neuschwanstein – EuroCheapo's Budget Travel Blog https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog EuroCheapo editors take on the world of budget travel. Tue, 18 Nov 2025 18:54:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.8.3 10-Day Germany Itinerary: Berlin, Potsdam, Hamburg, Munich and Neuschwanstein https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/10-day-germany-itinerary-travel-berlin-potsdam-hamburg-munich.html https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/10-day-germany-itinerary-travel-berlin-potsdam-hamburg-munich.html#comments Thu, 09 Jun 2016 14:08:59 +0000 https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/?p=45464 No doubt about it: Germany is one of Europe’s top tourist destinations at the moment. A big part of the tourist boom, of course, is because of Berlin’s growing popularity. This exciting metropolis is rich with culture, has a famously vibrant nightlife and is refreshingly affordable. However, if dirndl, lederhosen, beer gardens and quaint Fachwerk » Read more

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No doubt about it: Germany is one of Europe’s top tourist destinations at the moment. A big part of the tourist boom, of course, is because of Berlin’s growing popularity. This exciting metropolis is rich with culture, has a famously vibrant nightlife and is refreshingly affordable.

However, if dirndl, lederhosen, beer gardens and quaint Fachwerk houses are what you expect on a trip to Germany, you’ll find little of this in Berlin. Dirndl and Lederhosen are Bavarian traditions and, although you’ll find beer gardens in Berlin, they’re nothing like the ones you’ll find in Munich.

And still, Germany has a lot more to offer than just these two cities.

To get the best feel for what Germany has to offer on a 10-day tour, we suggest you delve into Berlin’s uber hip vibe, Potsdam’s regal elegance, Hamburg’s maritime magic, and Munich’s ritz and glitz (and beer gardens!).

Below we’ve outlined an itinerary to help you see the best in each place, along with tips on how to save. But first a couple of budget basics for your trip to Germany:

1. Choose your own adventure. We’ve ordered this itinerary in and out of Berlin, as cheap flights to Berlin are often easier to find than those to Munich (or Hamburg!). However, you can easily rearrange this to fit your needs — fly into Hamburg and then hit up Berlin and Potsdam on your way to Munich (a much more direct route), or start in Munich, head to Berlin and finish in Hamburg.

2. Fly into one city, and home from another. If flying in from the US, also search for tickets into Hamburg or Berlin, and back home from Munich, thus saving you the time and hassle of returning to your point of arrival to fly home. (Just note that if you rent a car, you’ll have to pick it up and drop it off in different cities, which shouldn’t be a problem with most major car rental agencies.)

3. Booking train tickets? Do it through the official Germany railway site: Bahn.de. You can easily switch to English in the top header, and the prices (and special offers on tickets) will be the cheapest you can find anywhere on the web. (Read more tips on German trains.)


Start your adventure in Berlin. Photo: larssteffens

Days 1, 2, 3: Berlin

We’re starting our trip in Berlin, the hippest and biggest city on the list. It’s also, as we pointed out above, the easiest to find cheap flights from the US.

There’s a lot to do in Berlin and a lot of land to cover (historically and geographically), and three days (including your first jet-lagged day, if flying internationally!) will race by. We don’t recommend trying to see the city in fewer than three days.

While in Berlin, don’t miss:

• Visiting the Brandenburg Gate and take a stroll through Tiergarten Park.

• Get a taste of Berlin’s nightlife at one of the many bars and clubs in Kreuzberg, Neukölln or Friedrichshain. (Here’s an excellent overview of nightlife options from VisitBerlin.)

• Receive a culture infusion and experience priceless works of art and antiquities on Museum Island, worth a trip for the quaint, cobblestone streets alone!

Explore the history of the Berlin Wall at the Berlin Wall Memorial and East Side Gallery.

• Enjoy a bite of scrumptious Turkish fast food, like Lahmucun and Dürüm Döner around Kottbusser Tor.

• Take a bike ride or stroll around Tempelhof Airport and sip a beer in the grass next to the former airstrip.

• Stroll down the swank tree-lined boulevards in Prenzlauer Berg.

• Treasure hunting at one the city’s many weekend flea markets.

• Peek through the gallery windows in Mitte.

• Sample the many cheap eats and finds Berlin has to offer, a city famously dubbed “Poor, but Sexy” by its former mayor. Here are our favorite street eats.

Additional info:

Tips for saving on Berlin restaurants and dining
How to save at Berlin’s top 10 attractions
Tips for saving on a shopping spree in Berlin
10 Ways to ride Berlin public transit like a local

Sleeping in Berlin

Unsurprisingly, Berlin’s hotel scene is also quite hip and very affordable (especially when compared to other capital cities in Europe). We love staying in Prenzlaeur Berg, Mitte and Kreuzberg, as the neighborhoods are still quite central and affordable options abound. See all of our favorite budget hotels in Berlin.


Day 4: Day trip to Potsdam

The former residence of Prussian kings as well as the German Kaiser, Potsdam is one of Germany’s most elegant cities.

Luckily, it is also less than an hour from Berlin and can be reached easily for the price of a regular BC region public transportation ticket. There’s no need to rent a car! Learn more about Berlin public transit tickets.

When in Potsdam, be sure to:

• Stroll around Sanssouci, Fredrick the Great’s iconic castle, and check out his final resting place next to several of his loyal dogs.

• Take in the beautiful green in the large Plant Hall of Orangery Palace, a 19th-century palace located on the grounds of Sanssouci Park.

• Take in the legend of the Miller of Sanssouci at the Historic Mill.

• Do a little window shopping in pricey but quaint downtown Potsdam.

• Check out the famous Dutch Quarter, one of the only places you’ll find Dutch-style houses outside of the Netherlands.

In the evening, head back to Berlin and either catch a little shut-eye or head right off to Hamburg. Another option is to spend the night in Potsdam. (There are about 70 hotels to choose from.)


Hamburg Port

A historic schooner docked in the Hamburg Port. Photo: Mark M.

Days 5 and 6: Hamburg

After a few days in edgy Berlin, Hamburg offers another side of Germany. It might not seem quite as “cutting edge”, but it’s not all buttoned up, either. This lovely maritime city still knows how to have a good time.

Getting there: The cheapest way to reach Hamburg from Berlin is by bus. The trip takes around three hours and buses run every couple of hours both day and night and can cost as little as €7.90 in each direction on Flixbus. (Read more tips for riding the budget bus lines in Germany.)

Trains: Check out train tickets on Die Bahn. The ride on the high-speed ICE train takes less than two hours. As mentioned above, book these tickets as far in advance as possible to get the cheap seats — from €19.

Otherwise, rent a car from Potsdam or Berlin. Again, booking as far in advance as possible to secure the best deal. The drive takes about three hours.

Activities

When you’re in Hamburg, make sure you:

• Get a glimpse of (and maybe participate in) the all-night-party vibe at the heart of the Reeperbahn red light district at night.

• Enjoy the vibrant nightlife in St. Pauli, the place where the Beatles got their start.

• Stroll along the waterfront past the red brick buildings of Speicherstadt, the largest warehouse district in the world.

• Lounge on the white sandy beach of the Elbstrand on the Elbe river.

• Take the ferry from Landungbrücke — but make sure it’s the regular HVV ferry, not one of the overpriced touristy ferries that basically travel the same route.

• Go for a nice hike through the Blakenese Stairs District.

• Check out artsy shops and little cafes in Karolinenviertel.

• Explore the cool Karo and Schanze Districts.

• Buy at least one souvenir with an anchor on it — believe me, they’ll be plenty to choose from!

More tips

7 Budget tips for visiting Hamburg
Weekend in Hamburg: A Budget-Friendly itinerary

Sleeping in Hamburg

Hotels in Hamburg, like restaurants and shopping, tend to be more expensive than in cheapo-friendly Berlin. But it’s not impossible to find a deal! Check out these five affordable picks in Hamburg and search over 370 hotels. 


Days 7 and 8: Munich

Now let’s head south to Bavaria to experience something totally different! Munich is known as the “world’s biggest village” and the city does have a low-key vibe, with plenty of historic sights and beer gardens to tickle your fancy.

It is also much ritzier and swankier than Berlin, and feels different than Hamburg. It’s a city of contrasts: You can hang out with a high-class crowd in fur coats and designer stilettos, or kick back with a lively beer-happy crowd with sausages and pretzels. Either way, you’ll have fun.

Getting there: There are plenty of ways to get down to Munich from Hamburg.

  • Try finding a cheap flight out of Hamburg (although it might be easier to head back to Berlin to find a good price on a flight!).
  • If you opt for the bus, it will take about eight hours from Hamburg.
  • The train, meanwhile, will take about six hours from Hamburg, and tickets can be booked for under €50 on the Bahn website.
  • Driving from Hamburg will take about eight hours on the Autobahn.

Some things you shouldn’t miss:

• A trip to the top the Neues Rathaus where you’ll get a great view over the city — and, on a clear day, see the Alps — all for a €2 admission.

• Have Weisswurst with sweet mustard and a soft pretzel for breakfast.

• Stroll around Viktualienmarkt and have an inexpensive spot of lunch.

• Do a little upscale window shopping on Maximilianstrasse.

• Hang out in the English Garden, one of Europe’s largest urban parks – and make sure you don’t miss the surfers!

• Pop in for a gigantic Maß of Bier at Lowenbräukeller, the less touristy alternative to the Hofbräuhaus.

• Check out Michaelskirche, the Renaissance church that would fight right in in Rome.

• Get artsy on a Sunday, when admission prices are only €1 at the Pinakothek museums.

• Sunbathe on the stony shores of the Isar river.

• Experience the regal beauty of Nymphenburg Palace and Park.

More tips
10 Simple ways to save on a trip to Munich
7 Free and cheap things to do in Munich

Sleeping in Munich

Depending on the season you’re visiting Munich, the city’s hotels can either be pretty reasonable or, if visiting during Oktoberfest, frightfully expensive. Our advice: Come well before or after the big party to avoid crazy prices.

There are a number of affordable places to stay inside the historic center (the Stadtmitte), although you’ll find many more options in the blocks just south of the station. See all of our recommended budget hotels here.


Day 9: Neuschwanstein Castle

Give your whirlwind tour of Germany a fairy-tale ending with a trip to lovely Newschwanstein Castle. The castle, the stuff of Disney dreams, is only about a two-hour drive southwest of Munich in Schwangau, making it an easy day trip.

You could, of course, pack up your things and spend the night in a nearby village, but, as you’ll be heading back up to Berlin, it’s probably easier just to keep your hotel in Munich!

Be sure to check out our tips for visiting Neuschwanstein Castle.


Day 10: Back to Berlin or last day in Munich

Depending on your flight, you’ll either spend your last day hanging out in Munich, or heading back up to Berlin for your last night.

Either way — enjoy yourself, and order one last taste of Germany before flying home!

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Tips for visiting Neuschwanstein Castle https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/tips-visiting-neuschwanstein-castle.html https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/tips-visiting-neuschwanstein-castle.html#comments Fri, 29 Apr 2016 13:51:50 +0000 https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/?p=45171 A trip to Neuschwanstein Castle is on the bucket list of many a European traveler. Nestled away in the Bavarian Alps about a two-hour drive south from Munich, this castle was one of several built by the eccentric Bavarian king Ludwig II, also known as “Mad King” Ludwig. If its white, limestone façade and fairy » Read more

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A trip to Neuschwanstein Castle is on the bucket list of many a European traveler. Nestled away in the Bavarian Alps about a two-hour drive south from Munich, this castle was one of several built by the eccentric Bavarian king Ludwig II, also known as “Mad King” Ludwig.

If its white, limestone façade and fairy tale turrets immediately make you think “Disney”, there is a reason – Walt Disney fashioned Sleeping Beauty’s castle after Neuschwanstein, just one of the reasons why it is among the most popular castles in the world.

Here are some tips for maximizing your experience at this unforgettable sight.

Getting to Neuschwanstein Castle

The castle is located at

By car

If you’re driving, you can take the A7 autobahn (direction Ulm-Kempten-Füssen) to the end and then head towards Füssen. From Füssen, you get on the B17 to Schwangau, following the signs to Hohenschwangau.

Another option is to get off the A7 at the Kempten exit and drive the B12 to Marktoberdorf. From there, get on the B16 to Roßhaupten – OAL I to Buching – and then on the B17 to Schwangau and Hohenschwangau.

Save on parking: If you opt to drive to Neuschwanstein, you can usually find free parking along the forest road about 900 feet south of the touristy area in the village Hohenschwangau.

Related: Need a rental car? Reserve well in advance to get the best deals. Search for your dates here.

Taking the train? Get off at cute-as-a-button-Fussen. Photo: ho visto nina volare

Taking the train? Get off at cute-as-a-button-Füssen. Photo: ho visto nina volare

By train

One of the best ways to reach Neuschwanstein is by train from Munich to the village of Füssen. The ride takes about two and a half hours and will give you a lovely view of the picturesque Allgäu countryside.

Once in Füssen, you need to take Bus 73 to “Steingaden Feuerwehrhaus” or Bus 78 to “Tegelbergbahn, Schwangau”. The bus stop you’ll need to disembark is “Hohenschwangau, Schlösser”.

Tip: Save on your train trip with the Bavaria ticket

The normal round-trip train ticket from Munich costs €58, including the bus fare. However, you can save if you buy a Bavaria ticket. This ticket offers one-day unlimited travel on Bavaria’s local transportation, including buses and trams. The ticket costs €23 and is ideal for groups of travelers: If one person in the group has purchased the Bavaria ticket, up to four travelers can go along with them for a mere €5 each.

Furthermore, children 15 and under travel free when traveling with parents or grandparents.

Learn about the Mad King as you make the walk up to the castles. Photo: luizcontreira

Learn about the Mad King as you make the walk up to the castles. Photo: luizcontreira

How to reach the castle(s)

Once you’ve reached Hohenschwanngau, you still need to get up to the castles – in plural because Hohenschwangau, a terra cotta colored castle built by Ludwig’s father, is right across from Neuschwanstein. Your options include hoofing it or taking the bus.

In our opinion, the best – and cheapest – option for outdoorsy and fit travelers is to walk. You’ll see signs warning of steep trails and a 40-minute walk but, in reality, most fit travelers can manage the trek in about half that time. The walk takes you along paved paths through the forest, and signs along the way offer interesting reading about the history and intrigue (as well as shenanigans) of the Mad King. With a little luck, you may even see a lone stag traipsing through the woods, making it just about the most romantic experience ever.

Those not in the mood for the work out should opt for the bus ride up the hill, which will only set you back €1.80. (You can always take a more leisurely stroll back down the trail afterward.) Note that buses don’t run when there’s ice and snow.

Tickets to visit the castles

The price is €12 per castle or €23 for both. Kids 18 and under are free if accompanied by a paying adult.

The time of your tour will be listed on the ticket, so be sure you don’t arrive late. It’s a one-time opportunity, folks. If you miss your tour, you’ll have to pay again.

Make sure you have your ticket before you reach the castle. Tickets can only be purchased at the ticket counter in Hohenschwangau or reserved online in advance for a small fee. The address of the ticket center is:

Alpseestraße 12, D-87645 Hohenschwangau
Telephone +49 (0) 83 62 – 9 30 83 – 0
Fax +49 (0) 83 62 -9 30 83 – 20
Online reservations

But, here’s the big question: Do you even need to visit the castles’ interiors?

In our opinion, the answer is: not really. Entrance is by guided tour only and the tour guides take you through the rooms at break-neck speed and you’re not allowed to take photographs. The castles are most beautiful from the outside anyway, and will give you plenty of gorgeous vistas and photo ops for Facebook and Instagram envy.

Tip: If you can, go off season

Neuschwanstein boasts 1.4 million visitors a year, and most of them come during the summer. If you do visit at this time, be prepared for long waits at the ticket counter and streams of tourists marching through old Ludwig’s palace – in the peak season, up to 6,000 pass through each day. Thus, if visiting during the summer, arrive as early as possible to beat the crowds. High season hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

But if you hold off your trip until, say, February, you’re likely to have the place almost to yourself. But don’t get there too late in the off-season: From mid-October to mid-March, the castles are only open from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

Nearby hotels

As noted above, many visitors to Neuschwanstein make the journey down from Munich. If you plan to do the same, here are some budget-friendly hotels in Munich that we recommend. However, there are many hotel options in Schwangau, as well. Search your dates for Schwangau here.

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In the Shadow of an Icon: 3 Sights not to miss in Pisa, Fussen and Paris https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/in-the-shadow-of-an-icon-3-sights-not-to-miss-in-pisa-fussen-and-paris.html https://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/in-the-shadow-of-an-icon-3-sights-not-to-miss-in-pisa-fussen-and-paris.html#comments Fri, 24 Aug 2012 15:03:36 +0000 http://www.eurocheapo.com/blog/?p=24339 Your tour of Europe is likely to take in at least a few iconic sights. There are, however, few guidebooks which tell you that next to the tower or castle you traveled half a world to see is a sight that’s equally (or more) worth your time and money to visit. Here a few suggestions » Read more

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Your tour of Europe is likely to take in at least a few iconic sights. There are, however, few guidebooks which tell you that next to the tower or castle you traveled half a world to see is a sight that’s equally (or more) worth your time and money to visit.

Here a few suggestions of near misses across popular destinations.

1. Leaning Tower of Pisa > Duomo di Pisa
Pisa, Italy

No trip to Italy would be complete without a stop in Pisa to take a picture “holding up” (or, for those more devilishly inclined, “pushing over”) the Leaning Tower of Pisa. And once you’ve turned down every vendor hocking watches, worked up the courage to walk on the forbidden lawn to get your picture, and perhaps even spent precious vacation time in line waiting for a timed ticket to climb to the top, you may finally take in the fact that the Tower is disappointingly small—and is, in fact, dwarfed by the other monuments in the ensemble, monuments you didn’t even know existed until you arrived in Pisa for this short visit.

Save your entrance fee money and buy a ticket for the Duomo, the large cathedral immediately adjacent to the Tower. The Duomo, with its green and white striped design, served as the archetype of the Pisan-Romanesque style and a model for other churches throughout Tuscany. Despite the hordes of tourists outside, the marble cathedral remains comfortably empty and, in the hot of summer, refreshingly shady and cool.

King Ludwig II spent his childhood in Hohenschwangau. Photo: Nataraj Metz

Anyone who may have felt crowded in cathedrals in Florence or Rome will be pleasantly surprised at the freedom to move, sit, and even pray peacefully in Pisa’s Duomo.

Entrance to the Duomo: €2; joint entrance to the Tower and Duomo:  €17.  Order tickets for the Tower online for a 2-euro additional fee.

2. Neuschwanstein > Hohenschwangau
Füssen, Germany

Mad King Ludwig II’s masterpiece, unfinished before his mysterious death in 1886, Neuschwanstein is clearly the model upon which Disney’s classic castle is based.  For travelers to southern Germany, this beauty is a highlight and a destination in itself.

Unfortunately, many overlook the neighboring castle, Hohenschwangau, where Ludwig spent his childhood.  Hohenschwangau is nowhere near as romantic from the outside, but inside, it hides countless treasures.  The castle was not damaged during either World War, and the castle’s contents — the royal family’s possessions — were saved from destruction or plunder during those years by local residents.

So whereas on most castle tours (Neuschwanstein included), one may be impressed by the luxurious decorations of the gigantic rooms, yet be left with little sense of how said rooms were actually used beyond the description of the tour and one’s own imagination, a tour through Hohenschwangau gives an excellent picture of everyday royal life.  Further, the tours at Hohenschwangau are more personal and informative and less rushed, without the assembly-line feeling one gets at Neuschwanstein.

The EIffel Tower rises over the Musée de Quai Branly. Photo: Theory

Entrance to Hohenschwangau:  €12; “King’s Ticket” joint entrance to Hohenschwangau and Neuschwanstein:  €23.  Book tickets online for a fee of €1.80 per person per castle.

3. Eiffel Tower > Museé de Quai Branly
Paris, France

Near the top of the list of European icons is Paris’ Eiffel Tower.  Originally constructed as a temporary part of the 1889 World Expo, the Tower won over the hearts and minds of Parisians and has since remained one of the city’s most significant landmarks.

Yet, if you failed to book your tickets for Tower entrance online and don’t have the time (or the legs) for standing in the ticket line or for walking up the Tower under your own steam, or if the weather simply isn’t cooperating, you don’t have to leave the area with a handful of pictures from the ground and a broken heart.  Instead, head over to the Musée de Quai Branly, Paris’s museum of ethnography.

Here you’ll find “an unpartitioned geographical itinerary comprising 5,450 artifacts from all four corners of the world.”  And on those hot summer and cold winter days, here you’ll find a temperate refuge from the weather outside (and a cloakroom for your luggage).

Entrance to Musee de Quai Branly:  €10 for all exhibitions; timed elevator tickets to the top of the Eiffel Tower:  €14.  Reserve online at no extra fee.

Your near misses?

What are some of your favorite “near misses”?  Share your ideas in the comments.

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