Overview
Europe’s hot springs tend to feel “built around.” Instead of remote rock pools, you’re more likely to find Roman-era bath traditions, town-run thermal pools, and spa complexes fed by mineral-rich water. The map clusters along the continent’s fault lines and volcanic pockets: the Alps and Carpathians for mountain thermal towns, Iceland for geothermal bathing, and a long arc of classic thermal cities from Central Europe to the Balkans. Many places pair soaking with architecture - historic bathhouses, tiled pools, saunas, and modern wellness add-ons - so the experience often looks as much like a local ritual as a nature outing.
You’ll usually choose between three formats: thermal bathhouses in cities or spa towns (tickets, time slots, strong rules), wellness resorts and thermal hotels (easy access, polished facilities), and small municipal pools where locals do laps in warm water. Before you go, check the basics that trip people up: nudity and sauna rules vary by country, swimsuits are mandatory in some baths and not allowed in others, and many sites run on reservations - especially weekends and winter. Seasons matter differently here too: shoulder season can be ideal for quieter spa towns, while snow season drives crowds to Alpine thermal pools after ski days.