







Highly recommended, memorable experience. Guests praised the tour for providing a deep understanding of Warsaw's WWII history and Polish culture. Many found it a highlight of their trip.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
3 hours
This private tour is designed for travelers with a strong interest in the history of World War II. Traveling through Warsaw in a retro Żuk minibus, you’ll explore the city’s wartime story in chronological order—from the outbreak of the war and the Nazi occupation, through resistance and uprisings, to the...
Begin your private tour in central Warsaw, where the scars of World War II are still woven into the cityscape. Traveling by retro Żuk minibus allows you to cover a wide range of locations comfortably while maintaining a clear historical narrative.
Your guide introduces the political climate of the late 1930s, the German invasion of Poland in 1939, and the simultaneous Soviet occupation of eastern Poland. Learn how these events shaped life in Warsaw and led to the emergence of an extensive resistance movement.
A central chapter of World War II history in Poland is the tragedy of the Jewish population, persecuted and murdered by Nazi Germany. Before the war, Poland was home to approximately three million Jews, including around 300,000 in Warsaw. In 1940, the Nazis established the Warsaw Ghetto, forcibly confining nearly...
In 1941 Ghetto was divided into two parts by Chłodna street, used for East-West transfer traffic.
The wooden bridge was built near the intersection of Chłodna and Żelazna streets to link two parts. It reached the third floor of the buildings, which allowed the “Aryan” trams, German military transports and...
The Waliców street tenement house is, as we say, the last ghost from the Ghetto since it remains a ruin up to now. Also - there is a fragment of the Ghetto wall preserved in the same place.
The next stop is the Muranów district. Again, the first impression is that it is just a regular neighbourhood filled with squared blocks of flats. But there is much more from the past to be discovered with the help of a guide.
The tour includes a visit to the area of the Monument to the Ghetto Heroes and the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews—two key symbolic sites connected to the Warsaw Ghetto. Both are located near the place where the first armed clashes of the 1943 Ghetto Uprising occurred....
On September 17th 1939, two weeks after the outbreak of WWII in Europe, Poland was attacked by the Soviet Union, and the Eastern part of our country was lost forever. After the fall of the USSR, the Monument to the Fallen and Murdered in the East was erected in honour...
The final chapter focuses on the Warsaw Uprising of 1944, the city’s last attempt to regain independence before the arrival of the Red Army. After the uprising’s defeat, Nazi forces systematically destroyed most of Warsaw. The Soviet army entered the empty ruins in January 1945, beginning a new era of...
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
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Click here if you prefer booking on Viator website.TourScanner acts as payment facilitator but the merchant of record is Viator. The price and conditions are the same.
Click here if you prefer booking on Viator website.Price from