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Destinations in Germany — where to go

Where to base yourself — Germany isn't one place, it's four or five different countries wearing a trenchcoat.

Germany's big four couldn't be more different: Berlin (history, nightlife, edge, 3–4 days), Munich (Bavarian charm, beer gardens, Alps day trips, 2–3 days), Hamburg (harbor city, understated, 2 days), and Cologne (cathedral, Rhine river life, Carnival spirit, 1–2 days). A solid first two-week trip combines Berlin, Munich, and one Rhine-area stop.

Here's the thing nobody tells you before a first trip to Germany: it doesn't really have one personality. Berlin feels like a different country from Munich, which feels like a different country from Cologne. That's not a bug — sixteen states, centuries of separate kingdoms and city-states before unification in 1871, and a very deliberate post-reunification identity all mean you get genuinely different food, dialects, architecture, and vibes depending on where you land. Here's every major destination, with an honest read on who it's actually for and how long it earns.

Questions people actually ask

What's the best first-time Germany itinerary?
Berlin (3–4 days) + Munich (2–3 days) + one Rhine-area or Bavarian stop is the classic combination. Over 10–12 days it flows well without feeling rushed, and you get both the modern-capital energy and the postcard-Bavaria half of the country.
Which German city is cheapest to visit?
Berlin is famously cheap for a European capital — hostels, döner, and nightlife all run less than in Munich or Hamburg. Smaller cities like Regensburg or Dresden cost noticeably less than any of the big four across the board.
Berlin or Munich — which is better?
Different trips entirely: Berlin for history, nightlife, and grit; Munich for beer gardens, Alpine day trips, and old-world charm. See our full head-to-head comparison if you can only pick one.