Tallinn
Clamber through the creaking wooden doors of Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, then grab sweet pastries at a local café before exploring cobblestone Old Town on foot. Kids love the city walls and toy museums.
20 spots · 1 itinerary
Itineraries
1Tours
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Food & Drink
6
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Pudel Baar (Non-Alcoholic Visit for the Space)
Stop for afternoon snacks and soft drinks at this quirky Kalamaja bar-cafe known for its eclectic decor and relaxed neighborhood energy, which families with older kids enjoy for people-watching in the Telliskivi complex. It is dog-friendly and has outdoor seating when the weather is good.
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Balti Jaama Turg (Baltic Station Market)
A five-minute walk from the seaplane hangar, this revitalized market hall has stalls selling Estonian street food, smoked fish, fresh pastries, and local produce across three floors. Grab lunch from different vendors and eat at the communal tables upstairs.
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Kohvik Vanaema Juures
Tucked into Toompea, this cozy Estonian grandmother-style cafe serves traditional home cooking including meatballs, sauerkraut, and black bread in a warm, unpretentious dining room. It is the kind of place locals actually eat lunch on weekdays.
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Olde Hansa Restaurant
For dinner, step inside this medieval-themed restaurant where servers wear period costumes and the menu features elk, wild boar, and honey-glazed dishes by candlelight. Kids are genuinely fascinated by the atmosphere, and the bear paw-shaped bread alone makes it memorable.
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Kompressor
This beloved Old Town pancake restaurant serves enormous savory and sweet pancakes at family-friendly prices, and the casual atmosphere makes it perfect for jetlagged kids who need a big meal. The mushroom and cheese pancake is a local favorite worth ordering.
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Cafe Maiasmokk
Estonia's oldest cafe, open since 1864, serves marzipan, pastries, and hot chocolate in a beautifully preserved historic interior on Pikk Street in the Old Town. Let the kids pick out a hand-painted marzipan figure from the display case as a souvenir.
Activities
14
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Kalamaja Neighborhood Wander and Street Art
Kalamaja is Tallinn's most charming residential quarter, filled with colorful 19th-century wooden houses, independent shops, and murals painted on garden walls. A self-guided walk through Telliskivi Creative City, which sits at the neighborhood's edge, exposes kids to street art and open courtyards with pop-up activities.
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Nõmme Adventure Park (Seikluspark)
If energy levels allow on the last afternoon, this forest ropes course and zip-line park on the edge of the city has circuits graded for different ages starting from age five. It is a 20-minute tram ride from the Old Town and a high-energy finale before evening flights or packing.
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Lennusadam Seaplane Harbour
This spectacular aviation and maritime museum inside a historic seaplane hangar lets kids climb aboard an icebreaker, explore a submarine, and sit in the cockpit of old aircraft. It is consistently rated one of the top family attractions in the Baltic states and easily fills a full morning.
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Alexander Nevsky Cathedral
The ornate Russian Orthodox cathedral with its onion domes is one of Tallinn's most visually striking buildings and takes only 15 to 20 minutes to visit, making it a good late-afternoon stop. Children are usually captivated by the gold iconostasis and the contrast with the surrounding Gothic architecture.
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Kiek in de Kök Fortifications Museum
This 15th-century cannonball-scarred artillery tower houses an interactive museum about Tallinn's defense history, with tunnels connecting several bastions that kids can explore on their own. The name roughly translates to 'Peep into the Kitchen' because soldiers could see into townspeople's kitchens from the top.
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Viru Gate and Town Wall Walk
Start at the iconic Viru Gate, the 14th-century twin-towered entrance to the Old Town, and walk a stretch of the medieval city walls with the kids. The towers and ramparts give an immediate sense of scale and history that even young children respond to.
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Tallinn Town Hall Square (Raekoja plats)
Spend the afternoon exploring the main square, where kids can run freely while parents take in the Gothic Town Hall and the colorful merchant buildings. In summer the square hosts street performers, and in winter it transforms into one of Europe's most charming Christmas markets.
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Masters' Courtyard (Meistrite Hoov)
This hidden courtyard off Vene Street is lined with artisan workshops selling handmade ceramics, jewelry, woolens, and woodwork made by Estonian craftspeople. Kids enjoy watching artisans at work through the workshop windows, and it is a far more meaningful souvenir stop than a gift shop.
Lodging
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