Visit Olesko, Zolochiv, and Pidhirci castles.
Tour fee:
| by car - | 1000 UAH (Ukrainian / Russian language) / 1300 UAH (English, Polish language) (up to 3 persons) |
| by minibus - | 1250 UAH (Ukrainian / Russian language) / 1500 UAH (English, Polish language) (up to 7 persons) |
| by minibus - | 1600 UAH (Ukrainian / Russian language) / 2000 UAH (English, Polish language) (up to 16 persons) |
| by bus - | 3500 UAH (up to 40 persons) |
Price includes a car (minibus, bus) with a driver, entrance tickets, English speaking guide.
Or much cheaper solution:
- you can go with a guide by local transport. The price will be - 500 UAH + bus tickets (about 30 UAH per person )
- every Sunday you can join the Castle tour by bus. The price is 100 UAH per person. It includes the transfers, entrance tickets and the guided tour in Ukrainian language. Additionaly you can order the interpreter for 500 UAH.
The most popular tourist itinerary is one, which leads to Olesko, Zolochiv and Pidhirci - these small villages are famous for their age-old majestic castles. From a distance we can see the powerful defensive building on the picturesque hill in Olesko, which walls are formed of the cutted stone blocks, they “remember” a lot of invasions of polyglot invaders. And within some kilometres there is one more castle, quite not like the previous. It’s alike a fairy-tale palace with the slender towers, shining versatile mosaic tile and playful decoration.
There are hardly any castles in the world that went through such roller coaster transformations – from a royal residence to a hospital, vocational school for farming machinery mechanics, ghost-haunted ruins, museums, crumbling structures in perpetual state of restoration where cows and goats graze on once well-kept lawns.
These are different kind of castles. They are like a photograph of beautiful flowers represented by a crazy avant-garde genius - it is really worth seeing.



Zolochiv Castle was built as a citadel with bastions in the 1630s. In the 17th - 18th centuries the castle belonged to the rich Polish families of Sobieski and Radziwill. In the days of Austro-Hungarian empire Zolochiv Castle was turned into a prison and later became a grim prison under Stalin. A memorial and an exhibition to commemorate those who perished here can now be seen in the castle as well as a chapel outside the the castle walls. Inside Zolochiv Castle visitors could see a newly restored Chinese palace built to follow European fashion for Chinese art in late 17th century. To the right is a larger residential palace undergoing restoration. From the bastions one could see surrounding countryside and the town of Zolochiv. Tourists would be taken to the old magic stone in the castle courtyard. It has engraved inscriptions in unknown language and a hole in the middle that will help fulfill your wishes if you put your finger there and turn.