This video is pretty interesting. I stopped in Halstatt on my way from Vienna to Salzburg (by car) just last week and it was nothing like this. We arrived after everything but a few restaurants were closed and the town was dead quiet. It was spectacular. Seemed like locals and no more than 50 very respectful tourists. It was spectacular, didn't feel touristy at all. All we did was walk around for an hour. Reminded me of seydisfjordur in Iceland which I also visited when there were no tourists. It was truly awe inspiring but I can imagine when it is filled with tourists you wouldn't get the same experience. We were able to talk with a few locals and casually dip our toes in the lake. I frequent the Canadian Rockies and this was better (hate to admit that as a Canadian). Just go in the evening and be respectful and I think you can still have a good experience.
@@NearFromHome By the way, the Canadian Rockies are different as a whole. The Alps may be more scenic but it feels like the countryside whereas the Rockies are empty other than a few towns and feel more dangerous if you were to get lost. I find they have totally different vibes. Alps look taller, are WAY more lush and the valley are tight and random. In the Canadian rockies you find extremely wide sweeping valleys that go on for 100s of kilometers. You also feel closer to the alpine in the Rockies even at the valley floor. The mountains in western Canada feature dense rainforest on the coast, sandy deserts and warm lakes in the middle and the jagged rockies in the east. To the north you'll find many 5000+ metre peaks and massive icefields. Lots of diversity.
Yeah, it is a shame how much walk through tourism the town is now having to deal with. Which IMO is the worst kind, as it stresses the roads, parking lots, and other aspects of infrastructure while not actually giving back to the town itself.
austrian here. I was in Hallstadt in 2020, and only because it was an opportunity to see it without tausends of tourists. We stayed for a week in Obertraun and there is so much more to do and see than only Hallstadt. Thanks for highlighting this!
We visited Hallstatt 21 years ago (before “The Gram” or Facebook which was way more pleasant than probably now. We took a gondola to the Dachstein Ice Caves and had soup and coffee (and schnapps) at one of the local restaurants when we returned to the village. The time of year was in October and on that particular day, Austria was celebrating a holiday so in the café was a lot of jovial men in hunting suits. So much fun. I hate the over tourism it has now because there is SO much more to this village than cheesy souvenirs. Thank you for your Salzkammergut videos! I’m dying to experience more places when we return there one day!
Wow that sounds like a lot of fun. Over tourism in Hallstatt is a relatively new phenomenon, so I couldn't help but wish I had visited ten years ago as well. Also, it always seems like their is some festival or celebration in the Alps. haha
I agree. Two weeks ago, I was in Hallstatt for three nights. It's so beautiful, and the locals are so nice and kind. We didn't know it was going to be so, so crowded. Only after the buses leave late is that you can enjoy it.
4:20 "because this is *your* vacation, not instagrams". hits hard. if i had two days and one night in the salzkammergut area (with car), what are some of the places you'd recommend me visiting? is there a particular city that's better to stay the night at?
So for such a short stint, where you base yourself will both be really important. I really really loved my time in Traunkirchen, and when I go back one day I'll be staying there. That being said St Wolfgang could also be a good option. If you haven't checked out the rest of my Salzkammergut series then I'd really recommend it, if only because I absolutely loved that trip and would do it all again beat for beat with no changes. Hiking the Miesweg near Traunsee, taking a boat from Gmunden, the sauna in Traunkirchen. Those things alone would make for a great trip. However, the cogwheel train up the Schafberg was incredibly memorable too, and I think back very fondly to Bad Ischl.
Thanks for the great tips! I noticed in the video that there are many no drone signs around the town, but I see you still managed to take some amazing drone shots. May I know where is a good location for drone takeoff? Thank you!
Thanks! We did not fly a drone in Hallstatt. Maybe you thinking of the other lakes in our Salzkammergut series? We flew the drone there and showed some of that footage at the end of the video!
@@NearFromHome thanks for the info! I am trying to apply for a permit to fly a sub-250g drone in Austria, may I ask which insurance did you take out to apply for the permit?
I love Hallstatt, but I agree, too much tourists, too crowdy. But there are similar places that are less overrun, for example Hallein (Celtic Museum) and along the numerous lakes in Tirol, Salzburg, Carinthia and Styria.
Exactly. I mean that’s why we made this video, to show the reality of it and let our viewers decide if they think it is worth it. I also liked ending my Salzkammergut series with this video as anyone who wants to find those other lakes can watch the other videos and get some inspiration.
If I were to take a day trip with my family from Salzburg with kids 16 and 10, what would you recommend? For I was planning to go for a day trip to Hallstatt originally around late May early June.
Are you asking what I’d recommend instead of Hallstatt? If so :) at the end of this video I list a few of my highlights from the Salzkammergut series, specifically for you though I’d probably say the Schafbergbahn at Wolfgangsee. It’s closer than Hallstatt and the cogwheel train plus mountain top views would be a lot of fun. There is also a town very close by that is super pretty, so you won’t miss out on seeing a small mountain town either.
I'm going in August with my boyfriend and planning to go to the Ossuary, Skywalk and walk around the lake. We're going to get there by train and ferry from Salzburg and then go back to our hotel in Salzburg.
There is definitely an element of that. However when I first went over the winter, no one had told me how touristy it truly was and I was honestly rather shocked. Especially because no one had mentioned how many other wonderful lakes and towns there are in the area. So then the question becomes how do I address this in my series on the region. Do I ignore Hallstatt entirely? Do I shrug it off in the footnote of another video? Or do I show what my genuine opinion is of the village. Do I try and show the beautiful shots, but also the massive crowds? And as I chose to do that, it would also be disingenuous to not actually get you the footage on good faith to look and see it for yourself. So I had to revisit one more time. Otherwise you’d just be looking at my face the whole time, which I don’t think would really help anyone make their own decisions. The influencers I watched didn’t show me the full picture, and I had a worse trip for it. So I really strive as hard as I can to not do that to my viewers.
Not sure if you'll be able to answer, but anyway; I'll probably be going to Europe this December and whilst searching about which cities to visit I came across Hallstatt and was very charmed by this little town. Do you think as I'll be visiting it in the winter i'll come across a relatively low amount of tourists?
In my experience, Winter had slightly fewer tourists, but not be much. Hallstatt is also very beautiful in the Winter, making it almost equally as popular a time to visit.
@@NearFromHome Thank you for replying. Yes, i've seen pictures of it in winter and it looks absolutely amazing. Kind of a bummer about the tourists, though... still, i'll probably be going there anyway, maybe sleep a few nights depending on how i like it :) I'll be renting a campervan though, so I hope that they have enough space, i don't know how's the situation in that camping area near the gas station, couldn't find much about it online
Great video. Going to strap myself in and watch the rest! I noticed that you visited the area in winter and I'm looking at travelling over during December for my honeymoon next year. It had been at the top of the list, along with Lapland, but is there any other area which you'd recommend visiting in this vicinity at that time of year?
Thanks! You can't go wrong with any of the lakes in the Salzkammergut. My favorite was Traunsee, but the Alps in general look very beautiful in the Winter covered in snow. Plus, the Christmas markets will be around in December, so you'll be able to visit those just about everywhere you go.
So arrive in the evening, watch the sunset and enjoy the town as it should be, eat local, stay local and get the heck outta dodge the next morning!! Got ya. Looks stunning and we’d love to visit - but a visit of substance xx
Don’t forget to visit the salt mine! lol I still think the other villages and lakes offer better value, but if you still want to check out Hallstatt, who am I to judge when I did it, then your summary is how I’d do it. It’s how I visited last winter and I don’t regret it. In this video I just wanted to make sure that I didn’t misrepresent the place as so many other videos I’ve watched have.
I couldn’t agree more. Which is why I think part 2 and 3 of the series were my favourites. While Hallstatt was swamped, Gmunden and Traunkirchen were pleasantly populated. I practically had the museum, hike, and ferry all to myself. The food was also far better too! I think in general that’s why so much of my content is about hikes and castle ruins, places that aren’t very busy and could probably do with more people knowing about them. Much like a lot of your ruin videos.
@@NearFromHome great minds is all I’ll say. Happy hiking band please post some more of when the snows come and everything looks like a Christmas card!! Xx
Okay so we are in Obertraun, across the lake from Halstatt and I wanted to learn more about the over tourism here and did a search on TH-cam. Your video came up! So cool! It was a very good synopsis of the problem of over-tourism. We will mention your video when we do our’s.
🥰 You are too nice. Thank you! 🥰 Glad it was helpful. I’ve been watching your insta stories, and it looks like you’re having a nice time. Also, you guys might like Trainkirchen. The lake is nice, and the town has some beautiful swimming spots your kids might enjoy
All very interesting .. I am taking a walking holiday too Austria next week , 2 nights St Wolfgang ,2 nights Bad Ischl and 2 in Hallstatt.. However I am there for the history , mines , walks , food and much more than just ''the day visitor '' .
Next July I will be visiting Hallstatt. I will be staying at Obertraun for 3 days. Planned to Visit Gosau for 1 day. Can you please let me know if the 5 fingers point and the skywalk at Hallstatt both worth visiting? If not and only one is enough then which one to choose?
It's fine, but I think there are much better views in the area. Our absolute favourite was taking the Schafbergbahn up to the Schfkopf mountain peak. We even have a video about it!
The locals have actually real problems with the tourists not respecting their boundaries. Many tourists do not know that there are people living in those houses. There are multiple instances of locals finding foreign tourisists in their houses and gardens, taking photos and moving around their stuff, to make them better photo opportunities.
Yes, It was shown on tv here in Austria. Drones are also not allowed, I saw the police explaining this to a tourist. There are signs explaining the rules in many languages.
This seems to be a very beautiful place, I hope I can visit sometime in the future when all this is over. Seeing and sharing places like this is why I love traveling and make videos so much! And please keep up the great job! Subscribed!!
For sure. To me it’s all about spreading it around. If we all keep going to the same places, then not only do we miss out on things we might enjoy more ourselves but we also sink these places for everyone else. I really debated whether or not to include Hallstatt in my Salzkammergut series for that reason, but I thought it might be interesting to share a slightly negative yet hopefully constructive point of view.
Maybe. But can you show people the reality of a situation without going for yourself? I also think it’s bus bound day trippers causing majority of the damage, so I followed all of my own advice on how stay, visit the place, and ultimately the rest of the series was designed to showcase more of the Salzkammergut. In all I tried my best to give an honest review of the situation in a way I see too few doing. Way too many videos duck the camera away and show a pristine village without the flood of people nor offer any advice or alternatives on how to try and do better.
@@NearFromHome After having been pointed to your video by the recent video of @MyMerryMessyLife, I watched it a second time, now more attentatively. I have to take back my previous comment. You are really pointing out the problem there. Great video. Good job.
Wow thanks for watching. the 4 Videos before it cover other villages and lakes in the region! My favorite is the town of Traunkirchen on the lake of Traunsee. :)
Just arrived today not knowing much about hallstatt. I'm not a ig user. It Def is busier during the day. We're here for 5 nights which is way longer than the average stay. Looking forward to checking out all the small things and supporting the local community here.
With 5 days make sure to check out the rest of our Salzkammergut series for ideas! For me, I love Traunkirchen so much. The owner of the two hotels there, Post and Bootshaus are some of the best hotel/restaurants I’ve ever been to. If you go, tell him we sent you!
The village is super tiny, tourists walk in and walk out because there is not much to see and and no place to stay. The few hotels and apartments are booked far in advance. In the places I visit the tourists are the nicest people, especially those with cameras that came to take pictures. The problem are the beggars, scammers, thieves and sellers that come for the tourists. As for the locals I'm sure they are very happy that their property prices have risen severalfold. And for those who want a quiet place should find one near by. If that place is not on the tourist map it can be even vis-a-vis but but barely a few lost tourists will be met.
We used to go there so often when I was a little kid, visiting the salt mines, swimming, and it was always so quiet, like just another sleepy backwoods village (at least that is how I remember it). So sad this has changed, I wonder how the locals deal with it. Amazing what a sudden hype on social media can do, the same damned thing happened to Green Lake. The signs are kind of tragic.
If you want to blame the real culprit then complain to Disney lol Frozen is based on Hallstatt and it's like telling people not to go see the Eiffel Tower
Bro, you are there, you didn't have to go there to make this video and, apparently, you've been there more than once, how dare you tell others not to go? This is a town of 700 with 10k tourists per day during peak season and I don't see anything "ruined". I see a beautiful thriving small town that revolves around tourism. There thousands of dying cities in Europe dying to have a few of these tourists - no pun intended. Beyond that, if the tourists overnumber you by 10-20 fold they should also overrule you and have a bigger saying on what goes, capitalism, baby. 🤑
Capitalism is trash mate, a highly flawed system, because this is what it does. Monetary value and worth are rarely aligned. If I made this video from my couch you’d just complain I don’t know what I’m talking about, the footage illustrates the point. I went to show people what they are actually getting into, instead of sugar coating it and lying like so many other “influencers” peddling to the masses. This is a town with its soul running dry and streets that smell like French fries. If you can’t see that, I can’t help you. I hope you visit and enjoy yourself :) however, you are unfortunately incorrect.
Another place is Castle Combe and Bibury in the Cotswolds that have up to around 15,000 tourists a day. It’s a problem with towns like these as locals are being assaulted by rude tourists.
Yes! We went last year, and there are a ton of tourists who just show up, take a picture and leave. We went to a bunch of English Heritage sites and public foot paths.
I have been to Hallstatt but it wasn't enjoyable due to the high number of tourists. There are a lot of underrated places like Hallstatt in the UK which have lot less tourists.
That's unfortunate! We have been to so many wonderful under touristed places in the UK, as Ben is actually from the Midlands. Unfortunately, most of our travels in the UK were before we started our channel :(
Since I was a kid reading a book about Austria and Germany and seeing Hallstatt - overhyped or not I want to visit. Definitely plan on eating at one of the lakeside restaurants and staying in one of their hotels.
Just make sure you visit the right way, and you’ll still have a good time. Though to journey all the way to Hallstatt and miss the rest of the Salzkammergut would be a real shame.
@@NearFromHomeoh definitely, we were gonna honeymoon though Italy into Austria but I want this trip to be separate so we can fully see everything there is.
@@joshuaprime777 Most likely just like this, Hallstatt doesn’t have an “off” season really. I don’t think going in one month vs another month will make the difference in it being over touristed. Check it if you want of course, but it will be what it will be. So I’d highly recommend checking out the rest of the series we did in Salzkammergut! There is a lot to explore amongst those mountains and lakes.
If the residents of Hallstatt don't want so many tourists it shouldn't be beyond their ability to do something about it, but I guess they just prefer raking in the money.
I doubt many of the residents are raking in the money. I'm not even convinced the town is raking it in either to be honest. The short stay tour bus companies and promoters sure are though.
@@NearFromHome Every community in Europe has some form of democratic town council that determines local traffic regulations and could introduce regulations to limit the number of coaches.
Don't blame the Chinese? Well, let's see...they spent years sending engineers and architects to Hallstatt to covertly photograph, measure, and copy every aspect of the village with the express purpose of 'cloning' the entire town back in the Guangdong province. Then, pre-pandemic levels of Chinese visitors to Halstatt increased 1,000-fold, with these Chinese tour groups having no concern for the inhabitants' way of life. So you can go out of your way not to offend them, but it's terrible what has happened to villages like this.
It is terrible what has happened to Hallstatt and many other villages being crushed by overtourism, but to lay the blame solely on the Chinese or simply just call them out more specifically than any other group is just……well…..you know……wrong. Americans, Romanians, Germans, Italians, Chinese: they all travel here by the tour bus load and none of them have any more right to be here than the other. We are all just tourists. - The problem as I see it is more about the way in which people travel, and not who is doing it. It’s the day tripper tour bus companies putting together awful itineraries that drain villages of their charm by forcing them to cater to bus loads of short stay passers by. The other problem is also that people don’t know any better, a problem I hope my channel combats. However, at the end of the day, you could banish all the Chinese tomorrow, as insanely problematic as that would be, and it wouldn’t solve the problem. But if you banned short form bus tourism and instead focused on more accessible public infrastructure, then you’d have actually made a step in the right direction.
Last time I went I got there early and it was great, until mid-morning the chinese tour busses start rolling in relentlessly. Couldn't get out fast enough
I really appreciate your honesty and have decided I will not go there, close up, it does remind me of a Disney village, I’ll just stick with viewing the beautiful pictures on the net. Thank you.
Lived in Vienna late 90s til early 2000’s. Would go to Hallstatt every other month for a 3 to 4 day weekend. Would run in their half marathon every year that races around the lake. Very few tourists. Visited again in ‘19 and was shocked. I just had to get away from the obnoxious, loud tourists, so I followed the stream back into the woods in the valley that seems to be between 2 mountains. Just to get a break. I felt like it was the least I could do for the poor locals. I am still a little angry about the change, but I have no right to be, I am not even Austrian. However, I will say before I moved to Austria with my team for my job, they grilled us hard on talking softly in Austria, as well as not expecting any one in Austria to be like us from the US. We tried really hard to be respectful. Do these travel companies that being in these droves do anything remotely similar?
Hi where would you recommend instead? Would like to celebrate my husband's 40th birthday on December in Austria with our 8yo daughter. I want somewhere relaxing. Thanks for sharing this video. I don't think I would like to go there now😂
At the end of the video, we feature all the other places in Austria that we made videos on. You can also find them in our Salzkammergut playlist. We especially loved Traunsee and the towns of Traunkirchen and Gmunden. We also loved Wolfgangsee for the Schafbergbahn. Bad Ischel is also nice!
Looking to go on a relaxing holiday and I never heard of this village until I did a google and it came up, then I search for some videos to see what it would be lile and I think my husband and I decided to choose to spend a week in hallstat over greece but your video has given me second thoughts. Which is a shame for the village economy to take my money elsewhere.
Not really. Hallstatt isn’t hurting for tourists or money, which is the entire problem. Not to mention most of the tourist money goes to the tourist companies and the mass tourism infrastructure. Very little money comparatively goes to the town itself. But that’s not the only point of the video. I did an entire series of videos in the region, no more than 40 minutes away from Hallstatt the whole time. There is so much more to see, so many towns and experiences to be had that no ever visits because all anyone ever does is Hallstatt. So perhaps give those videos a watch and see if you might like those too! Greece also suffers from the same mass tourism problems. Obviously not all of it. But I wouldn’t bet that you’ll find more peace in Santorini than Hallstatt. Sadly most travel channels just recycle the same 6 places over and over again, the ones you have likely heard of, and never show you the reality of what these places are really like. So if you appreciate what we are doing here, maybe consider subscribing, watching our other videos, and sharing us with your friends!!
@@NearFromHome Thank you for answering, one other question if you don't mind. Is it possible to rent a hotel in hallstat and travel to other areas for sightseeing without a car or it costing a fortune? All we really want is a week of peace and relaxation. Tysm
@@littleanthonyuk6730 I think taking the trains would be a lot less expensive than renting a car. In our Salzkammergut series, we wanted to take the trains, but they didn't run quite frequently enough for our packed and changing schedule. For regular site seeing it might be an option. I would look at the frequency and duration of the trains between Hallstat and wherever you want to go. A few Austrians commented that our Salzkammergut series is doable via public transit.
The title isn’t clickbait? I 100% think you should skip Hallstatt and that over tourism by busses and day trips have completely eroded any authenticity yet the Salzkammergut goes mostly untouched. Nothing clickbait about it. Over tourism has ruined Hallstatt and until people spread out the town will continue to suffer.
I'm not going to visit the salt mine because I'm already visting Wieliczka which is the best in the world lol but definitely will be visiting Hallstatt because it looks beautiful
Honestly that means a lot, as I shared this a few places and was mostly called a prick. I put myself out there and did something a little different with this video; and I’m really glad you liked it :)
As a person living in China, I 100% blame the Chinese. My Chinese colleagues also blame the Chinese. It’s because they all have the exact same time off for holidays 3 times a year
We have a word for this. It's called being a pick me. It's also strange to blame such a complicated problem on a single group of people. Seems pretty problematic to me. Idk, I never hear the same criticism for other large groups of foreign tourists, of which I saw many the two times I visited Hallstatt. Additionally, much of the conversation around Chinese tourists is not as level headed as 'they all have the same three weeks off'. In fact, I have been really shocked with how openly racist a lot of Europeans have been with comments such as 'the Chinese are so rude/disrespectful/loud ect when they visit Europe.'
Now I want to go for the working salt mine and try some food at a restaurant. Of course i would need to spend a couple nights in their hotel. Truth is I'm just learning about this place. I've never left the United States. I don't even have a visa to leave the country. So truth is I don't see myself traveling their. But if I could travel outside the United States I would definitely try to visit this place. It's beautiful. That whole area looks ripe for exploration and really checking everything out. Nice video.
What a drama 👻 I love the tourists not liking the other tourists 😂 C'mon! You could show the hidden gems of Hallstatt without blaming all the people in the world (excluding Chinese tourists).👋
Lucky for you I made a whole series showing the hidden gems of the Salzkammergut :) and recommended some better ways to see Hallstatt itself too. So I’ve got you covered!
A lot of this can be done with public transit! I wouldn’t be able to film this series as easily, but you can definitely go to these places with public transit.
Right. So that bus parking lot isn’t for public transport, maybe that’s where you got confused. However sadly no, that parking lot is for mass tourism. The kind of tourism that shows up for a few hours and leaves without ever really giving back to the town. It’s parasitic, and it’s low effort. So I personally would like to see much less of it. Instead I think people should try to take real public transit if they can, not mass tour busses, but more importantly I think people should stay longer and actually spend their money in the town. Like really think about it for a minute. When you book a mass tour, most of the money goes to that company and very little to the town. What money they do get then often has to support building these massive tourist parking lots and doesn’t go into what actually makes the town special. If you however get there yourself and spend some real time there, imagine how much more money the town will receive, and to which business owners it will go to. It’s a night and day difference. Lastly. If you think every single one of those mass tourists would actually take the effort to stay in these places longer and put the effort to get there the hard way……well……you are wrong ;) By decreasing tourist bus parking lots, advocating people stay longer, and recommending actual busses and public transit when available you can easily see how this would lead to less over tourism.
@@NearFromHome I don’t know why you have so much against local bus drivers, but public transport is never going to be able to handle that many tourists. Not to mention public transport is what the actual locals probably rely on, so overcrowding them even In Their public transit seems incredibly odd. Plus, Money going to government transit is never going to make its way back into any of the townspeople’s pockets. Sure spending more time and going to local business les is fun, but not everyone has that much money is wealthy enough to make that happen. Some people can only afford a bus ticket. Not to mention, everyone staying overnight would only make the town more crowded, more loud. Or just let people take their instagram photos, let them pay for busses to come grab their photos, and then leave. It’s not that big of an issue
@@wallinballinfam If you ask the people who live there, I don’t believe they will agree with you that it isn’t a big issue. Mass tourism has turned a beautiful town into little more than Disneyland. It’s sad. The food quality is abysmal, the shops tacky, and the streets littered with signs practically begging you to not fly your drone or step into people’s property to get a better photo. Personally, I do not believe even a 10th of the people taking mass tours in and out of Hallstatt would bother going if they had to get there themselves or were encouraged to spend more time there. Which is why I don’t think it’ll overcrowd the local transit. If anything it will help push and fund for more local transit which will in turn help everyone. The whole Salzkammergut region is fantastic. Many towns almost empty. Yet Hallstatt is overflowing. It’s wild. Which was the entire point of the video. To recommend people travel the area differently. If you feel differently. That’s up to you. My goal was to just share my thoughts, and I felt like your comment was a little bit rude and sorta missed my point entirely. Regardless though. You watched the Hallstatt video :) so I’d recommend you check out the others in the area. There was some really cool stuff out there that a lot of people were missing.
@@NearFromHome That's just the reality of what happens when you live somewhere beautiful. You got to go there so why shouldn't everybody else. Travel snobs are the worst lol
I am from Austria. They visit Hallstatt 4 just one day....make the fotos gor instagram etc. Being famos on instagram is a bit like being rich at monopoly😂😂😂
Luckily that entire region of Austria is a Lake District with tons of different spots to choose from. To me, Hallstättersee isn’t even my favourite, I much preferred lake Traunsee. Which I think is also my favourite video in the series.
@NearFromHome I would like to apologize. I did not mean to offend you. My comment meant to be funny. I was thinking about over tourism like the traffic. When we are in traffic, we all blame traffic, but we are actually part of the traffic. Once again, I do apologize. I thought I was funny. Thank you for the report. You did a good job. I am looking forward to seeing Austria and will not be going to Hallstat.
@@dasberlinlex I apologise if I was being a bit short. If I knew your tone the I’d be able to tell it was a joke, but I also get this comment very very often from really rude people that I end up just deleting to keep the comments civil, so after a while it just sorta grates on you. Comments in general have also been oddly more negative this week and it kinda got to me. So we had some unlucky timing there. But yeah :) to discuss the problem you have to become the problem. I do hope you have an amazing trip though! The Salzkammergut is an area I really love and I think back on this series really fondly very often.
After seeing this I can’t imagine why Hitler was so bitter. I’m from West Texas And all we got was rattlesnakes and sunburns And I’m a nice guy generally. Well, sometimes. Whatever.
I also went there this summer, my impressions were quite similar to this video. Now imagine what the tourism would be like if there wasn't a global pandemic 😵💫 Still, the town is very pretty, and you can visit the salt mine and go up to the Krippenstein mountain from there.
Yeah, we went in December 2019, and it was wayyyy more crowded. We were a little disappointed at the crowds for this video, as we really wanted to make a point. However, I think the shots suffice. We love the salt mine. hahah I do think there are a couple others in the Salzkammergut though.
How is this place any worse than Neuschawnstein sp ic castle Fussen? Yellowstone National Park in July with thousands of cars? The Maroon Bells here in Colorado USA is so beautiful and so many go up there that cars are limited and buses take the crowds up. Lanikai beach in Hawaii on Oahu is gorgeous but the people in the neighborhood are pissed at the cars and traffic and crowds. How dies Hawaii survive without the US military and tourism? Tourism! How can one stay in Hallstast when lodging is limited and therefore not exactly any bargain? $300 USD a night at least?🤔 I would stay in Ebensee and train to Hallstast myself. A full day looks like enough to me😊 These overwhelming tourists are coming from all of Austria ViennaSalzburg and Germany Munich (The Marianplatz is crowded?😀) et al spending millions not only in the town but the big cities too 😊 BTW all are welcome in Colorado, Wyoming and Montana USA. Welcome! Welkommen! Bienvenido. Fly into Denver with our expanding airport. Nothing wrong with Miami, DC, New York, San Franscisco LA etc but come see the old west and what we have and how we live! Vielen dank! Cheers!❤
So are you arguing that one cannot be racist against the Chinese because the Chinese are not a race? 🙄 You gotta get things straight before you say racist shit.
lol. You silly billy, if I hadn’t gone and shown it to people 🙄 if I hadn’t gotten footage to back up my claims, then how would I be able to make the video? I guess I could sit at home and talk out of my ass, but no doubt you’d then accuse me of not knowing what I’m talking about. People like you think they’ve got a clever “gotcha” moment, but …… well …… not really.
did you want to watch a blank screen the entire time? I think the presence of two people filming for a few hours can be forgiven by the 49k people who have been warned to not contribute to over tourism.
@@NearFromHome you could have used stock footage or footage from your old trip. I'm sure everyone of those 49k people thought the same, one extra person isn't going to make a difference. Such narcissistic behaviour, you get to go TWICE and make money from your trip there because you're an important you-tuber, but normal people shouldn't go because you said so.
Locals blocking the main entry road coz they’ve had enough of mass tourism 😂😂 can’t blame them. If you’re gonna go somewhere, at least stay the night and spend some money
Austria is over rated in general... need to do an exam and a test to get a fishing licence, can't swim in most lakes, no wild camping. All the beautiful nature that you can't enjoy
Not sure, if we were in Hallstatt while visiting Austria in the 70s. You cannot beat the beauty of the place, but the ppl there are racist and anti american...bad history of child abuse, too🙁i would not go back there.
Hallstatt is an Austrian Disney Land..nothing special. Go to other towns and villages. Zell-am-See, Ischl, many places few tourists. Everything made in China (oh, Chinese copied Hallstatt).
you don't need to be scared to call out the chinese mainland people. they always bring their attitude w them everywhere they go. n its important to not leave out the "mainland" word when addressing them. I used to work in a mall where tourists would come visit n most of the foreigners are the mainland chinese. I think bcs china has like 1 billion citizens n a lot of them are rich enough to go travel n act like they are the aryans of the world
lol I am no 'afraid to call out the Chinese'. There's nothing to call out. 'They act like the Aryans of the world'- Hoooo boi there is a lot to unpack here. You have made. a lot of assumptions and generalisations about a racial group....what is that called again?
@@NearFromHome that’s called racism. yes I’m a bit racist but to be fair, I also condemn my race if we do something wrong. also I forgot to point out that back when I used to work in an apple store, the mainland chinese tourists were the rudest n least civilized. not all of them but I can say around 50-60% of them are like that. yes its probably bcs its an apple store, therefore our target market are customers w money. but a lot of them treat us like lowlife peasants. ofc i’ve encountered a few good chinese people but its so rare that it amazed me every time they come by
This video is pretty interesting. I stopped in Halstatt on my way from Vienna to Salzburg (by car) just last week and it was nothing like this. We arrived after everything but a few restaurants were closed and the town was dead quiet. It was spectacular. Seemed like locals and no more than 50 very respectful tourists. It was spectacular, didn't feel touristy at all. All we did was walk around for an hour. Reminded me of seydisfjordur in Iceland which I also visited when there were no tourists. It was truly awe inspiring but I can imagine when it is filled with tourists you wouldn't get the same experience. We were able to talk with a few locals and casually dip our toes in the lake. I frequent the Canadian Rockies and this was better (hate to admit that as a Canadian). Just go in the evening and be respectful and I think you can still have a good experience.
Glad you were able to experience the village in peace!
We still need to make it out to Iceland and the Rockies to make the comparison as well.
@@NearFromHome By the way, the Canadian Rockies are different as a whole. The Alps may be more scenic but it feels like the countryside whereas the Rockies are empty other than a few towns and feel more dangerous if you were to get lost. I find they have totally different vibes. Alps look taller, are WAY more lush and the valley are tight and random. In the Canadian rockies you find extremely wide sweeping valleys that go on for 100s of kilometers. You also feel closer to the alpine in the Rockies even at the valley floor. The mountains in western Canada feature dense rainforest on the coast, sandy deserts and warm lakes in the middle and the jagged rockies in the east. To the north you'll find many 5000+ metre peaks and massive icefields. Lots of diversity.
I spent my childhood not far from Hallstatt. It was such a quiet place back then. It's unbelievable what's been going on there in recent years. :-(
Yeah, it is a shame how much walk through tourism the town is now having to deal with. Which IMO is the worst kind, as it stresses the roads, parking lots, and other aspects of infrastructure while not actually giving back to the town itself.
I'm sure, not far from Hallstatt is still as quiet as before 😁
austrian here. I was in Hallstadt in 2020, and only because it was an opportunity to see it without tausends of tourists. We stayed for a week in Obertraun and there is so much more to do and see than only Hallstadt. Thanks for highlighting this!
🥰 thanks for your comment. Very cool! It must have been nice to see empty. We will have to check out obertraun.
Als Österreicherin, die Hallstatt besucht hat, solltest du wissen, dass es "Hallstatt" heißt.
We visited Hallstatt 21 years ago (before “The Gram” or Facebook which was way more pleasant than probably now.
We took a gondola to the Dachstein Ice Caves and had soup and coffee (and schnapps) at one of the local restaurants when we returned to the village. The time of year was in October and on that particular day, Austria was celebrating a holiday so in the café was a lot of jovial men in hunting suits. So much fun. I hate the over tourism it has now because there is SO much more to this village than cheesy souvenirs.
Thank you for your Salzkammergut videos! I’m dying to experience more places when we return there one day!
Wow that sounds like a lot of fun. Over tourism in Hallstatt is a relatively new phenomenon, so I couldn't help but wish I had visited ten years ago as well.
Also, it always seems like their is some festival or celebration in the Alps. haha
I agree. Two weeks ago, I was in Hallstatt for three nights. It's so beautiful, and the locals are so nice and kind. We didn't know it was going to be so, so crowded. Only after the buses leave late is that you can enjoy it.
It is unfortunate that the only time it is not over crowded is int eh slim windows before and after the busses!
4:20 "because this is *your* vacation, not instagrams". hits hard.
if i had two days and one night in the salzkammergut area (with car), what are some of the places you'd recommend me visiting? is there a particular city that's better to stay the night at?
So for such a short stint, where you base yourself will both be really important. I really really loved my time in Traunkirchen, and when I go back one day I'll be staying there. That being said St Wolfgang could also be a good option.
If you haven't checked out the rest of my Salzkammergut series then I'd really recommend it, if only because I absolutely loved that trip and would do it all again beat for beat with no changes. Hiking the Miesweg near Traunsee, taking a boat from Gmunden, the sauna in Traunkirchen. Those things alone would make for a great trip. However, the cogwheel train up the Schafberg was incredibly memorable too, and I think back very fondly to Bad Ischl.
Thanks for the great tips! I noticed in the video that there are many no drone signs around the town, but I see you still managed to take some amazing drone shots. May I know where is a good location for drone takeoff? Thank you!
Thanks! We did not fly a drone in Hallstatt. Maybe you thinking of the other lakes in our Salzkammergut series? We flew the drone there and showed some of that footage at the end of the video!
@@NearFromHome thanks for the info! I am trying to apply for a permit to fly a sub-250g drone in Austria, may I ask which insurance did you take out to apply for the permit?
I love Hallstatt, but I agree, too much tourists, too crowdy. But there are similar places that are less overrun, for example Hallein (Celtic Museum) and along the numerous lakes in Tirol, Salzburg, Carinthia and Styria.
Exactly. I mean that’s why we made this video, to show the reality of it and let our viewers decide if they think it is worth it. I also liked ending my Salzkammergut series with this video as anyone who wants to find those other lakes can watch the other videos and get some inspiration.
If I were to take a day trip with my family from Salzburg with kids 16 and 10, what would you recommend? For I was planning to go for a day trip to Hallstatt originally around late May early June.
Are you asking what I’d recommend instead of Hallstatt? If so :) at the end of this video I list a few of my highlights from the Salzkammergut series, specifically for you though I’d probably say the Schafbergbahn at Wolfgangsee. It’s closer than Hallstatt and the cogwheel train plus mountain top views would be a lot of fun. There is also a town very close by that is super pretty, so you won’t miss out on seeing a small mountain town either.
I'm going in August with my boyfriend and planning to go to the Ossuary, Skywalk and walk around the lake. We're going to get there by train and ferry from Salzburg and then go back to our hotel in Salzburg.
@@ania5038 booo
Just a tad 'do as I say, not what I do' but I get it. Now to find a different iconic view for our trip next year (postponed from this year of course).
There is definitely an element of that. However when I first went over the winter, no one had told me how touristy it truly was and I was honestly rather shocked. Especially because no one had mentioned how many other wonderful lakes and towns there are in the area. So then the question becomes how do I address this in my series on the region. Do I ignore Hallstatt entirely? Do I shrug it off in the footnote of another video? Or do I show what my genuine opinion is of the village. Do I try and show the beautiful shots, but also the massive crowds? And as I chose to do that, it would also be disingenuous to not actually get you the footage on good faith to look and see it for yourself. So I had to revisit one more time. Otherwise you’d just be looking at my face the whole time, which I don’t think would really help anyone make their own decisions. The influencers I watched didn’t show me the full picture, and I had a worse trip for it. So I really strive as hard as I can to not do that to my viewers.
I agree. This video felt very judgy. I will be going for just a day and will try my darnedest not to "sink" Hallstatt. Geeze.
Not sure if you'll be able to answer, but anyway;
I'll probably be going to Europe this December and whilst searching about which cities to visit I came across Hallstatt and was very charmed by this little town. Do you think as I'll be visiting it in the winter i'll come across a relatively low amount of tourists?
In my experience, Winter had slightly fewer tourists, but not be much. Hallstatt is also very beautiful in the Winter, making it almost equally as popular a time to visit.
@@NearFromHome Thank you for replying. Yes, i've seen pictures of it in winter and it looks absolutely amazing. Kind of a bummer about the tourists, though... still, i'll probably be going there anyway, maybe sleep a few nights depending on how i like it :) I'll be renting a campervan though, so I hope that they have enough space, i don't know how's the situation in that camping area near the gas station, couldn't find much about it online
Great video. Going to strap myself in and watch the rest!
I noticed that you visited the area in winter and I'm looking at travelling over during December for my honeymoon next year. It had been at the top of the list, along with Lapland, but is there any other area which you'd recommend visiting in this vicinity at that time of year?
Thanks! You can't go wrong with any of the lakes in the Salzkammergut. My favorite was Traunsee, but the Alps in general look very beautiful in the Winter covered in snow. Plus, the Christmas markets will be around in December, so you'll be able to visit those just about everywhere you go.
At 4.02 you mentioned hiking somewhere, but can't quite catch the name. Where is this please? Thanks
Miesweg! It’s a beautiful trail at Traunsee. It was actually our favorite thing we did in the Salzkammergut.
So arrive in the evening, watch the sunset and enjoy the town as it should be, eat local, stay local and get the heck outta dodge the next morning!! Got ya. Looks stunning and we’d love to visit - but a visit of substance xx
Don’t forget to visit the salt mine! lol
I still think the other villages and lakes offer better value, but if you still want to check out Hallstatt, who am I to judge when I did it, then your summary is how I’d do it. It’s how I visited last winter and I don’t regret it.
In this video I just wanted to make sure that I didn’t misrepresent the place as so many other videos I’ve watched have.
@@NearFromHome it looks stunning, but we do not like crowds at all! We can’t wait to get out to Germany and Austria again to hike!!!
I couldn’t agree more. Which is why I think part 2 and 3 of the series were my favourites. While Hallstatt was swamped, Gmunden and Traunkirchen were pleasantly populated. I practically had the museum, hike, and ferry all to myself. The food was also far better too! I think in general that’s why so much of my content is about hikes and castle ruins, places that aren’t very busy and could probably do with more people knowing about them. Much like a lot of your ruin videos.
@@NearFromHome great minds is all I’ll say. Happy hiking band please post some more of when the snows come and everything looks like a Christmas card!! Xx
Okay so we are in Obertraun, across the lake from Halstatt and I wanted to learn more about the over tourism here and did a search on TH-cam. Your video came up! So cool! It was a very good synopsis of the problem of over-tourism. We will mention your video when we do our’s.
🥰 You are too nice. Thank you! 🥰 Glad it was helpful. I’ve been watching your insta stories, and it looks like you’re having a nice time.
Also, you guys might like Trainkirchen. The lake is nice, and the town has some beautiful swimming spots your kids might enjoy
I'm staying in Hallstatt for a few days next year. I'm hoping it's not too horrendous in early May and I can get parked.
Even if it's not crowded, it just doesn't feel super authentic. Watch our other videos on the Salzkammergut! There are so many hidden gems!
All very interesting .. I am taking a walking holiday too Austria next week , 2 nights St Wolfgang ,2 nights Bad Ischl and 2 in Hallstatt..
However I am there for the history , mines , walks , food and much more than just ''the day visitor '' .
That seems like a pretty brilliant way of traveling the region
Next July I will be visiting Hallstatt. I will be staying at Obertraun for 3 days. Planned to Visit Gosau for 1 day.
Can you please let me know if the 5 fingers point and the skywalk at Hallstatt both worth visiting? If not and only one is enough then which one to choose?
It's fine, but I think there are much better views in the area. Our absolute favourite was taking the Schafbergbahn up to the Schfkopf mountain peak. We even have a video about it!
@@NearFromHome Thanks, I check
@@NearFromHome Yes I see your video! Thanks for your recommendation! It's awesome and I add it to my list!
Can I expect Sunny weather in July?
The locals have actually real problems with the tourists not respecting their boundaries. Many tourists do not know that there are people living in those houses. There are multiple instances of locals finding foreign tourisists in their houses and gardens, taking photos and moving around their stuff, to make them better photo opportunities.
I’d believe it. There are signs about respecting the locals everywhere 😢
Yes, It was shown on tv here in Austria. Drones are also not allowed, I saw the police explaining this to a tourist. There are signs explaining the rules in many languages.
Very beautiful places, wonderful architecture really great thanks for sharing excellent videos and useful detailed information congratulations 👌
Thank you!
This seems to be a very beautiful place, I hope I can visit sometime in the future when all this is over. Seeing and sharing places like this is why I love traveling and make videos so much! And please keep up the great job! Subscribed!!
Thanks so mich!
honestly! i get the perspective, Instagrammers gotta chill and shut their phone and enjoy
For sure. To me it’s all about spreading it around. If we all keep going to the same places, then not only do we miss out on things we might enjoy more ourselves but we also sink these places for everyone else. I really debated whether or not to include Hallstatt in my Salzkammergut series for that reason, but I thought it might be interesting to share a slightly negative yet hopefully constructive point of view.
Good advice dude. Really enjoy your channel.
Thanks! 🥰
It's kind of a catch-22. Weren't you part of the problem by visiting Hallstadt?
Maybe. But can you show people the reality of a situation without going for yourself?
I also think it’s bus bound day trippers causing majority of the damage, so I followed all of my own advice on how stay, visit the place, and ultimately the rest of the series was designed to showcase more of the Salzkammergut.
In all I tried my best to give an honest review of the situation in a way I see too few doing. Way too many videos duck the camera away and show a pristine village without the flood of people nor offer any advice or alternatives on how to try and do better.
@@NearFromHome After having been pointed to your video by the recent video of @MyMerryMessyLife, I watched it a second time, now more attentatively. I have to take back my previous comment. You are really pointing out the problem there. Great video. Good job.
Favorite hiike in the Salzkammergut ?
Thanks! We were thinking we might visit Hallstatt but are now reconsidering. Maybe, we should check out a lesser known town in the area. :)
Wow thanks for watching. the 4 Videos before it cover other villages and lakes in the region! My favorite is the town of Traunkirchen on the lake of Traunsee. :)
Even though it is touristy and over crowded I recommend you to visit once it is beautiful town😍
Just arrived today not knowing much about hallstatt. I'm not a ig user. It Def is busier during the day. We're here for 5 nights which is way longer than the average stay. Looking forward to checking out all the small things and supporting the local community here.
With 5 days make sure to check out the rest of our Salzkammergut series for ideas! For me, I love Traunkirchen so much. The owner of the two hotels there, Post and Bootshaus are some of the best hotel/restaurants I’ve ever been to. If you go, tell him we sent you!
I subscribed because I love your angle on tourism. Good information.
Thank you so much 😊
which month?
We were there in June, but it is always so crowded it's unenjoyable.
Where would you recommend I go instead
The rest of the Salzkammergut series!
The village is super tiny, tourists walk in and walk out because there is not much to see and and no place to stay. The few hotels and apartments are booked far in advance.
In the places I visit the tourists are the nicest people, especially those with cameras that came to take pictures. The problem are the beggars, scammers, thieves and sellers that come for the tourists.
As for the locals I'm sure they are very happy that their property prices have risen severalfold.
And for those who want a quiet place should find one near by. If that place is not on the tourist map it can be even vis-a-vis but but barely a few lost tourists will be met.
I really don’t think the answer to over tourism is to tell the locals that they can leave their homes and live somewhere else.
We used to go there so often when I was a little kid, visiting the salt mines, swimming, and it was always so quiet, like just another sleepy backwoods village (at least that is how I remember it). So sad this has changed, I wonder how the locals deal with it. Amazing what a sudden hype on social media can do, the same damned thing happened to Green Lake.
The signs are kind of tragic.
Wow, I have heard bag from people who visited before instagram. It’s so sad. Glad y out have such nice memories though
If you want to blame the real culprit then complain to Disney lol Frozen is based on Hallstatt and it's like telling people not to go see the Eiffel Tower
Bro, you are there, you didn't have to go there to make this video and, apparently, you've been there more than once, how dare you tell others not to go? This is a town of 700 with 10k tourists per day during peak season and I don't see anything "ruined". I see a beautiful thriving small town that revolves around tourism. There thousands of dying cities in Europe dying to have a few of these tourists - no pun intended. Beyond that, if the tourists overnumber you by 10-20 fold they should also overrule you and have a bigger saying on what goes, capitalism, baby. 🤑
Capitalism is trash mate, a highly flawed system, because this is what it does. Monetary value and worth are rarely aligned. If I made this video from my couch you’d just complain I don’t know what I’m talking about, the footage illustrates the point. I went to show people what they are actually getting into, instead of sugar coating it and lying like so many other “influencers” peddling to the masses. This is a town with its soul running dry and streets that smell like French fries. If you can’t see that, I can’t help you. I hope you visit and enjoy yourself :) however, you are unfortunately incorrect.
@@NearFromHomeand yet you still went? Twice?
@@NearFromHome I am going, you are no???
If you really hate there, why would make a video in the place that you don’t recommend. Contradicting!!
Another place is Castle Combe and Bibury in the Cotswolds that have up to around 15,000 tourists a day. It’s a problem with towns like these as locals are being assaulted by rude tourists.
Yes! We went last year, and there are a ton of tourists who just show up, take a picture and leave. We went to a bunch of English Heritage sites and public foot paths.
I have been to Hallstatt but it wasn't enjoyable due to the high number of tourists. There are a lot of underrated places like Hallstatt in the UK which have lot less tourists.
That's unfortunate!
We have been to so many wonderful under touristed places in the UK, as Ben is actually from the Midlands. Unfortunately, most of our travels in the UK were before we started our channel :(
Since I was a kid reading a book about Austria and Germany and seeing Hallstatt - overhyped or not I want to visit. Definitely plan on eating at one of the lakeside restaurants and staying in one of their hotels.
Just make sure you visit the right way, and you’ll still have a good time. Though to journey all the way to Hallstatt and miss the rest of the Salzkammergut would be a real shame.
@@NearFromHomeoh definitely, we were gonna honeymoon though Italy into Austria but I want this trip to be separate so we can fully see everything there is.
Which month is this?
I don’t think the month makes much of a difference.
@NearFromHome ok
I'm visiting this April..
Not sure how it's gonna be like..
Anyways ,thanks.
@@joshuaprime777 Most likely just like this, Hallstatt doesn’t have an “off” season really. I don’t think going in one month vs another month will make the difference in it being over touristed. Check it if you want of course, but it will be what it will be. So I’d highly recommend checking out the rest of the series we did in Salzkammergut! There is a lot to explore amongst those mountains and lakes.
@@NearFromHome Tq sir.. much appreciated 🙏🏾
Can’t believe you only have 2k views and 2k-ish subs. Quality content.
Thanks so much 🥰 The YT algorithm is a cruel mistress
If the residents of Hallstatt don't want so many tourists it shouldn't be beyond their ability to do something about it, but I guess they just prefer raking in the money.
I doubt many of the residents are raking in the money. I'm not even convinced the town is raking it in either to be honest. The short stay tour bus companies and promoters sure are though.
@@NearFromHome Every community in Europe has some form of democratic town council that determines local traffic regulations and could introduce regulations to limit the number of coaches.
Stay there for a night... The room prices are insanely high there..
Stay somewhere else! :) The entire Salzkammergut series I made should have more than enough inspiration!
Will be going there first week of October.
Check out the salt mine!
Don't blame the Chinese? Well, let's see...they spent years sending engineers and architects to Hallstatt to covertly photograph, measure, and copy every aspect of the village with the express purpose of 'cloning' the entire town back in the Guangdong province. Then, pre-pandemic levels of Chinese visitors to Halstatt increased 1,000-fold, with these Chinese tour groups having no concern for the inhabitants' way of life. So you can go out of your way not to offend them, but it's terrible what has happened to villages like this.
It is terrible what has happened to Hallstatt and many other villages being crushed by overtourism, but to lay the blame solely on the Chinese or simply just call them out more specifically than any other group is just……well…..you know……wrong. Americans, Romanians, Germans, Italians, Chinese: they all travel here by the tour bus load and none of them have any more right to be here than the other. We are all just tourists. - The problem as I see it is more about the way in which people travel, and not who is doing it. It’s the day tripper tour bus companies putting together awful itineraries that drain villages of their charm by forcing them to cater to bus loads of short stay passers by. The other problem is also that people don’t know any better, a problem I hope my channel combats. However, at the end of the day, you could banish all the Chinese tomorrow, as insanely problematic as that would be, and it wouldn’t solve the problem. But if you banned short form bus tourism and instead focused on more accessible public infrastructure, then you’d have actually made a step in the right direction.
Last time I went I got there early and it was great, until mid-morning the chinese tour busses start rolling in relentlessly. Couldn't get out fast enough
I really appreciate your honesty and have decided I will not go there, close up, it does remind me of a Disney village, I’ll just stick with viewing the beautiful pictures on the net. Thank you.
😎 check out our other videos/ the other attractions in the Salzkammergut. They are just as beautiful, and not over touristed
Lived in Vienna late 90s til early 2000’s. Would go to Hallstatt every other month for a 3 to 4 day weekend. Would run in their half marathon every year that races around the lake. Very few tourists. Visited again in ‘19 and was shocked. I just had to get away from the obnoxious, loud tourists, so I followed the stream back into the woods in the valley that seems to be between 2 mountains. Just to get a break. I felt like it was the least I could do for the poor locals. I am still a little angry about the change, but I have no right to be, I am not even Austrian.
However, I will say before I moved to Austria with my team for my job, they grilled us hard on talking softly in Austria, as well as not expecting any one in Austria to be like us from the US. We tried really hard to be respectful. Do these travel companies that being in these droves do anything remotely similar?
wow that sounds amazing. We've heard a couple stories about people visiting Hallstatt before the big tourism boom.
Hi where would you recommend instead? Would like to celebrate my husband's 40th birthday on December in Austria with our 8yo daughter. I want somewhere relaxing. Thanks for sharing this video. I don't think I would like to go there now😂
At the end of the video, we feature all the other places in Austria that we made videos on. You can also find them in our Salzkammergut playlist. We especially loved Traunsee and the towns of Traunkirchen and Gmunden. We also loved Wolfgangsee for the Schafbergbahn. Bad Ischel is also nice!
Looking to go on a relaxing holiday and I never heard of this village until I did a google and it came up, then I search for some videos to see what it would be lile and I think my husband and I decided to choose to spend a week in hallstat over greece but your video has given me second thoughts. Which is a shame for the village economy to take my money elsewhere.
Not really. Hallstatt isn’t hurting for tourists or money, which is the entire problem. Not to mention most of the tourist money goes to the tourist companies and the mass tourism infrastructure. Very little money comparatively goes to the town itself.
But that’s not the only point of the video. I did an entire series of videos in the region, no more than 40 minutes away from Hallstatt the whole time. There is so much more to see, so many towns and experiences to be had that no ever visits because all anyone ever does is Hallstatt. So perhaps give those videos a watch and see if you might like those too!
Greece also suffers from the same mass tourism problems. Obviously not all of it. But I wouldn’t bet that you’ll find more peace in Santorini than Hallstatt.
Sadly most travel channels just recycle the same 6 places over and over again, the ones you have likely heard of, and never show you the reality of what these places are really like. So if you appreciate what we are doing here, maybe consider subscribing, watching our other videos, and sharing us with your friends!!
@@NearFromHome Thank you for answering, one other question if you don't mind. Is it possible to rent a hotel in hallstat and travel to other areas for sightseeing without a car or it costing a fortune? All we really want is a week of peace and relaxation. Tysm
@@littleanthonyuk6730 I think taking the trains would be a lot less expensive than renting a car. In our Salzkammergut series, we wanted to take the trains, but they didn't run quite frequently enough for our packed and changing schedule. For regular site seeing it might be an option. I would look at the frequency and duration of the trains between Hallstat and wherever you want to go. A few Austrians commented that our Salzkammergut series is doable via public transit.
I agree with your point but the title is an obvious clickbait and it’s not the village that should be hated…
The title isn’t clickbait? I 100% think you should skip Hallstatt and that over tourism by busses and day trips have completely eroded any authenticity yet the Salzkammergut goes mostly untouched. Nothing clickbait about it. Over tourism has ruined Hallstatt and until people spread out the town will continue to suffer.
@@NearFromHome Te miért mentél Hallstatba??? Hogy eggyel több turista legyen??? Nem kellett volna!!!
So ... the only thing bad about it are the daytrippers?
I think they cause the most damage, and give the least back. Yeah.
Rick Steves might tell you to go?❤️
I think he does, but a lot has changed since then!
I'm not going to visit the salt mine because I'm already visting Wieliczka which is the best in the world lol but definitely will be visiting Hallstatt because it looks beautiful
Well I tried my best.
@@NearFromHome I will try to go to the Ossuary and the Skywalk so at least there's that and I plan to go by train 🤷♀
Thanks for being one of only a very few tour guides to tell the truth about over tourism. Keep up the great videos!
Honestly that means a lot, as I shared this a few places and was mostly called a prick. I put myself out there and did something a little different with this video; and I’m really glad you liked it :)
As a person living in China, I 100% blame the Chinese. My Chinese colleagues also blame the Chinese. It’s because they all have the exact same time off for holidays 3 times a year
We have a word for this. It's called being a pick me. It's also strange to blame such a complicated problem on a single group of people. Seems pretty problematic to me.
Idk, I never hear the same criticism for other large groups of foreign tourists, of which I saw many the two times I visited Hallstatt. Additionally, much of the conversation around Chinese tourists is not as level headed as 'they all have the same three weeks off'. In fact, I have been really shocked with how openly racist a lot of Europeans have been with comments such as 'the Chinese are so rude/disrespectful/loud ect when they visit Europe.'
When is that?
I have got to experience this beautiful town until my gopro got stolen 😢
oh nooooo
Now I want to go for the working salt mine and try some food at a restaurant. Of course i would need to spend a couple nights in their hotel.
Truth is I'm just learning about this place. I've never left the United States. I don't even have a visa to leave the country. So truth is I don't see myself traveling their. But if I could travel outside the United States I would definitely try to visit this place. It's beautiful. That whole area looks ripe for exploration and really checking everything out. Nice video.
Thanks! We really love the surrounding Salzkammergut region!
Thanks well said opposite view.
Thanks! :)
What a drama 👻 I love the tourists not liking the other tourists 😂 C'mon! You could show the hidden gems of Hallstatt without blaming all the people in the world (excluding Chinese tourists).👋
Lucky for you I made a whole series showing the hidden gems of the Salzkammergut :) and recommended some better ways to see Hallstatt itself too. So I’ve got you covered!
when the Chinese tourists are the main culprit, lol
Tourism destroys the places it stands for.
Agreed. That is definitely the case for Hallstatt. :(
I am shocked people would people would pass up the salt mine tour. The stuff that caused humans to survive. 7000 years old🤦🏽♀️
It's great. I think it's really the best part. :D
Some of us don’t drive though so we can’t explore in these quieter spots.
A lot of this can be done with public transit! I wouldn’t be able to film this series as easily, but you can definitely go to these places with public transit.
Ohhhh no a bus parking lot, oh the horror.
Let’s complain about over tourism, but then ALSO ask people to spend MORE than a few hours here! 😂
Right. So that bus parking lot isn’t for public transport, maybe that’s where you got confused. However sadly no, that parking lot is for mass tourism. The kind of tourism that shows up for a few hours and leaves without ever really giving back to the town. It’s parasitic, and it’s low effort. So I personally would like to see much less of it.
Instead I think people should try to take real public transit if they can, not mass tour busses, but more importantly I think people should stay longer and actually spend their money in the town. Like really think about it for a minute. When you book a mass tour, most of the money goes to that company and very little to the town. What money they do get then often has to support building these massive tourist parking lots and doesn’t go into what actually makes the town special. If you however get there yourself and spend some real time there, imagine how much more money the town will receive, and to which business owners it will go to. It’s a night and day difference.
Lastly. If you think every single one of those mass tourists would actually take the effort to stay in these places longer and put the effort to get there the hard way……well……you are wrong ;)
By decreasing tourist bus parking lots, advocating people stay longer, and recommending actual busses and public transit when available you can easily see how this would lead to less over tourism.
@@NearFromHome I don’t know why you have so much against local bus drivers, but public transport is never going to be able to handle that many tourists.
Not to mention public transport is what the actual locals probably rely on, so overcrowding them even In Their public transit seems incredibly odd.
Plus, Money going to government transit is never going to make its way back into any of the townspeople’s pockets. Sure spending more time and going to local business les is fun, but not everyone has that much money is wealthy enough to make that happen. Some people can only afford a bus ticket. Not to mention, everyone staying overnight would only make the town more crowded, more loud.
Or just let people take their instagram photos, let them pay for busses to come grab their photos, and then leave. It’s not that big of an issue
@@wallinballinfam If you ask the people who live there, I don’t believe they will agree with you that it isn’t a big issue. Mass tourism has turned a beautiful town into little more than Disneyland. It’s sad. The food quality is abysmal, the shops tacky, and the streets littered with signs practically begging you to not fly your drone or step into people’s property to get a better photo.
Personally, I do not believe even a 10th of the people taking mass tours in and out of Hallstatt would bother going if they had to get there themselves or were encouraged to spend more time there. Which is why I don’t think it’ll overcrowd the local transit. If anything it will help push and fund for more local transit which will in turn help everyone.
The whole Salzkammergut region is fantastic. Many towns almost empty. Yet Hallstatt is overflowing. It’s wild. Which was the entire point of the video. To recommend people travel the area differently.
If you feel differently. That’s up to you. My goal was to just share my thoughts, and I felt like your comment was a little bit rude and sorta missed my point entirely.
Regardless though. You watched the Hallstatt video :) so I’d recommend you check out the others in the area. There was some really cool stuff out there that a lot of people were missing.
@@NearFromHome That's just the reality of what happens when you live somewhere beautiful. You got to go there so why shouldn't everybody else. Travel snobs are the worst lol
@@ania5038 just admit you don't care about others and leave
I am from Austria.
They visit Hallstatt 4 just one day....make the fotos gor instagram etc.
Being famos on instagram is a bit like being rich at monopoly😂😂😂
Hahaha we def saw plenty of that
Sad to see the tourist overcrowding and the recent protest of locals who feel their small piece of paradise is being spoilt.
Yes! I hope that people will find other equally cool and beautiful destinations in the area instead!
so right it's overcrowded the only part I like was the lake in the end of the town
Luckily that entire region of Austria is a Lake District with tons of different spots to choose from. To me, Hallstättersee isn’t even my favourite, I much preferred lake Traunsee. Which I think is also my favourite video in the series.
You do realize that when you are saying there are too many tourists, you are one of those tourists, right?
You do realise if I hadn’t gone there to get actual footage your comment would read “how are you talking about a place you’ve never been” right?
@NearFromHome I would like to apologize. I did not mean to offend you. My comment meant to be funny. I was thinking about over tourism like the traffic. When we are in traffic, we all blame traffic, but we are actually part of the traffic. Once again, I do apologize. I thought I was funny. Thank you for the report. You did a good job. I am looking forward to seeing Austria and will not be going to Hallstat.
@@dasberlinlex I apologise if I was being a bit short. If I knew your tone the I’d be able to tell it was a joke, but I also get this comment very very often from really rude people that I end up just deleting to keep the comments civil, so after a while it just sorta grates on you. Comments in general have also been oddly more negative this week and it kinda got to me. So we had some unlucky timing there.
But yeah :) to discuss the problem you have to become the problem.
I do hope you have an amazing trip though! The Salzkammergut is an area I really love and I think back on this series really fondly very often.
@NearFromHome No problem, and thank you for the reply.
So true. Hallstatt is a complete waste of time. Austria has so much more to offer.
Someone gets it!
i can only imagine how much those tourists are getting on nerves of ppl living there :D
My thought too!
After seeing this I can’t imagine why Hitler was so bitter. I’m from West Texas And all we got was rattlesnakes and sunburns And I’m a nice guy generally. Well, sometimes. Whatever.
I also went there this summer, my impressions were quite similar to this video. Now imagine what the tourism would be like if there wasn't a global pandemic 😵💫 Still, the town is very pretty, and you can visit the salt mine and go up to the Krippenstein mountain from there.
Yeah, we went in December 2019, and it was wayyyy more crowded. We were a little disappointed at the crowds for this video, as we really wanted to make a point. However, I think the shots suffice.
We love the salt mine. hahah I do think there are a couple others in the Salzkammergut though.
How is this place any worse than Neuschawnstein sp ic castle Fussen? Yellowstone National Park in July with thousands of cars? The Maroon Bells here in Colorado USA is so beautiful and so many go up there that cars are limited and buses take the crowds up. Lanikai beach in Hawaii on Oahu is gorgeous but the people in the neighborhood are pissed at the cars and traffic and crowds. How dies Hawaii survive without the US military and tourism? Tourism! How can one stay in Hallstast when lodging is limited and therefore not exactly any bargain? $300 USD a night at least?🤔 I would stay in Ebensee and train to Hallstast myself. A full day looks like enough to me😊 These overwhelming tourists are coming from all of Austria ViennaSalzburg and Germany Munich (The Marianplatz is crowded?😀) et al spending millions not only in the town but the big cities too 😊 BTW all are welcome in Colorado, Wyoming and Montana USA. Welcome! Welkommen! Bienvenido. Fly into Denver with our expanding airport. Nothing wrong with Miami, DC, New York, San Franscisco LA etc but come see the old west and what we have and how we live! Vielen dank! Cheers!❤
This level of over tourism is bad. People should spread out.
@@NearFromHomeWe went last May mate. Stayed across the lake in Obertraun. 4 nights. Loved it....😊
Lol, colonizer complaining about overtourism
Colonizer- A person who settles among and establishes political control over the indigenous people of an area.
Chinese is a nationality, not a race. Gotta get things straight before you virtue signal.
So are you arguing that one cannot be racist against the Chinese because the Chinese are not a race? 🙄 You gotta get things straight before you say racist shit.
Looks overrated, boring and annoying as hell.
I swear any place in south Germany is prettier and I am happy it's not overcrowded as HEllstatt
you said it, not me :D
The salt mine is pretty cool though
Sure don't go to any city or town anywhere.. we don't want outsiders anywhere stay in your own towns or city's and don't step outside of it..
My point exactly ;) thanks for watching
@@NearFromHome LOL great reply! Great video, keep up the good work Sir.
Hey , smart guy, did it ever cross your mind that you're one of them..
lol. You silly billy, if I hadn’t gone and shown it to people 🙄 if I hadn’t gotten footage to back up my claims, then how would I be able to make the video? I guess I could sit at home and talk out of my ass, but no doubt you’d then accuse me of not knowing what I’m talking about. People like you think they’ve got a clever “gotcha” moment, but …… well …… not really.
what a hypocrite, goes and films a monetized youtube video and tells people not to go.
did you want to watch a blank screen the entire time?
I think the presence of two people filming for a few hours can be forgiven by the 49k people who have been warned to not contribute to over tourism.
@@NearFromHome you could have used stock footage or footage from your old trip. I'm sure everyone of those 49k people thought the same, one extra person isn't going to make a difference.
Such narcissistic behaviour, you get to go TWICE and make money from your trip there because you're an important you-tuber, but normal people shouldn't go because you said so.
Locals blocking the main entry road coz they’ve had enough of mass tourism 😂😂 can’t blame them.
If you’re gonna go somewhere, at least stay the night and spend some money
Exactly!
Austria is over rated in general... need to do an exam and a test to get a fishing licence, can't swim in most lakes, no wild camping. All the beautiful nature that you can't enjoy
I do wish we could wild camp in Germany and Austria....
Not sure, if we were in Hallstatt while visiting Austria in the 70s. You cannot beat the beauty of the place, but the ppl there are racist and anti american...bad history of child abuse, too🙁i would not go back there.
Oof. big yikes. :O
Hallstatt is an Austrian Disney Land..nothing special. Go to other towns and villages. Zell-am-See, Ischl, many places few tourists. Everything made in China (oh, Chinese copied Hallstatt).
That’s pretty much the point of the video :) and the whole Salzkammergut series. I agree totally.
you don't need to be scared to call out the chinese mainland people. they always bring their attitude w them everywhere they go. n its important to not leave out the "mainland" word when addressing them. I used to work in a mall where tourists would come visit n most of the foreigners are the mainland chinese. I think bcs china has like 1 billion citizens n a lot of them are rich enough to go travel n act like they are the aryans of the world
lol I am no 'afraid to call out the Chinese'. There's nothing to call out.
'They act like the Aryans of the world'- Hoooo boi there is a lot to unpack here.
You have made. a lot of assumptions and generalisations about a racial group....what is that called again?
@@NearFromHome that’s called racism. yes I’m a bit racist but to be fair, I also condemn my race if we do something wrong.
also I forgot to point out that back when I used to work in an apple store, the mainland chinese tourists were the rudest n least civilized. not all of them but I can say around 50-60% of them are like that.
yes its probably bcs its an apple store, therefore our target market are customers w money. but a lot of them treat us like lowlife peasants.
ofc i’ve encountered a few good chinese people but its so rare that it amazed me every time they come by
@@sentiasatransformasi big yikes to everything you just said.
Kinda boring nature from a Norwegian POV
ok
Also, I hate this city, even Salzburg better to visit 2 times.
😅 this is the truth. I’m visiting Salzburg for the like the fifth time this weekend.