ID matches the name on the ticket, to prevent people from reselling tickets.
  • Bring lunch – You can’t eat or drink inside the grounds of the camps, but there are benches outside for you to sit and have a quick bite. Chances are, you’ll want to eat something in between visiting Auschwitz and Birkenau but you won’t have much time to stand in line at the café, so bringing a packed lunch is ideal.
  • Plan for the bus – The drive from Krakow to Oświęcim (the city where the camps are located), takes about an hour and a half. If you get travel sick, bring your medication. Bring a bottle of water for the journey, as well as anything else that you might need.
  • Don’t overindulge the night before – Krakow is a great place to party, but you will not want to wake up early and embark on a 7-hour trip that involves a lot of walking, concentration and emotion. Don’t drink too much the night before and get a reasonable amount of sleep the day before you visit Auschwitz.
  • Don’t try and cram too much in – some companies offer a combined tour to Auschwitz/Birkenau and the Wieliczka Salt Mine. Do not do this. This is far too much for one day and you will be too exhausted to enjoy the second half of the tour.
birkenau


Rules for Visiting Auschwitz | Final Thoughts


And there we have it – the official and unofficial rules for visiting Auschwitz.

I strongly believe that visitors to Poland owe it to themselves and to the victims of Hitler’s regime to visit Auschwitz and Birkenau. We cannot erase history, and we shouldn’t want to. We should want to pay our respects and educate ourselves about what our fellow humans have done before us.

If you can follow my guidelines on how to behave while you are walking around Auschwitz, Birkenau and other sights of mass tragedy, I implore you to go and visit them and learn about the atrocities committed not that long ago.

You can buy your tickets here.

However, if you want to walk around in a Megadeth t-shirt laughing, joking and taking selfies then perhaps skip the day trip to Auschwitz and visit a beer garden instead.


Do you agree with me? How do you feel about taking photographs at Auschwitz? Can it be done tastefully or is it never appropriate? What is the worst type of behaviour that you have witnessed at Auschwitz/Birkenau? Please let me know in the comments section so that other readers can know what else not to do at sights like this. 


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Visiting Auschwitz - Do's and Don'ts. While I was visiting Auschwitz, I witnessed people laughing and joking, taking selfies, play-fighting and posing for photographs in front of the ovens where countless people's bodies were incinerated. #auschwitz #poland
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26 thoughts on “The Official (and Unofficial) Rules for Visiting Auschwitz”

  1. It blows my mind that this has to be spelled out. I’ve never been to Poland but I have been looking into it and I think I would visit Auschwitz. I cannot imagine how unimaginably insensitive you would have to be to think this is ok, or even to be in that “lets take a selfie” frame of mind. Every time I’ve thought about going I’ve really thought about it hard because I’m really sensitive and just the thought of being in a place where so many were murdered makes me feel sick. In Barcelona, there’s the Montjuic Cemetery which you can take a guided tour of at night… There are several famous writers, artists and other well-known people buried there. I feel very … uneasy about the thought of taking a guided tour of a cemetery. I have been to the cemetery because they did a ceremony there for the last person executed in Catalonia by the Franco regime in 1974, Salvador Puig i Antich. I find cemeteries deeply moving even though a lot of people there probably passed away in relatively peaceful conditions, so I cant imagine being like “yayy Auschwitz selfie!”.

    I know some Spanish people who were living in Manchester who went to see a cemetery in Salford because our cemeteries are very different to theirs and they marked the occasion by taking selfies with the peace sign and tongues out around a few different graves. It’s not exactly the same because millions weren’t murdered there but the level of disrespect was insane.

    1. Can we bring a candle or paper hearts to be placed in memory of all the children and unborn children who died in Auschwitz ?

  2. The crass insensitivity of certain types of people is beyond belief. Thank god the majority of us are decent respectful human beings. As you rightly point out these places are open to the public for a very good reason – unfortunately some folks are too stupid to understand.

  3. I can’t even believe people actually do this sort of thing! It really shouldn’t be that difficult for people to just be respectful in a place like this. It’s not as if they don’t know what happened there before they visit. I visited a gaol in Melbourne and when it came to the place they used to hang people it made me very uneasy. I don’t know if I could bring myself to visit the concentration camps because of this but at the same time i feel like visiting somewhere like this gives a much greater perspective on life and history.

  4. It really is ridiculous, the number of people who are unaware of proper etiquette at travel destinations! So appalled at some of the photos people have captured at these places. Like what is running through their minds?! Thanks for sharing this post! Hopefully, this stops more people from behaving this way.

  5. For me, Auschwitz is a must-see, not because it is, but I am WWII nerd and I personally want to see where all horrors happened at a point. I want to see the extent those people went to torture humanity and never felt a thing. I find it really to understand why people can’t simply respect the place they’re in and behave as if they’re in a park or pub. I hope this post spreads the word and people visit Auschwitz paying more respect.

  6. I spend a lot of time in Mostar and Sarajevo. I am studying all I can about the domestic war. I’ve witnessed young backpackers regard places like the “sniper tower” in Mostar as nothing but a tourist attraction.. and have seen some rather inappropriate videos.. (hip hop music and glamor shots of the bullet casings they found) People show up drunk and laughing. It’s just weird.. this is a place where people killed innocent civilians.

    The whole IG thing too is just getting too weird and fake, and too many backpackers pretend to have a clue about the places they travel to.. but actually haven’t the faintest idea about, or any desire to know more about these places.

  7. I agree with all of the above .It seems that most younger people , although not all seem to lack introspection and the ability to focus on anything deeper than the trivial narcissistic .It’s sad that most younger people especially, know very little of Auschwitz and see it as a tourist destination ,A sombre disneyland.It is a pilgrimage to bear witness to man’s inhumanity to man and a reminder of humans potential for such darkness .It is a psychological journey and one that is lost on some people .I cannot comprehend this casual ignorance .It’s as though the West has become indifferent and so removed from anything other than instant gratification .

    1. You said it better than I ever could – it seems that a visit to Auschwitz is only ‘worth it,’ if you can get a nice Instagram picture, along with a few #neveragain hashtags and a nice poignant caption (preferably with a deep quote) so that people know you really care.

    2. I’ll have to disagree with this being just a “west” problem. I’ve lived in several places and traveled to even more! That problem you describe is worldwide!!! I do originate from that “west” country you are referring to…and it’s pretty bad there, but it’s also a very big country.
      I do agree with you on the main point of your comment. The generation coming up knows no other way and puts way too much importance on such things. Instead of seeing it as just a way to share things, it’s a huge attention seeker and ego boost for them.

  8. I’m visiting Auschwitz (hopefully, Ryanair permitting) this month (October) I will take a selfie at the Arbiet Mach freight sign but that is it, not for social media, not for friends, but for my own personal memory. I’ve wanted to go there & pay respects for a very long time. I’m not doing the tour, I’m going by myself to walk around in quiet reflection. The thought of people taking selfies in the chambers or oven simply repulsed me. People dont realise that wherever you walk at Auschwitz, that you are most likely walking on the very spot where people were murdered. It’s going to be very emotional but something that something inside me tells me that I simply have to do. God bless the fallen

  9. What do you do for food and drink if you are there all day? But there are silly people who go there to laugh at misfortune which goes to show how sick in the head they are. Most of them are drunk.

  10. It’s just unbelievable to me that these things need to be pointed out. But then when I look around at what society has become….it’s not only infuriating, but extremely sad.
    I’ve been reading about the Holocaust and survivors stories for at least 35 years. We visited Dachau last year and it was so very overwhelming for me. To stand where they stood, walked into the gates, to see where they once “lived”, slave labored, slept, suffered…broke my heart. But when we got to the crematorium, that took my breath away. That’s what really did me in and the tears really came. There’s a mass grave over by the ovens and it’s part of a garden that can be walked through. The gas chambers are at the beginning of the “newer” building of the “newer” ovens. It’s all just so surreal. To know that our fellow man could do this to another human…it’s just beyond any and all comprehension.
    Everyone was respectful, acting appropriately. There just seemed to be such a heavy cloud over the place.
    There’s so much detail I could give, but I will keep it to myself. It’s kind of personal I feel. We did take pictures. No pictures with either of us in them. I posted to my friends and family that we had gone and about SOME of the feelings the visit had brought up, but still I cannot bring myself to share any of the photos online. I want to, so others might see, but then I don’t, because it’s not a tourist destination.
    We would like to visit Auschwitz in the next few months. Every time I think about it I almost start to cry. I know it’s going to be so very overwhelming.
    I’ll NEVER EVER be able to comprehend ANY of this.

  11. I visited Auschwitz Birkenau alone last year, it has been a goal of mine for almost a decade because I’m interested in the holocaust and understanding the horrors that happened. I was also quiet the whole time, just thinking and relating with what I read, but almost no one else agreed with my behavior. I wish selfies were the worst thing but many groups were laughing and joking around.
    I sincerely wanted to punch one girl who entered the crematorium in Auschwitz, she was taking selfies and laughing with her friend in a place where no speaking is allowed. Afterwards there was a group of young adults smoking in front of where the gas chambers of birkenau used to be.
    That day was eye opening for me in a way, I was just so angry with the disrespect shown and I’m still pissed about it one year later. I lost most of my belief in the decency of humanity. I know there are great people out there, but to me they are the minority.
    I still wish to go back, it’s a somber place but it needs to be visited, reflected and addressed, but only by those with enough maturity to do so. I know people who say they’ll never visit because they wouldn’t be able to deal with it or do it right.
    My conclusion is: Please, just go if you’re able to understand that people died there, that this behavior is not okay and should not be treated lightly. Not only because TripAdvisor told you to, Also, if you’re at risk for depression or mental health diseases consider having some support when going or afterwards, or maybe waiting until you’re better.

  12. I think one of the problems could be how easily one can walk into the site through the front gate. I’ve seen a few videos now of YouTubers exposing selfie takers and what not and you just see people pouring in in all manner of dress and activity (as in eyes down on a screen). These sites are not that old. There is a tree next to the “Arbeit Macht Frei” gate that was there when the camp was in operation. It’s a living silent witness to the horror. Naked prisoners that had been viciously attacked by dogs were forced to stand under the tree once holding up signs that said something like “Hurrah. Welcome back.” to workers that had just returned from a mine. I had read about it from another article where a survivor wrote about that. It was something he witnessed. One of the prisoners had attempted escape, and a whole group of them were horrifically punished for it. (Forgive my memory, but it was a while since I had read that article, so my apologies if any of the facts are wrong or not exact.) This was one of the many many countless horrors of the camp.

    This isn’t a site one should be able to just walk into, especially with your eyes down on some screen. It’s not a place to visit because you happen to be traveling through Poland and you just happen to be in the area. It is definitely NOT A HAUNTED HOUSE AT AN AMUSEMENT PARK!!! I’ve heard of people going to visit literally treating it like this.

    I’ll never know if in my life I may ever visit the site. I too have studied about the holocaust for decades. It’s absolutely unreal that it in fact happened. For me to visit the site would an act of respect and understanding. To walk between the electric barbwire where so many walked only once and one way. To walk into the site. To bear witness to the gas chamber. The piles of shoes and other belongings. When you enter the gate, even though you may leave any time, you should still be feeling the dread and sadness of the place. Be silent. Tell the spirits who remain, that they will never be forgotten. Bring a flower or bring many flowers.

    I would say if I was in charge of the care taking of the site, I would have much more strict rules for visitors. All visitors would meet a guide at closed gates, who would address all of the visitors, give the rules, and the gate would open for the group. For anyone wanting to walk the grounds alone, they’d have to submit a form explaining why, before special permission was granted. Any visitor caught acting inappropriately – laughing, joking, taking selfies, fooling around, .. basically blatantly disrespecting the grounds, and no good excuse – I would enforce the following: That visitor is taken by security back to the main gate. They then have a choice – walk the grounds completely with a new tour group and at the end, write a short personal essay of what the site and tour meant to them. What did they learn? How did they feel? If they don’t want to do that, then have a taxi arranged to take them back to where they came from, and if they are a tourist – have their visa revoked. And yes, this might be extreme, but inappropriate behavior or visiting for the wrong reasons should NEVER be tolerated at such a site. It diminishes the memory of those who perished and is an insult to them and to survivors.

    1. Completely agree. I will say that when I visited for the second time on a guided tour, our guide did tell us not to take selfies, laugh and joke etc. and I didn’t see anybody doing so (like I did several years ago). This gives me hope that they are cracking down on it.

  13. This is mad! I remember visiting Sachsenhausen camp when I was about 17 or 18 in college and we all walked around silently with our audio guides taking everything in. It was such a solemn day that our chaperones even cancelled the evening activities they had planned for us because we all just needed to take the rest of the day to process what we’d seen and heard. We were teenagers and I can’t imagine any of us acting that way or even being in the mood to laugh and joke in that setting. It’s easily the most harrowing place I’ve ever been!

    I’m looking to visit Auschwitz this year and was hoping to attend without taking a guided tour (as I feel like they always rush you around too quickly) – does Auschwitz have the audio guides to provide information to un-guided guests like Sachsenhausen does? The ones where you press a number and it gives you info about that part, like at the Roman Colosseum/Vatican Museums etc? I can’t see any info about this on their website/other reviews but I note you did mention them in this post so wanted to clarify if possible please?

    1. I haven’t personally visited Auschwitz with the audio guides but I believe that they have them available. If you book online through their official website, it should tell you. Thanks so much for commenting!

  14. It’s above 30c in summer, so sounds like shorts and t-shirt of no shouting colors/messages – are acceptable…

    I’m in the area and would like to visit, but have a toddler in a pram – so self-guided is likely better for such cases, as the kid would not last a full guided day.

  15. Please note, While there are no rules about age for visiting Auschwitz, the memorial staff recommends that children under 14 should not visit.

  16. Hi, I am a guide at Auschwitz for nearly 20 years and this article is quite a good one, full of important remarks and tips, so thank you! I also tried to give people some idea of what the visit is like so that you can prepare so I made a website, where you can find updated route and the present rules (which change regularly). You can contact me through the site if you need more assistance, I’d appreciate any feedback on the content too. Regards, Lukasz
    https://visitauschwitz.info/

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