How to Book a Sir Lancelot Medieval Dinner in Budapest

Walk down Podmaniczky utca on any given evening and the street looks exactly like what it is — a busy Pest cross-street near the Western Railway Station, full of late commuters, chain pharmacies, and traffic lights. Push open the heavy door at number 14, descend the stone steps into the cellar, and the next thing you see is a man in chainmail tying a bib around your neck. That whiplash, from twenty-first-century street to candlelit feasting hall in about forty seconds, is most of why people book Sir Lancelot.

I’ll be honest. I went the first time as a favour for a friend’s birthday, fully expecting a tourist trap. I came out three hours later genuinely full, slightly drunk, and grinning like an idiot.

Three guests in medieval attire eating at a long candlelit dinner table
The lights actually go this low at Sir Lancelot — the cellar runs on candles and a few wall sconces, so your phone camera is going to struggle. Lean into the ambience and put it away.
Candles flickering against a textured stone wall in a medieval-style cellar
Sir Lancelot is a cellar restaurant — bare stone walls, low ceilings, candles burning in every alcove. If you’re claustrophobic this might not be your night, but most people find it cosy rather than tight.
Two women in renaissance costumes sharing a vintage feast
The waitstaff are in full costume — long skirts and corsets for the women, tunics and leather belts for the men. They stay in character but only lightly. No one is going to call you “my liege” with a straight face for two hours.

What Sir Lancelot Actually Is

Sir Lancelot is a themed dinner-show restaurant in District VI — central Pest, three minutes’ walk from Nyugati railway station. It has been running since the late 1990s. The format hasn’t changed much: you book a slot, you turn up around 7 pm, you sit at a long communal-style trestle table, you get tied into a bib, and over the next ninety minutes or so you work through a multi-course platter while costumed staff bring out short performances between bites.

The performances are not a continuous show. Think more like a variety night cut into five-minute slots — a juggler appears, lights dim, music plays, juggler does his bit, juggler bows, lights come back up, you go back to your goose leg. Then twenty minutes later a swordsman wanders out and does a routine. Belly dancer next. Possibly a fire breather later if the room is feeling lively.

A rustic medieval-style feasting hall set with traditional dishes
The hall has rows and rows of long wooden tables. Most of the seating is communal so you’ll be near other parties — fine if you’re a group, slightly awkward for a quiet date.
A medieval knight in protective armor holding a sword
The sword routine is the most polished bit of the show. It’s choreographed, but the metal is real — I’ve watched the same performer twice and the rhythm of the strikes never changes.

Two things to know before you book. First: this is not historically accurate medieval cuisine. The menu reads like a medieval theme but the food is straight modern Hungarian, big and meat-heavy, served on metal platters because that fits the look. Second: the entertainment is short and bitty. If you’re hoping for a forty-minute jousting epic, you’ll be disappointed. The performances are punctuation between courses, not the main act. The food and the room are the main act.

How to Actually Book

You have two routes, and they’re not equivalent.

Booking through GetYourGuide (recommended for most travellers)

The Sir Lancelot listing on GetYourGuide is straightforward: pick your date, pick your menu, pay the deposit or full amount depending on the package, get an instant voucher. Around $47 per person for the standard menu including welcome shot and beer. The big advantage here is free cancellation up to 24 hours before, and the booking is in English with English customer service if anything goes wrong. The price is locked in HUF-equivalent at booking time, so you’re not exposed to forint swings.

Most importantly, you’re guaranteed a table. The restaurant tends to fill up with tour groups in summer and on weekends, and walking in cold at 8 pm on a Friday in July is not going to work.

Booking direct with the restaurant

Sir Lancelot’s own website takes reservations by phone (+36 1 302-4456) or by email through their booking form. They confirm within 48 hours. The form requires you to submit at least 72 hours before the desired date. There’s no instant confirmation — you wait for someone to email you back.

If you book direct you can sometimes negotiate the menu choice and get specifics nailed down (e.g., dietary swaps), but you lose the easy-cancel and you’re now dealing with a Hungarian-language phone line if you call. Email works fine in English.

Two clear shot glasses filled with a clear spirit
The welcome pálinka comes the moment you sit down. Apple is the standard but they have plum and pear too if you ask. Sip — it’s around 40% ABV and Hungarians don’t water it down.
A platter of grilled meats served with vegetables
This is what arrives once you’re past the soup. Three or four cuts on one platter, potatoes underneath, a heap of pickled vegetables on the side. Two people can finish one of these. Three is genuinely too many.

Three Ways to Spend the Evening

Sir Lancelot is the only proper medieval dinner-show in Budapest, so the “tour cards” below aren’t really competing experiences — they’re alternative dining-and-entertainment formats for evenings where the cellar isn’t right for your group. I’ve done all three.

1. Sir Lancelot Medieval Dinner with Drink and Show — around $47

The Sir Lancelot Medieval Dinner table setting with banners and metalware
This is the only Sir Lancelot booking on the major platforms. Three menu tiers — Lancelot’s Challenge, Butcher’s Sword, Beef Budapest Style — all variants of “very large amount of meat plus sides”.

This is the one to book if a medieval-themed night is what you actually want. Welcome pálinka, half-litre of draft beer, three courses, the full bib-and-flagon treatment, four to six short performances spread across about ninety minutes. Our full review goes through the three menu options in detail, including which one I’d order and which one I’d skip. Come hungry — portion sizes are not subtle.

2. Danube Dinner Cruise with Live Music and Folk Dance — around $93

A dinner cruise on the Danube past illuminated Budapest landmarks
If your evening is a date or a wedding-anniversary type situation, this is the better call. You’re outside, you’re moving, and the Parliament is the best-lit building in the city after dark.

About double the price of Sir Lancelot but a completely different experience — 90 minutes on the water, hot Hungarian buffet rather than table-served platters, live music and a short folk-dance act. Quieter, more romantic, view of the Chain Bridge and Parliament that you simply don’t get from a cellar. Read our take on the cruise — it’s a real alternative if you want a special night rather than a themed one. See also our guide on how to book a Danube cruise for the full breakdown of cruise options.

3. Hungarian Folk Dance and Concert (with optional dinner) — from $22

A Hungarian folk dance and concert performance
This one is the cultural option — a real Hungarian folkloric show rather than themed-restaurant entertainment. The dance is the point; the dinner is an add-on you can take or leave.

The cheapest of the three by a mile, and the most genuinely Hungarian. Eighty-minute folk performance with traditional czardas, music from the Carpathian Basin, real dancers rather than restaurant staff. Dinner add-on is decent but not the draw. Pick this if you want the cultural experience without the theme-restaurant scaffolding around it. Read our review for what to expect.

The Menu, Decoded

Sir Lancelot’s menu is written in deliberate medieval-flavoured English (or Hungarian, depending which version you pick up). It takes a moment to translate. Here’s what’s actually on each set menu, in plain language.

A hand reaches for roast chicken on a renaissance-style table
The set menus are heavy on roast and grill. If you’re vegetarian this restaurant will not work for you — there’s no vegetarian set, and ordering off-menu is awkward in a place where everyone else is getting carved meat brought out on a sword.

Lancelot’s Challenge

The biggest of the three. A welcome pálinka, then a hearty cheese-and-onion soup, then a platter of mixed grilled meats — usually pork knuckle, beef, sausage, sometimes chicken — with potatoes, pickled vegetables, and a hot dipping sauce. Dessert is something cake-like and sticky. This is the menu where people end up taking food home.

Butcher’s Sword

The middle option. A starter (often a small cheese plate or a pâté), then meats served on an actual metal sword propped over the platter — Tomahawk steak, smoked pork loin, and pieces of bacon-wrapped poultry. Sides as above. The “sword” presentation is the gimmick and it works visually. Food itself is good but not better than Lancelot’s Challenge.

Beef Budapest Style

The smaller, more refined option, if “refined” applies in this room. Beef fillet mignon layered with bacon and goose liver — a dish you’d actually find on a normal Hungarian fine-dining menu. Smaller portions overall, and the only one of the three I’d recommend if you don’t usually eat much. Still served with potatoes and the standard pickle plate, but you won’t be defeated by it.

A Hungarian mixer plate with beef pork chicken sauces and roast potatoes
This is roughly what arrives. The platter is heavy enough that the waitress puts both hands under it walking from the kitchen. Two large humans can finish it.
A bowl of Hungarian goulash with onions and meat
If you want to compare to “real” modern Hungarian — this is what a normal goulash looks like at a market restaurant. Nothing on the Lancelot menu is this saucy or this stew-like. The cellar leans roast and grill.

Drinks: the welcome shot is included on every set menu. So is the half-litre of draft beer. Wine is extra and the house red is fine. Avoid the cocktails — this is not a cocktail kitchen and they know it.

About the bib (yes, it’s mandatory)

You don’t get the choice. The bib goes on before any food arrives. It’s a long cotton thing, washed thousands of times, slightly damp at the edges. Embarrassing for ten seconds, then you forget it’s there. By the second course you’ll be glad of it — sauce flies. Trust them.

What’s Included, What’s Not

Read the listing carefully because there’s some confusion online about what comes with the booking. As of the current GetYourGuide listing, the package covers:

  • The set menu of your choice (three to four courses, depending on tier)
  • One welcome shot of pálinka per person
  • Half-litre of draft beer per person
  • The show — performances are not extra
  • The bib (you keep wondering if this is a joke; it isn’t)

What’s not included:

  • Additional drinks beyond your beer and shot
  • Tips — Hungarian custom is 10-12% on the meal, paid in cash
  • Coat check (a small charge at the door, usually a few hundred forints)
  • Taxis or transport to/from your hotel
A performer breathing fire at night
The fire breather doesn’t appear every night — it’s a rotating roster of performers and on quieter weeknights you’ll get jugglers and a swordsman without fire. Don’t book with the expectation that fire is guaranteed.
A woman performing belly dance in a blue costume
The belly dancer is on most nights. The act lasts about three minutes and she works the room — she’ll come up to your table and pull a guest in. If you absolutely don’t want this, sit at a back-row table.

Getting There

Sir Lancelot is at Podmaniczky utca 14, in the part of Pest that connects the Inner City to the Heroes’ Square end of Andrássy út. Two minutes’ walk from Nyugati pályaudvar (Western railway station), the easiest landmark to navigate to. Three minutes from Oktogon, where the Andrássy avenue trams all stop.

Budapest Nyugati Railway Station exterior
Nyugati station is your reference point. From the main entrance, head south down Podmaniczky utca for two blocks. The Sir Lancelot entrance is small — there’s a sign and a door. Easy to walk past if you’re chatting.
The Podmaniczky-Vigyazo mansion in Budapest
The Podmaniczky family — the street is named after Frigyes Podmaniczky, a 19th-century Budapest urbanist — also have a mansion in the city. Useful trivia for your taxi driver if you need to clarify which Podmaniczky street.

By metro: M3 (blue line) to Nyugati pályaudvar, then walk. The M3 is the line you almost certainly used coming from the airport via 100E plus M3, so this is the same line.

By tram: tram 4 or 6 along the Grand Boulevard (Nagykörút) stops at Nyugati. Two of the city’s busiest tram lines — Hungarians use them like buses, they run every couple of minutes from 4 am to 11 pm.

By taxi or Bolt: tell the driver “Podmaniczky 14” or “Sir Lancelot étterem”. Both work. From the Inner City around the Chain Bridge, the ride is about 1,500-2,000 HUF — under five euros.

Walking from the Parliament area takes about fifteen minutes, mostly along Bajcsy-Zsilinszky út. If you’ve been on a Parliament tour earlier in the day, the dinner makes a natural follow-up — finish the building tour around 5, walk over slowly, you’ll be there by 6:30 with time for a coffee somewhere first.

Best Time of Year, Best Time of Night

Sir Lancelot is busy on weekends year-round. The shoulder periods — late March through mid-May, and September through early November — are when the room is full but not chaotic. Mid-summer (July, August) is peak tour-group season and the restaurant feels more like a coach-tour stop than a personal night out. December gets specifically interesting: they run a Christmas-themed version with mulled wine welcome instead of pálinka, and the room gets decorated with greenery on top of the standard banners. Worth doing if you’re already visiting the Christmas markets in the same week.

Time of night matters. The two main seatings are 7 pm and 9:30 pm. The 7 pm seating gets the full show — performers are fresh, the room fills steadily, you’ll be home by 10. The 9:30 seating is a different vibe: groups have been drinking elsewhere first, the energy is rowdier, performances tend to be shorter as performers wind down. If you’re with kids or older parents, take the 7 pm. If you want a louder party night, take the 9:30.

Long exposure of vehicles and tram lights on a Budapest street at night
Out the door at 10:30 with the Grand Boulevard trams still running every two minutes. The 4/6 will get you almost anywhere central in fifteen minutes — a serious advantage over restaurants in the Buda hills.

Sir Lancelot With Kids

Children love it, mostly. The bib is funny to them, the food is straightforward (chicken, potatoes, sausage), the show is short and punctuated. Most kids have a great time. Two genuine warnings:

First, the cellar is loud. By the second course there are two hundred adults eating, drinking, talking, and clapping at the performers. Sensitive kids may struggle.

Second, the fire breather and the swordsman both involve real fire and real metal. Tiny children sometimes get scared. The performers are professional and never come close enough to be dangerous, but the noise and the flame are real. Below age six I’d skip it.

If you’ve got kids and want a more relaxed Hungarian-themed night, the tuk-tuk evening tour followed by a normal restaurant works better. Sir Lancelot is a single-block experience — you commit to the cellar for two hours.

The Real History Behind the Theme

The “medieval Hungary” the restaurant is theming is a real era. The Hungarian Kingdom under the Árpád dynasty (10th-13th century) and then the Anjou kings (14th century) had a documented court culture of feasts, jousts, troubadours, and yes, costumed knights. The Visegrád Royal Palace upriver from Budapest was the centre of one of medieval Europe’s most celebrated courts. So while Sir Lancelot itself is a 1990s themed restaurant, the iconography it borrows is genuinely Hungarian.

15th century manuscript illustration of a medieval feast from the Lancelot romance
This is the actual source material — a 15th-century French manuscript of the Lancelot romance, showing exactly the kind of feast the restaurant is recreating. The bib, oddly, was historically accurate. From a 15th-century manuscript / Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)
Medieval manuscript illustration of Henry II at his coronation feast
Henry II at his coronation feast — manuscript illustrations like this are where the visual language of “medieval banquet” we all carry around in our heads comes from. The restaurant is borrowing from the same well. Anonymous medieval manuscript / Wikimedia Commons (CC0)
Medieval manuscript miniature of a jousting tournament
Jousting was the centrepiece of court entertainment in 14th- and 15th-century Hungary. The Sir Lancelot sword-fight act is the cellar-restaurant version of this — much shorter, much louder, no horses.

The character of “Sir Lancelot” himself, of course, is from the French Arthurian romances rather than anything Hungarian. The restaurant doesn’t claim otherwise. The whole place is a deliberately mashed-together medieval-Europe pastiche — French chivalry in the name, Hungarian food on the plate, generic Western European costuming on the staff, Ottoman-influenced belly-dancing for the entertainment. None of it pretends to be a museum exhibit.

Honest Drawbacks

I’ve been twice and recommended it to half a dozen people. It’s not perfect. Things to know.

The performances can feel thin. Five-minute juggling acts, a swordsman doing a routine you’ll forget by the end of the evening. If you’re hoping for a Cirque du Soleil-grade variety night you’ve come to the wrong cellar. Treat the show as garnish on the meal, not the meal itself.

It’s not wheelchair accessible. The cellar is reached by a flight of stone stairs and there’s no lift. The bathrooms are also down. If anyone in your party has mobility issues, this experience is not for you and the restaurant doesn’t pretend otherwise.

Vegetarian options are basically nonexistent. The set menus are all meat. They’ll plate you something off-menu if you call ahead, but it’s an afterthought — you’ll get cheese, potatoes, and grilled vegetables while everyone else is eating Tomahawk steak. Genuinely worth picking the food walking tour route instead if you’re vegetarian.

The bill won’t split. Confirmed by the restaurant: they bring one bill to the table, end of negotiation. Bring cash if your group of eight is going to need to divide the meal. Card splits at the till are slow and the staff don’t love doing it.

It’s loud. Couple of hundred adults eating and drinking in a stone cellar with a low ceiling — the acoustics work for atmosphere and against quiet conversation. Don’t book this for a first date where you’re trying to actually talk.

Tour groups happen. Some weeknights you’ll be in a room mostly full of one tour bus from a single country. The energy depends entirely on which tour bus. Random Friday with mixed bookings is the best night.

A woman in a vintage dress at a candlelit feast
If you’re going to do this, commit to it. The half-bored couple at the end of the table picking at their food and looking at their phones is having the worst time of anyone in the room. The people in costume are having the best.

Pairing It With the Rest of Your Day

The dinner ends around 10 pm if you take the 7 pm seating. Half a dozen good things to do afterwards within walking distance.

The most natural pairing: a ruin bar pub crawl. The ruin bar district (Erzsébetváros, around Kazinczy utca) is a fifteen-minute walk south. Dinner at 7, finish at 10, fall into Szimpla Kert by 10:30 — the standard Budapest weekend stack.

If you’d rather see the city lit up, the late-night Danube cruise options run until midnight and the boats are quieter than the dinner cruises. Parliament after dark is one of those views you’ll remember.

For the morning after — go to the Széchenyi thermal baths and let the heat sweat the goulash and pálinka out of you. Or take the Gellért thermal baths on the Buda side if you prefer the Art Nouveau setting.

Buda Castle illuminated at night above the Danube
If you’ve still got energy after dinner, the walk along the Danube to Chain Bridge takes twenty minutes. Buda Castle is lit up till midnight from across the river. Photo by Ivanhoe / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)
St Stephens Basilica illuminated at night in central Budapest
St Stephen’s Basilica is six minutes’ walk from Sir Lancelot. The square in front is one of the better late-night photo spots in the city — the basilica is floodlit and the light bounces off the cobbles.

What I’d Order

If you’ve never been: Lancelot’s Challenge. It’s the cliché order and there’s a reason — you came for the experience, the experience is “huge medieval feast”, and the Challenge is the most-feast version. Yes, you’ll take leftovers home. That’s also part of the cliché.

If you’ve been before: the Beef Budapest Style. Smaller, more refined, the bacon-and-goose-liver fillet is good cooking that holds up against a normal Budapest restaurant. More about flavour than presentation.

If you don’t eat much: skip Sir Lancelot entirely and go to a normal restaurant. The whole point of this place is volume.

Metal goblets and platters arranged on a red tablecloth in renaissance still life
The metalware is consistent throughout — pewter goblets, iron platters, no porcelain anywhere. Looks great in photos, weighs a tonne to lift if you’re trying to drink delicately.

Frequently Useful Things to Know

Dress code: none. People turn up in jeans, in suits, occasionally in actual costume. Don’t wear white — see earlier note about flying sauce.

Languages: the staff handle Hungarian, English, German, and at least one of them speaks Italian. Menus exist in all four.

Payment: cards (Visa, Mastercard, AMEX) and cash both work. They accept HUF and euros (poorly converted, so prefer HUF). The SZÉP card is accepted.

Reservations: 72 hours minimum lead time direct, instant confirmation through GetYourGuide. In peak weekends, book a week ahead.

Cancellations: 24 hours free on GetYourGuide. Direct bookings vary — sometimes a deposit is non-refundable.

Accessibility: not accessible. Stairs only, no lift.

Photography: allowed. Flash looks worse than ambient — turn it off and lean on shutter speed.

Smoking: not inside. Courtyard at street level for smokers between courses.

The Frigyes Podmaniczky Memorial in Budapest
Frigyes Podmaniczky, the 19th-century Budapest urban planner who has the street named after him. He’s also responsible for much of how Pest is laid out today — useful trivia if you want to seem clued in to your tour group.
Budapest architecture and church vista on a sunny day
The walk back from Sir Lancelot toward central Pest takes you past the Western Railway Station and on toward Bajcsy-Zsilinszky út — solidly central, well-lit, safe at night.

So Should You Book It?

Yes, if any of the following describe you. You’re in Budapest for at least three nights and have already done the Castle, the Parliament, and a thermal bath. You’re travelling as a group of three or more. You like food in volume. You’re cheerful about being in costume-adjacent for two hours. You don’t mind a bit of sauce on your shirt.

No, if any of these. You’re vegetarian or vegan. You have mobility issues. You’re on a tight budget — $47 plus drinks plus tip is real money. You wanted a quiet, conversational dinner. You hate the kind of restaurant where someone might call you “good sir” while you eat.

For everyone in between, it’s a worth-doing-once experience. The food alone is enough — the show is a bonus. And you’ll have a ridiculous photo of yourself in a bib gnawing on a chicken leg, which is the kind of holiday photograph that ends up framed three years later.

A knight in full armor at a medieval reenactment
One last thing about the cellar — it’s actually a former wine cellar from the 19th century, repurposed in the 1990s. The vaulted brickwork is real, even if the knights in it are theatrical.
Knights in colourful medieval jousting armour
The full medieval-cellar fantasy is really only a Sir Lancelot kind of experience in Budapest — none of the other Hungarian dinner shows commit to it the way this one does.

Other Budapest Evenings Worth Booking

If Sir Lancelot is your first themed dinner of the trip, you’ll probably want a couple of contrasting nights to balance it out. The Buda Castle evening walking tour is the obvious pairing — historical context, no costumes, ends with the city lights coming on. For something more unusual, the vampires and myths night tour covers the city’s actually-fascinating folklore, very different from medieval pageantry.

For a less-themed Hungarian night, look at the Cinema Mystica immersive show or the Cat Museum if you’ve got an eccentric afternoon to fill. And if you haven’t crossed off the Castle Hill yet, the Buda Castle cave tour takes you under the hill itself — another underground Budapest experience that pairs naturally with a cellar restaurant. The tuk-tuk tour is a fast way to see the central sights in two hours if you’re tight on time.

For day-trip range, the Danube Bend day trip takes you to Visegrád where the genuine medieval royal palace was. Cellar dinner one night, actual ruined palace next morning — both halves of the medieval-Hungary experience.

Affiliate disclosure: some links above go to GetYourGuide and Viator. If you book through them, we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.