Café Sacher Vienna Review: Original Sacher-Torte at One of Vienna’s Top 3 Cafés, Austria

Café Sacher Vienna Review: Original Sacher-Torte at One of Vienna’s Top 3 Cafés, Austria

Vienna, Austria is home to a few legendary coffeehouses

often referred to as Vienna’s top 3 cafés.

Café Sacher, Café Demel, and Café Central

are the big three, and on this trip,

I made it to Sacher and Demel.

Today’s post is a quick review of Café Sacher, one of the most iconic stops for anyone looking for the original Sacher-Torte in Vienna.

Café Sacher Wien

Café Sacher
Philharmoniker Str. 4, 1010 Wien, Austria

Café Sacher is located on the ground floor of Hotel Sacher.

Opening hours are from 7:00 AM to 11:00 PM.

Original Sacher-Torte at Café Sacher Vienna: Wait Times

This place is incredibly popular,

so from around 10 AM through the late afternoon,

you should pretty much expect a line.

If you want to avoid waiting, go before 9 AM

or come very late at night.

That said, daytime is definitely the prettiest time to visit—

the natural light is lovely,

and it really feels like the perfect hour for coffee in Vienna.

We were staying at Hotel Sacher,

and hotel guests can enter without waiting.

Even if the café is full, guests are basically given priority

and placed first in line for the next available table.

My Hotel Sacher Vienna stay review

Café Sacher Vienna Visit Tips

original Sacher-Torte at Café Sacher Vienna entrance

The hotel entrance and the café entrance are separate,

and the café itself doesn’t have just one entrance either.

Café Sacher entrance map

On the map, both spots marked with a V

are entrances to Café Sacher,

but they are not connected inside.

They’re both Café Sacher,

just different dining spaces.

The waiting lines are separate for each entrance too.

If you’re visiting, I’d recommend the side marked with the blue V.

It’s larger and prettier overall.

The space you usually see in YouTube videos and blog posts

is the blue-side second-floor dining room.

The red-side space is smaller and only one floor,

and since we entered through the passage connected to the hotel,

we ended up in the red-side hall.

Inside the Café

We used the smaller hall on the red-V side,

but honestly, it was still beautiful and full of charm.

I’d just line up wherever the wait is shorter.

Café Sacher interior

This is the overall look of the interior.

After staying at Hotel Sacher, I got the feeling that

this deep red color is one of the brand’s signatures,

and the café uses that same palette throughout.

chandelier and paintings inside Café Sacher

The chandeliers and framed artwork on the walls were gorgeous too.

Vienna Top 3 Cafés: Café Sacher Menu

A quick look at the Café Sacher menu.

The must-order original Sacher-Torte cake costs

€9.9 per slice (about $11),

or €54 to €73 for a whole cake (about $58 to $79), depending on size.

Coffee drinks included an Americano (black coffee) for €6.7,

Sacher Mélange for €7,

and Einspänner for €7.5, among others—and everything can be made decaf.

There were also breakfast dishes

and plenty of other desserts,

but I didn’t photograph the full menu (you can check Google Maps for that).

boxed whole Sacher-Torte

This is how they package the whole cakes.

The shelf life is about two weeks,

which is surprisingly long for a cake,

so it actually makes a nice gift to bring home.

Coffee Tasting

coffee and dessert at Café Sacher

Honestly, when you stay at the hotel,

the Sacher-Torte, coffee, and even brunch-style dishes

are already included at breakfast,

so it did feel a little unnecessary to pay again.

But Café Sacher is such a famous institution in Vienna

that I still wanted to experience the café itself separately.

affogato iced coffee and Sacher-Torte

We ordered an affogato, an iced Americano, and Sacher-Torte.

affogato at Café Sacher

The affogato was €7.9 (about $8.50),

and you can switch it to decaf, which is what I did.

Coffee is good pretty much everywhere in Vienna,

so of course this was good too.

That said, because of the vanilla ice cream,

it ended up tasting a little more ordinary than I expected,

so I liked it slightly less

than when I just had the coffee on its own.

Sacher-Torte

original Sacher-Torte slice

Café Sacher in Vienna, Austria is the only café

allowed to use the menu name

Original Sacher-Torte.’

Sacher-Torte close-up

Sacher-Torte

is a chocolate sponge cake layered with apricot jam

and coated in a thick chocolate glaze.

It was first created in the 1800s

by Franz Sacher.

Sacher-Torte with whipped cream

It’s traditionally served with unsweetened whipped cream on the side,

which makes total sense because the cake itself is already sweet.

If the cream were sweet too, it would be a lot.

It’s dense, rich, and definitely tasty,

but since we’re not huge dessert people,

the two of us barely finished one slice together.

Meanwhile, I saw Austrian men come in two at a time

and each order a full slice for themselves like it was nothing.

Honestly, impressive.

Final Thoughts

Café Sacher table setting

Café Sacher is such a symbolic, classic stop in Vienna,

and the coffee, desserts, and brunch dishes are all solid,

so if the line isn’t too bad,

I do think it’s worth experiencing at least once.

The interior is beautiful too, so it’s great for photos.

Café Sacher bill

Our total came to about 40,000 KRW, roughly $30.

Technically, it was money I didn’t need to spend,

but I definitely would have regretted skipping the café.

breakfast Sacher-Torte at Hotel Sacher

This is the Sacher-Torte served at breakfast.

The slice is smaller than the one sold in the café.

Sacher-Torte cube gift

And this is the Sacher-Torte cube.

It was provided as welcome food in our room,

and the cube shape makes it perfect as a one-bite snack.

You can also buy it at the café as a gift set,

but the shelf life is only about 8 days,

which is shorter than the whole cake,

so keep that in mind before buying.

Other Hotel Sacher posts


Hotel Sacher Vienna deluxe room post

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