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Things to do in Tallinn, Estonia, include exploring the medieval charm of Tallinn Old Town. This area covers approximately 113.2 hectares. You can also visit Toompea Castle, located on Toompea Hill, which offers panoramic views of the city. Be sure to see the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral with its distinctive onion domes, a fine example of Russian Revival architecture.


Vanalinn
Medieval streets, colorful guild houses, and skyline views make Old Town unforgettable. Wander cobbled lanes, climb Toompea for city panoramas, and linger in cozy cafés.
Quick facts: Cobblestone streets shimmer under warm streetlights, while small cafés and artisan shops nestle in narrow alleys that feel like walking into a fairy tale. Ascending narrow staircases to aged towers offers sweeping views of red-tiled rooftops, and centuries-old guild houses and pharmacies continue to welcome both locals and visitors.
Highlights: Slip down narrow cobblestone streets beneath wrought-iron lanterns and you might hear a cappella choirs practicing in vaulted courtyard cellars, their voices echoing off 15th-century stone walls and red-tiled rooftops. Local confectioners still hand-paint marzipan figures with recipes dating back to the 16th century. Some evenings, a costumed town watch sounds a wooden horn at 9:00 p.m., a charming tradition marking the closing of the old gate.


Perched on a limestone bluff, Toompea Castle anchors Tallinn's history and politics. Stroll medieval walls, enjoy sweeping Old Town views, and admire the pink parliament building.
Quick facts: From the hilltop terrace, watch medieval red roofs spread out while a tall baroque spire stands out against the skyline. Guided tours reveal a hidden prison cell beneath the thick walls. A pink-and-white tower topped with a golden weather vane houses the national parliament, and the surrounding limestone slopes offer calm walking paths with broad views.
Highlights: Climb the limestone hill said by locals to be about 20 meters high, and you'll find a 46-meter medieval tower where the Estonian blue-black-white flag is ceremoniously raised overlooking the city, a ritual linked to the 1918 independence movement. Legend says the hill was formed from the tears and stones of Linda, the mythical mother of the nation. On quiet evenings, you can almost taste the salt in the air and hear the flag's nylon flutter against the tower's stone walls.


Iconic onion-domed cathedral showcasing lavish Russian Revival architecture on Toompea Hill. Walk through glittering mosaics, carved iconostasis, and candlelit interiors.
Quick facts: Onion-shaped domes sparkle with gold and green tiles, while mosaics and carved stonework make the facade a magnet for photographers and curious visitors. Inside, a stunning iconostasis and layered frescoes fill the space with the faint scent of beeswax and incense, creating a striking contrast to the medieval streets outside.
Highlights: Built from 1894 to 1900 by architect Mikhail Preobrazhensky, the cathedral’s onion domes are heavily gilded and shine like molten coins in the sunlight, especially at dawn when even the smallest mosaic tiles catch vibrant color. After independence in 1918, there were serious plans to demolish the cathedral and reuse its stones for national monuments, but costs and strong public opposition stopped the idea.
After traveling to 30+ countries, there's one thing I wish someone had told me from day one, and it completely changed how I experience new cities.
Free walking tours. Yes, actually free. No credit card needed. No catch.
Local guide, 2-3 hours
Major sights, hidden gems, local stories
100% tip-based
Guides earn only tips, so they give their absolute best
You tip what feels right
At the end, just tip whatever you feel is right
I've done these in dozens of cities and they've been the highlight of almost every trip. If you're visiting Tallinn, Estonia, do this on your first day. You'll thank me later.


Medieval heart of Tallinn with lively markets and cafés. Walk the cobbled square, admire the Gothic Town Hall, and enjoy local street life.
Quick facts: Cobblestones gleam underfoot as open-air cafés and a centuries-old market fill the square with the aroma of roasting chestnuts and cardamom buns. Climb narrow wooden stairs to a Gothic council chamber where a small gilded rooster sits atop the spire. The view rewards photographers with rooftops appearing to tumble toward the sea.
Highlights: Look up to spot Old Thomas, the 16th-century weather vane and guardian installed in 1530, whose iron silhouette casts a crooked shadow over red-tiled roofs. Records from 1441 note the first public Christmas tree was set up in the square. Each December, the cobbles echo with the clink of wooden mugs as about 40 wooden stalls sell steaming glögi and honeyed gingerbread.


Baroque palace and landscaped gardens reveal Estonia's imperial era. Stroll ornate rooms, art galleries, ponds, and tree-lined paths for relaxed, photogenic exploring.
Quick facts: Marble-clad halls and sweeping Baroque facades open into a garden where fountains, formal flowerbeds, and whispering linden trees create picturesque postcard scenes. Summer concerts, hidden statues, and a labyrinth of gravel paths invite leisurely walks and sunlit picnics that feel both grand and intimate.
Highlights: Czar Peter the Great commissioned a Baroque palace in 1718 for Catherine I. On clear mornings, the pale facade and gilded stucco shine like warm pastry under a deep blue sky. In the park, long lime-tree-lined alleys and mirror-like ponds fill with the sweet scent of linden in late June. Visitors often follow the 18th-century avenue layout, as if retracing the footsteps of the original gardeners.


Major museum of Estonian art featuring striking modern shows and skyline views. Experience immersive contemporary exhibitions, historic collections, and a café on the top floor.
Quick facts: Step inside to wander through bright galleries where classical portraits sit beside bold contemporary artworks. The austere concrete architecture is softened by warm wood and abundant natural light. A rooftop terrace overlooks the park, while interactive displays and well-designed audio guides make the art feel surprisingly approachable and engaging.
Highlights: Designed by Finnish architect Pekka Vapaavuori and opened in 2006, the building’s sweeping concrete-and-glass atrium channels pale northern light across 20th-century oil paintings, causing Konrad Mägi’s skies and Nikolai Triik’s portraits to shift tones as the sun moves west. A charming local tradition sees visitors staying for after-hours sketch nights, adding quick ink drawings and postcard notes to a communal paper roll that numbers in the hundreds. These creased, coffee-stained pages are kept by curators as an unusual archive.


Explore huge historic ships and interactive naval exhibits on Tallinn's waterfront. Climb a real submarine, try flight simulators, and walk aboard century-old vessels.
Quick facts: Enter a vast hangar where a genuine wartime submarine rests in a shallow dock. The metallic silence and dim lighting make you feel like a secret stowaway. Interactive exhibits let you explore cramped control rooms, try historic navigation tools, and watch model ships glide through illuminated tanks. Even skeptics leave excited.
Highlights: You can explore a 59.5-meter submarine launched in 1936, ducking through a 60-centimeter hatch and feeling the cold riveted steel beneath your hand as guides point out bunks stacked like sardine cans. Sunlight pours through the curved corrugated roof of the old seaplane hangar. On some afternoons, a working periscope is lowered so visitors can take turns spying on a projected harbor panorama, the air thick with the scent of diesel and salt.


Oleviste
A soaring medieval spire with sweeping city and sea views. Climb narrow stairs to the observation deck for panoramic photos and a steeped-in-history atmosphere.
Quick facts: Ascend narrow spiral stairs to be rewarded with dizzying views from a spire once claimed to be the tallest building in the world. Repeated lightning strikes and dramatic rebuilds have left a mixture of architectural styles and a rich reputation among seafaring merchants.
Highlights: Climb the narrow wooden spiral to the observation deck and you’ll stand about 159 meters above ground, a height that made the spire reportedly the tallest structure in the world during the 16th and 17th centuries. Old maritime maps from the 1600s marked the spire as a seafaring landmark. You can still smell centuries of tar and oak in the stairwell while imagining the watchmen who rang bells warning ships and the town.


Teletorn
Panoramic views over Tallinn and the Gulf of Finland from Estonia's tallest structure. Ride the glass lift to viewing decks, a café, and a Cold War exhibit.
Quick facts: Step onto the glass-floored observation deck and watch the city shrink below you as a 314-meter spire pierces the sky. Hands-on exhibits explain how broadcasting once connected the region. On clear days, the view stretches over fifty kilometers. Sensors record strong gusts that make the structure sway gently, and a cozy café helps ease any vertigo with strong coffee.
Highlights: Rising 314 meters and originally built to broadcast live coverage of the 1980 Olympic sailing events, the tower’s slender concrete shaft and needle-like antenna make the skyline look like a radio mast stuck through a postcard. An elevator shoots you up to the glass observation deck at about 170 meters in roughly 30 seconds, leaving your ears popping and offering a dizzying panorama of rooftops, forests, and distant water beneath your feet.


Telliskivi Loomelinnak
Vibrant creative quarter blending street art, quirky shops, and cool cafés. Expect colorful murals, weekend markets, and lively bars in a repurposed factory setting.
Quick facts: Colorful murals and pop-up markets transform old industrial courtyards into a feast for the eyes and taste buds, where independent designers sell quirky fashion and street food fills the air with smoky, spicy fragrances. Expect experimental theater, craft workshops, and over a hundred creative studios packed into a small area, letting you move from a design shop to a pop-up gig in minutes.
Highlights: A group of renovated red-brick factory halls now houses dozens of independent studios, galleries, and quirky shops. The long-standing bar-restaurant F-Hoone fills the cobbled courtyard with the smell of fried onions and coffee. On summer weekends, the courtyard turns into an open-air flea and design market beneath strings of lights, where you can browse handmade ceramics next to walls covered in numerous vivid murals while DJs spin vinyl records.
Selected by City Buddy based on guest reviews and proximity to top attractions
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Kringel is a braided sweet yeast pastry shaped into a loop, often studded with almonds and pearl sugar, and served at weddings and celebrations as a symbol of good fortune.

Kohuke is a portable curd snack coated in chocolate that became an iconic Estonian treat during the 20th century, and many people enjoy it straight from the freezer for a refreshingly firm texture.

Mulgipuder mixes mashed potatoes with barley groats, it was a peasant staple from the Mulgi region that became Estonia's quintessential comfort dish, usually topped with butter and fried bacon.

Verivorst is a traditional blood sausage spiced and packed with barley, it is essential at Estonian Christmas tables and families still guard recipes handed down through annual butchering days.

Kama is a powder of roasted grains and peas mixed with milk or kefir, it dates back centuries and is still served cold with berries for a quick, protein-rich snack.

Vana Tallinn is a dark, spiced rum-based liqueur from Tallinn, its vanilla and citrus notes make it a favorite for warming cocktails and for drizzling over desserts.
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Old manors, forests, bogs and coastal walks.
Estonia’s summer beach town with parks and cafés.
Quick international trip across the Gulf of Finland.
Main domestic lines to Tartu, Narva, Valga and regional services
Regional services; close to airport and Ülemiste City
From TLL: tram 4 or bus 2 to city centre (~15–20 min); taxis and ride-shares widely available.
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Comments (8)
Kadriorg Park is peaceful and beautiful, locals were friendly, felt very safe walking at night.
Was hoping for lively nightlife, instead found quiet bars and early last calls, not ideal if you want late parties.
Loved the medieval vibe, but summer crowds and tourist prices in the center were more annoying than I expected.
Foggy mornings and sharp wind made photos moody, pack layers and a waterproof jacket even in summer.
Check museum opening days, many close Mondays or have late-free hours, saved us money by planning around them.