Renew your seat-specific subscription by June 18, 2026, or purchase a new subscription by November 10, 2026, valid until the first concert. Winners will be notified by email.
Subscriptions can be purchased at the Filharmonia Hungary office in Szeged (Klauzál Sq. 7, Szeged; +36 62 425 260; szeged@filharmonia.hu), at Ticket Express box offices, as well as online at www.jegymester.hu.
Filharmonia Tisza Subscription 4+1
Purchase a Filharmonia Tisza Plus Subscription and immerse yourself in the extraordinary world of classical music! The additional +1 event included in the subscription may be freely selected from the following three featured concerts:
José Cura and Szabolcs Szamosi – Békéscsaba – August 13, 2026
Franz Liszt International Piano Competition, Solo Final – Pécs – September 18, 2026
Bánk bán in Italian – Budapest – November 6–8, 2026
The price of the Filharmonia 4+1 Subscription includes the cost of organized transportation. The Filharmonia Tisza Plus Subscription can be purchased until July 31, 2026.
Among those who purchase their season tickets by June 22, we will raffle off 8×2 tickets to one of the July or August concerts of the Dómkerti Music Nights.
Subscribers of Filharmonia Hungary’s Tisza and Organ series are entitled to a 20% discount on tickets for concerts organized by Filharmonia Hungary in any city across the country. The discount applies to one ticket per subscription, per concert.
We reserve the right to change the programmes, dates, venues, and performances, and ticket prices may change accordingly.
A childhood fan of Haydn and Mozart, conductor Gábor Takács-Nagy holds the two composers as spiritual healers and has conducted their works at BFO concerts for years.
This time he will conduct Haydn's Symphony, a favourite of the French Queen Marie Antoinette, followed by Mozart's most popular Violin Concerto and Serenade, the latter including a later symphony and a Violin Concerto. The soloist for the programme is Belgian violinist Marc Bouchkov, of Russian-Ukrainian descent, who strives to exhibit how close his instrument is to the human voice.