Cage-free shark feeding makes Thursdays in Budapest a must. Every week in 2026 at 2:30 p.m., certified diver-keepers at the Tropicarium slip into a 1,400,000 oz saltwater tank, 13.1 ft deep and kept at about 69.8–73.4°F, to hand-feed sharks and the country’s only shark-tailed guitarfish. It’s a family-friendly, goosebump moment: roughly 26.5–33.1 pounds of sea fish disappear in seconds as predators glide past the panoramic glass. Settle into comfy seating, soundtrack on, and watch the majestic moves, flicks, and playfulness unfold inches away at 1122 Budapest (Budapest 11), District 22 – Budafok-Tétény (Budafok-Tétény), Nagytétényi út (Nagytétényi Road) 37–43.
Mark the Thursdays: 03/05/2026, 03/12/2026, 03/19/2026, 03/26/2026 in Budapest. More dates are coming, and organizers reserve the right to change times and programs, so check before you go.
Social hunting is rare among sharks, but sand tiger sharks often gather in groups—sometimes dozens—near wrecks or cave mouths. They can gulp air at the surface and store it in their stomachs to fine-tune buoyancy, a neat trick for effortless hovering. Their PR problem? That long snout, cold fixed stare, and dagger-like, protruding teeth make them look far scarier than they are. Because they seem dangerous, people long blamed them for attacks without evidence, fueling culls so intense that in parts of southeastern Australia, sand tigers were wiped out in many areas.