Pärnu Museum
In Parnu, Estonia .
More places to visit in Parnu
Discover more attractions and things to do in Parnu.
Pärnu Beach
First promoted in the late 1890s as the “Nordic Riviera,” Pärnu Beach stretches for nearly two kilometres of powder-soft golden sand shelving gently into the warm Baltic shallows—often reaching 22 °C in July. Families appreciate knee-deep water far from shore, while kite-surfers harness steady gulf breezes beyond the marked swimming zone. The award-winning Beach Promenade , rebuilt in 2010 with sleek timber decking and wave-shaped benches, links historic bathhouses to art-deco changing cabins and open-air yoga platforms. Sand-sculpture festivals, night-glow volleyball tournaments on FIVB-certified courts , and the midsummer “Sunset Jazz” stage keep the shoreline lively from dawn to fiery Baltic sunsets . Ecologists lead dune-safari walks explaining fragile marram grass and migratory bird habitats, while nearby cafés serve smoked flounder and sea-buckthorn sorbet. Clean water monitoring has earned the beach coveted Blue Flag status each season. Illuminated after dusk, the promenade becomes a starlit boardwalk where locals cycle under art-installations powered by sea breeze turbines, confirming Pärnu’s reputation as Estonia’s carefree summer capital.
Pärnu Mud Baths
Since 1838 , when a wooden bathing hut first offered curative seaside dips, Pärnu’s Mud Baths have lured health-seekers with therapeutic coastal peat. The current functionalist palace, designed by architect Olev Siinmaa in 1927, gleams with white stucco colonnades that evoke Miami rather than the Baltic. Inside, therapists apply heated Pärnu mud —rich in humic acids and minerals—during signature body wraps said to soothe arthritis and boost circulation. Salt-water pools, a Roman-style tepidarium, and Nordic-contrast saunas complement bespoke aromatherapy rituals using local sea-buckthorn oil. Historical exhibits showcase vintage electro-therapy devices, tsarist-era guestbooks, and 1930s swimsuit fashion. A glass atrium café serves detox smoothies and rye-bread tapas while overlooking a sculpture garden of bathing nymphs. Weekly candlelit yoga sessions coincide with sunset over the Gulf of Riga, and annual Spa History Days feature lectures on balneology and live jazz from Estonia’s big-band heritage. Fusing heritage architecture, scientific wellness, and seaside glamour, Pärnu Mud Baths remain the beating heart of Estonia’s spa tradition.
Pärnu Old Town
Encircled by remnants of 17th-century Swedish ramparts, Pärnu Old Town charms visitors with pastel wooden houses , leafy courtyards, and baroque merchant manors lining Rüütli Street. Enter through the monumental Tallinn Gate —one of the Baltic’s few surviving bastioned portals—then meander toward Town Hall Square where a neo-Renaissance city hall presides over street musicians and Saturday craft markets. The beloved Kissing Students fountain splashes beside cafés that dish out kama milkshakes and wild-berry pastries. St. Elizabeth’s Church, consecrated in 1747 , delights organ aficionados with summer Bach recitals beneath its gilded pulpit. Hidden behind stucco façades are galleries exhibiting contemporary Baltic art and boutiques selling juniper-wood souvenirs. QR plaques on doorframes reveal tales of Hanseatic spice traders, 19th-century spa pioneers, and Soviet underground jazz clubs. Evening lantern tours describe wartime shipyards and resilience after the 1944 bombing raid. Whether sipping local craft gin in a vaulted cellar or admiring gingerbread-trim verandas, travellers experience a seamless dialogue between living culture and layered history in Pärnu’s walkable Old Town.
Vallikäär Park
Where Swedish bastions once guarded Pärnu’s harbour, tranquil Vallikäär Park now curves around a leafy historic moat rejuvenated in 2011. A graceful pedestrian bridge arcs over mirror-still water, linking illuminated promenade paths to lawns perfect for summer picnics beneath chestnut blooms. Sculptures of composer Raimond Valgre and poet Lydia Koidula celebrate the city’s cultural icons, while evening sound-installations play their music across the canal. Restored earthworks house an open-air amphitheatre whose stage floats on the moat; July’s Hanami Festival fills it with lanterns, koto strings, and sushi stalls under flowering sakura imported from Japan. Joggers circle fitness stations, and families rent retro rowboats to glide past mute swans and 18th-century stone powder magazines. Information boards outline the fort’s role during the Great Northern War and explain how modern bio-filters keep water quality pristine. Winter transforms the canal into a fairy-lit skating ribbon where vendors pour cinnamon-spiced glögi. Offering history, art, and recreation within footsteps of Old Town cafés, Vallikäär Park delivers Pärnu’s most photogenic urban retreat.