The 1902 Klotild-paired Mátyás Palace on the Pest abutment of the Erzsébet Bridge, reopened in 2021 as a 130-room Marriott Luxury Collection. The marble-and-iron staircase is the most photographed hotel interior in the city; The Duchess rooftop bar overlooks the Danube and the Castle.
"The most beautifully restored Belle Époque interior in Budapest. Korb and Giergl's 1902 Mátyás Palace — northern twin to the Klotild — sat on the Pest abutment of the Erzsébet Bridge through eight decades of misuse before its 2021 reopening as a Marriott Luxury Collection. The marble-and-iron staircase is the single most photographed hotel interior in Hungary."
The Matild Palace is the northern twin of the Klotild Palaces, a paired Belle Époque set commissioned by Habsburg Archduchess Klotild von Sachsen-Coburg-Gotha-Koháry and built between 1900 and 1902 by Flóris Korb and Kálmán Giergl on the Pest abutments of the then-new Erzsébet Bridge. The original purpose was mixed residential and shop use; the Mátyás Palace operated as the venue for the Belvárosi Café (one of Budapest's great early-20th-century literary cafés) and through the 20th century declined into neglected office space and a series of indifferent ground-floor uses. The restoration began in 2017 under owner Mellow Mood Hotels and the BDG Architects design programme; the hotel reopened in May 2021 as Matild Palace, A Luxury Collection Hotel — Marriott's seventh Luxury Collection property in Central Europe.
The 130 rooms (incl. 26 suites) are arranged across the building's five floors, with the public rooms — the marble-and-iron central staircase, the Mátyás Suite (the original archducal apartment), the Spago dining room, the rooftop Duchess Bar — restored to original dimensions. Standard Premium rooms run 28–32 square metres; Suites 50–110 square metres. The named suites — the Mátyás, the Klotild, the Matild Royal — are the headline units, with original ceiling frescoes, marble fireplaces, and full Danube or Erzsébet Bridge views. The marble bathrooms and the contemporary Italian fittings are notably more design-forward than the parallel offering at the Four Seasons or the Ritz-Carlton.
Spago Budapest by Wolfgang Puck on the ground floor is one of two Wolfgang Puck Spagos in Europe (the other in Istanbul) and runs the most ambitious dining programme of any Budapest hotel — Puck's California-Mediterranean menu adapted to Hungarian seasonal product, with dégustation menus through dinner service. The Duchess rooftop bar (named for the original archducal owner) has the most photographed Danube-and-Castle view of any Pest hotel rooftop and operates as a serious cocktail destination from late afternoon into the evening. Wally's Bar by the staircase is the in-hotel piano bar; the Pâtisserie at the entrance handles the morning coffee and Esterházy-cake counter. The wellness floor in the basement runs a 10-metre indoor pool, an Omorovicza-skincare-line spa, and a Technogym fitness centre.
The position on the Pest end of the Erzsébet Bridge is the property's structural advantage: Váci utca (the central pedestrian shopping street) at the front door, the Vörösmarty tér Christmas market three minutes north, the Central Market Hall four minutes south, the Danube embankment thirty seconds west, and the bridge to the Buda thermal baths (Rudas, Gellért) at the corner. Buddha-Bar Hotel in the southern Klotild Palace is across the street; Párisi Udvar is three minutes east at Ferenciek tere; Four Seasons Gresham Palace is six minutes north along the embankment.
Matild Palace is the obvious milestone-anniversary answer in Budapest. The Mátyás Suite or the Klotild Suite for the headline night; The Duchess rooftop for the cocktail hour overlooking the Castle floodlit; Spago by Wolfgang Puck for the dinner; the marble staircase for the photo. Every component is the most photographed in its category in the city.
For Budapest honeymoons at the Belle Époque end of the spectrum, Matild is the strongest answer below the Four Seasons — the design language is more contemporary, the Spago dinner programme is more ambitious, and the Erzsébet-Bridge address makes the Buda thermal baths (Rudas, Gellért) a five-minute walk.
A Budapest proposal at Matild Palace runs through The Duchess rooftop at sunset (the Castle and Chain Bridge floodlit, the bridge tram passing below) and the marble staircase the next morning. The concierge handles the photographer-and-flowers booking competently.
Váci utca 36
1056 Budapest
Hungary
Erzsébet Bridge 30 seconds; Vörösmarty tér 3 minutes; Central Market Hall 4 minutes; Ferenciek tere Metro 3 minutes; Rudas Baths (across the bridge) 8 minutes
130 rooms (incl. 26 suites)
Premium Rooms from EUR 420/night
Junior Suites from EUR 720/night
Mátyás Suite from EUR 1,800/night
Matild Royal Suite from EUR 4,500/night
Check-in: 3:00 PM
Check-out: 12:00 PM
Building 1902 (Mátyás / Klotild Palace twin); Marriott Luxury Collection from May 2021
Spago Budapest by Wolfgang Puck
The Duchess rooftop bar
Wally's Bar (piano bar)
Matild Café Pâtisserie
10-metre indoor pool, Omorovicza spa
Restored Korb & Giergl marble staircase
Marriott Bonvoy / Luxury Collection
From EUR 420/night. Junior Suites and the Mátyás Suite book two to three months ahead for spring and autumn weekends; four months for the December Christmas-market weeks. Marriott Bonvoy points are accepted; the Luxury Collection redemption tier is one of the best-value Marriott awards in Central Europe.
Book This Hotel →179 rooms inside the 1906 Art Nouveau Gresham Palace, opposite the Chain Bridge — the headline grand-hotel answer in the city.
110 rooms inside the 1913 Brudern House Moorish-Gothic shopping arcade with the original Zsolnay-tile cupola.
The southern twin Klotild Palace across Váci utca from Matild — 102 rooms with the Buddha-Bar restaurant on the ground floor.