The Spanish Riding School - visitor information
So how do you get to see the Lipizzaner horses in action? Relatively easily it turns out, provided you can settle for less than a fully fledged performance.
The formal performances take place four to six times a month, usually on the weekend. Exceptions are when the school is touring and during much of July and August, when the horses are on their summer holidays in the country.
The Lipizzaner breed
History of the Spanish Riding School
Life of a Lipizzaner Stallion
The Lipizzaner Museum
Performance schedules, pricing and booking links are here.
There are alternatives, though.
Tuesdays to Saturdays, the stallions are trained in the winter riding hall between 10am and midday. This Morgenarbeit (morning training) is open to the public.
It doesn’t have the glamor or comprehensiveness of the gala performances, but the exercises are done to music and it’s a (relatively) cheap and easy way to see the horses undertaking some of their moves.
I say relatively cheap because you do need a ticket to see the training. It’s €12 for adults, with various reductions for senior citizens, kids etc.

Entrance to the ticket office
© Mark Brownlow
When the performing stallions are away on tour, the Morgenarbeit is replaced by a one hour workout session from 10am to 11am featuring student and apprentice riders with young stallions in training. This is open to the public, too, with tickets costing a base €6. See here for more details.
You can also take a guided tour round the riding school and stables. The cost is €15 for adults, with the usual reductions available. Details here.
Finally, if you want to see the stallions for free and you have plenty of patience, you can wait outside the stable areas for the horses to transfer from their accommodation to the training areas on days when there’s Morgenarbeit or a performance.
Stand outside the Lipizzaner Museum, facing the wall. To your right is the entrance to the stables. If you’re there just before, during and after the times of a session or performance, you should see some stallions walked past by their riders.
The question just remains, how do you get there? The visitor center and entrance to the Spanish Riding School is part of the Hofburg Palace area, underneath the giant dome (Michaelerkuppel).
You can best reach it on bus numbers 2A and 3A, stops Michaelerplatz and Habsburggasse respectively. Alternatively, it’s a short walk from subways U1 (Stephansplatz), U2 (Volkstheater, Museumsquartier or Karlsplatz), U3 (Herrengasse or Stepahnsplatz) and U4 (Karlsplatz) and from any stop on the trams 1, 2, D and J between the stops Dr.Karl-Renner-Ring and Oper/Karlsplatz.
Address: Spanish Riding School (visitor center and entrance), Michaelerplatz 1, 1010 Vienna
Website: http://www.spanische-reitschule.com/