Budapest has the Danube. This sounds obvious until you’re standing on the Chain Bridge at dusk and understand that the river is not an amenity but the city’s central fact — Buda on the right bank rising to a castle and a citadel and a Baroque quarter that looks like central Europe looked in 1900, Pest on the left bank flat and grand and running to the Parliament building, which is lit at night in a way that is among the most purely beautiful things any capital does to itself after dark. The thermal baths are the other fact: Budapest sits on roughly 120 natural hot springs and has been building bath houses above them since the Ottoman occupation in the sixteenth century. The Széchenyi in City Park and the Gellért on the river are architectural statements as much as wellness destinations; the Rudas, built by the Ottomans in 1566 and still operating on the original structure, is the one worth visiting in the early morning on a weekday when it is mostly locals.
The planning insight with Budapest is that it is an incomplete trip on its own. Five nights in Budapest is right; ten nights in Budapest is a search for things to do. The city earns its time and then is done. The Central Europe circuit — Budapest, Vienna, Prague — exists because the three cities are linked by rail, by the Danube, and by a shared Austro-Hungarian architectural history that you can read across all three; the train between them is not a logistical necessity but a meaningful part of the experience. The sequence we use for Indian clients is typically Budapest first (easier visa entry via Vienna airport, and the city rewards fresh attention), Vienna in the middle, Prague last. The reverse works; we route clients the other way when the Prague dates matter more.
The Four Seasons Gresham Palace is the correct answer to the hotel question in Budapest without much contest. It occupies a restored Art Nouveau building directly at the end of the Chain Bridge — the view from the riverside rooms is the Parliament across the Danube, and you can hear the bridge’s chains when the window is open. The Corinthia is on the Pest side in the old city and is the right choice for clients who want to be inside the ruin bar district in the evenings; the rooms are grand in a different way, more Austro-Hungarian ballroom than riverside light.