
Hamburg
Hamburg is Germany's second-largest city and its busiest port, and it's genuinely underrated on most first-timers' itineraries. Two days covers the essentials: the Speicherstadt (the world's largest warehouse district, a UNESCO World Heritage Site), the striking Elbphilharmonie concert hall, and a harbor boat tour. It's understated compared to Berlin or Munich — less about single blockbuster sights, more about atmosphere.
Hamburg doesn't try very hard to be liked, which is sort of the point — it's a working port city first, a tourist destination second, and that gives it a texture Berlin and Munich don't have. Red-brick warehouses, canals that earn the (slightly overused) 'Venice of the North' nickname, and a harbor that never really stops moving.
What's worth seeing in two days
- Speicherstadt — the world's largest contiguous warehouse district, built on oak-pile foundations over canals; a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2015. Walk it at golden hour for the best light on the red brick.
- Elbphilharmonie — a striking glass concert hall built on top of an old warehouse; the free public viewing platform (Plaza) has some of the best harbor views in the city — reserve a free timed ticket online.
- A harbor boat tour — Hamburg's port is one of Europe's largest, and an hour-long boat tour past container terminals and shipyards is a genuinely different perspective on the city.
- St. Pauli and the Reeperbahn — Hamburg's famous (and historically red-light) entertainment district, now a broader mix of clubs, live music venues, and bars; the Beatles played some of their earliest gigs here.

Where to stay
| Area | Best for |
|---|---|
| Speicherstadt / HafenCity | Waterfront views, walking distance to the Elbphilharmonie |
| Altstadt (Old Town) | Central, classic sightseeing base |
| St. Pauli | Nightlife, budget stays, a grittier edge |
Hamburg's weather is genuinely changeable — pack a light rain layer regardless of season. It's a North Sea/Elbe estuary climate, closer to the UK's in feel than Munich's more continental one.
What it costs
Roughly comparable to Berlin — a mid-range hotel runs $100–170/night, a casual meal $12–20, and the harbor boat tour €20–25 per person. Hamburg is not a budget-blowout city by Western European standards.
Getting there and getting around
Hamburg Airport is a 25-minute train ride from the city center, and the city sits on a major ICE line — roughly 1.5 hours from Berlin or 4 hours from Munich by high-speed train. Once you're there, the city's compact enough that the U-Bahn/S-Bahn network plus walking covers everything; a car is more hassle than help.
A common mistake
- Treating Hamburg as a quick half-day stopover on the way somewhere else — the Speicherstadt and Elbphilharmonie alone deserve a slower half-day, and rushing it means missing the harbor tour that's arguably the best single thing to do here.
- Skipping the free Elbphilharmonie Plaza because you assume you need concert tickets — you don't, and the harbor view from up there is one of the best in the city.
Where to stay in Hamburg — hotels
Check live availability and prices for hotels, resorts, and guesthouses in Hamburg on Booking.com:
Search hotels in Hamburg on Booking.com ←We may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you.












































