Berlin, Germany
Germany · Europe

Viajes a medida a Berlin

A capital still rewriting itself, one wall at a time.

Ver itinerarios de muestra
Desde 1,700/persona·Mejor época: May–September·★★★★★ 500+ viajeros conectados
Foto de Travel with Lenses en Pexels

¿Qué es un viaje a medida a Berlin?

A custom Berlin tour embeds you with historians, club insiders, and neighborhood experts who skip the museum queues and take you to the döner joints locals defend. You'll move through Cold War history, underground techno nights, and street art that changes monthly—curated entirely around what fascinates you.

Berlin doesn't preserve its past—it argues with it. A custom tour here means standing at Checkpoint Charlie not with a tour group but with a Cold War historian who lived through the division, walking into the Stasi Museum where surveillance files still smell of bureaucratic paranoia. You'll learn why this city spent 28 years split in two, and why that wound still shapes every street corner.

By night, Berlin becomes a different animal. Your guide knows the password to Berghain, or the underground club where the real techno happens—not the sanitized version for tourists. You'll dance until dawn in a warehouse in Friedrichshain where the bass rattles through concrete walls that once held secrets. This is the Berlin that reinvents itself every weekend.

The city eats well and without pretense. A custom itinerary ends not at the döner stand Instagram made famous, but the one where construction workers and night-shift nurses queue at 3 a.m., where the owner has been slicing meat the same way for twenty years. In Berlin, authenticity isn't marketed—it's earned.

¿Cuándo es la mejor época para visitar Berlin?

Nuestros meses recomendados son May–September. Aquí una vista mensual con notas de planificación.

Jan
Temporada baja — mejor disponibilidad y precio.
Feb
Temporada baja; tranquilo y a menudo más barato.
Mar
Temporada media; el tiempo mejora.
Apr
Temporada media; empieza el tiempo ideal.
May
Recomendado
Temporada media alta; reserva con antelación.
Jun
Temporada alta; buen tiempo, precios más altos.
Jul
Temporada alta; concurrido pero animado.
Aug
Temporada alta; mes de vacaciones en gran parte de Europa.
Sep
Recomendado
Temporada media alta; nuestro mes favorito.
Oct
Temporada media; luz preciosa y menos turistas.
Nov
Temporada media baja; tranquilo y con ambiente.
Dec
Temporada baja salvo Navidad y Nochevieja.

Las mejores experiencias en Berlin

Momentos seleccionados por nuestras agencias locales. Cada viaje incluye una selección de estas — o algo mejor si lo encontramos.

Berlin Wall and Stasi Museum with a historian — Berlin
Experiencia 1
Berlin Wall and Stasi Museum with a historian
Walk the remaining Wall sections with a historian who lived through division, then descend into the Stasi Museum to confront the machinery of surveillance. This is Cold War history told through human testimony, not textbooks.
Museum Island private morning — Berlin
Experiencia 2
Museum Island private morning
Beat the crowds with early-access entry to the Pergamon or Neues Museum before tour groups arrive. A curator-connected guide contextualizes postwar restitution and imperial plunder—Berlin's collections tell uncomfortable truths.
Techno club night with a local guide — Berlin
Experiencia 3
Techno club night with a local guide
Your guide gets you past the velvet ropes at Berghain or into a warehouse party where the crowd is small and the sound system justifies the hype. Dance until dawn and understand why Berlin became Europe's electronic music capital.
Kreuzberg food and street art walk — Berlin
Experiencia 4
Kreuzberg food and street art walk
Walk with a street artist through Kreuzberg's shifting murals, explore the neighborhood's anarchist roots, then eat at the Lebanese restaurant that's been operating since 1987. Authentic food and art, no Instagram filters.
Potsdam Sanssouci palaces day — Berlin
Experiencia 5
Potsdam Sanssouci palaces day
Full day at Sanssouci Palace, Frederick the Great's summer residence, where baroque excess meets manicured gardens. The contrast to industrial Berlin clarifies the city's historical ruptures.
Jewish Berlin and Holocaust memorial walk — Berlin
Experiencia 6
Jewish Berlin and Holocaust memorial walk
Visit the Jüdisches Museum and walk Mitte's Jewish Quarter—the Old Synagogue, Stolpersteine embedded in sidewalks, the Memorial to the Murdered Jews. Quiet reflection on Berlin's pre-war culture and Nazi destruction.

Itinerarios de muestra

Dos puntos de partida — tu itinerario real es a medida. Construimos desde aquí.

7 días clásico

  1. 1
    Día 1: Arrival & Kreuzberg orientation
    Land at Berlin Tegel or Schönefeld and transfer to your accommodation in Kreuzberg or Friedrichshain. Your guide meets you for an evening walk through RAW-Gelände, the former railway yards now pulsing with street art, DIY venues, and the smell of grilled vegetables. You'll see why this neighborhood became the aesthetic blueprint for post-Wall Berlin and grab dinner at a local Spätkauf-adjacent restaurant.
  2. 2
    Día 2: Berlin Wall and Stasi Museum with a historian
    Spend the morning at the East Side Gallery with a historian who explains the wall through personal testimony, not plaques. Walk the remaining sections in Mitte and Prenzlauer Berg, then descend into the Stasi Museum. Your guide contextualizes the surveillance state—filing systems, informants, the psychological architecture of control. Lunch at a former East Berlin workers' café, still unchanged.
  3. 3
    Día 3: Museum Island private morning & Charlottenburg Palace afternoon
    Beat the crowds with an early access session at the Pergamon or Neues Museum before they fill with school groups. A curator-connected guide highlights the pieces that illuminate Berlin's imperial past and postwar restitution questions. Afternoon transfer to Charlottenburg Palace in Charlottenburg district—the largest palace in Berlin, where Prussian excess meets baroque gardens and the city feels very far away.
  4. 4
    Día 4: Techno club night with a local guide
    Day begins with a slow coffee in Neukölln, exploring Turkish bakeries and vintage shops. Evening: your guide takes you to the real Berlin nightlife—whether Berghain's industrial cathedral or a warehouse party in Lichtenberg where the crowd is 200 people and the sound system cost more than a car. You'll understand why Berlin became Europe's electronic music capital.
  5. 5
    Día 5: Kreuzberg food and street art walk
    Start in RAW-Gelände's artist studios, then navigate Kreuzberg's shifting murals with a street artist who explains the neighborhood's anarchist roots and gentrification tensions. Stop at Markthalle Neun for street food, then a craft brewery in Neukölln. Dinner at a Lebanese restaurant where the owner's family has cooked the same recipes since 1987.
  6. 6
    Día 6: Jewish Berlin and Holocaust memorial walk
    Guided tour of the Jüdisches Museum Berlin, followed by a walking route through Mitte's Jewish Quarter—the Old Synagogue, Oranienburger Straße, the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. Your guide brings context to each site's pre-war history and postwar reconstruction. Quiet reflection at lesser-known memorials, away from crowds. End at a kosher restaurant or café that survived the war.
  7. 7
    Día 7: Potsdam day trip & departure
    Take the S-Bahn to Potsdam for a morning at Sanssouci Palace, the summer residence of Frederick the Great—a contrast to Berlin's industrial rawness. Explore the Baroque gardens and Neues Palais. Return to Berlin for evening departure, or extend with a final Spätlese wine at a local wine bar in Charlottenburg.

14 días en profundidad

  1. 1
    Día 1: Arrival & Friedrichshain walk
    Land and transfer to Friedrichshain or Kreuzberg. Evening orientation walk through RAW-Gelände, the former railway yards transformed into galleries, clubs, and street art. Dinner at a communal table spot where locals gather—no reservations, standing room, excellent food.
  2. 2
    Día 2: Berlin Wall and Stasi Museum with a historian
    Morning at the East Side Gallery with a historian explaining the wall's human cost through personal testimony. Visit remaining wall sections in Mitte, then enter the Stasi Museum—the surveillance apparatus, the files, the informant network. Lunch at a 1970s East German café, untouched by gentrification.
  3. 3
    Día 3: Museum Island and Tiergarten private access
    Early morning at the Pergamon or Neues Museum with curator-level access before crowds arrive. A guide contextualizes the postwar restitution questions embedded in Berlin's collections. Afternoon walk through Tiergarten, Berlin's central park, ending at the Reichstag with dome views if time permits.
  4. 4
    Día 4: Techno club night with a local guide
    Slow morning in Neukölln exploring Turkish bakeries and vintage shops. Evening: your guide takes you beyond tourist zones to where Berlin's electronic music scene actually lives—Berghain, a warehouse in Friedrichshain, or a smaller club in Wedding. You'll understand the sound and the architecture that made it possible.
  5. 5
    Día 5: Kreuzberg street art and food deep dive
    Walk RAW-Gelände's artist studios with a working street artist. Navigate Kreuzberg's shifting murals, learning the neighborhood's anarchist history and current gentrification debates. Market Halle Neun for international street food. Dinner at a Lebanese restaurant operating since 1987, or a Vietnamese spot where no one speaks English and the food is better for it.
  6. 6
    Día 6: Jewish Berlin and Holocaust memorial walk
    Jüdisches Museum Berlin with context on pre-war Jewish life, Nazi persecution, and postwar reconstruction. Walk Mitte's Jewish Quarter—Old Synagogue, Oranienburger Straße, the Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) embedded in sidewalks. The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe in silence. Kosher dinner at a restaurant or café that carries the weight of history.
  7. 7
    Día 7: Charlottenburg Palace and Western Berlin
    Morning transfer to Charlottenburg Palace, Berlin's largest palace, where Prussian baroque meets gardens designed for imperial leisure. Explore the palace interiors and grounds. Afternoon in Charlottenburg district—cafés, antique shops, the atmosphere of West Berlin before the Wall fell. Dinner in Savignyplatz, the old West Berlin intellectual quarter.
  8. 8
    Día 8: Potsdam Sanssouci day trip
    S-Bahn to Potsdam. Full day at Sanssouci Palace, Frederick the Great's summer residence—baroque excess, manicured gardens, the Neues Palais. Walk the grounds. Lunch in Potsdam's Altstadt. Return to Berlin by evening, or stay overnight in Potsdam's quieter atmosphere.
  9. 9
    Día 9: Dresden day excursion or Saxon countryside
    Train south to Dresden (two hours) to see the Frauenkirche, rebuilt after WWII bombing, and the Elbe Valley. Or stay in the Elbe region for smaller towns, vineyards, and slower pace. Return to Berlin evening, or extend the regional stay. This shift breaks the Berlin intensity with landscape and history at a different scale.
  10. 10
    Día 10: Return to Berlin & alternative neighborhood exploration
    Return to Berlin from Potsdam or Dresden region. Evening in Prenzlauer Berg—the cobblestone streets where East Berlin's bohemia survived, now gentrified but still textured with vintage shops, bookstores, and cafés. Or explore Wedding, Moabit, or Spandau—neighborhoods tourists miss. Dinner in a neighborhood Kiez spot.
  11. 11
    Día 11: Prenzlauer Berg vintage and café culture
    Slow morning navigating Prenzlauer Berg's vintage shops, independent bookstores, and galleries. This was East Berlin's bohemian refuge—now transformed but still retaining texture. Visit the Kulturbrauerei, the former brewery complex turned cultural space. Lunch at a long-standing café. Afternoon at Mauerpark, where karaoke happens Sunday afternoons (if timing aligns).
  12. 12
    Día 12: Industrial heritage and photography walk
    Explore Berlin's industrial past—former factories in Friedrichshain, abandoned structures being repurposed as studios and galleries. A photography guide or architectural expert contextualizes the postwar reconstruction and the current creative reuse. Visit Kunsthaus Tacheles or other artist-run spaces. The landscape of Berlin's reinvention, documented.
  13. 13
    Día 13: Final night: döner and nightlife choice
    Your last full day in Berlin. Lunch at the döner spot locals queue for—no Instagram fame, just consistent excellence and regulars who know the owner's name. Afternoon at a neighborhood you haven't fully explored. Final evening: choose your own Berlin—quiet wine bar in Charlottenburg, last club night in Friedrichshain, or a rooftop bar overlooking the Spree.
  14. 14
    Día 14: Departure
    Transfer to Berlin Tegel or Schönefeld airport. The city has not finished rewriting itself—your custom tour was one version, and Berlin offers infinite others.

Información práctica

Visado
Schengen visa; 90 days visa-free for US/UK/CA
Moneda
Euro (€)
Idioma
German
Zona horaria
CET (UTC+1)

Preguntas frecuentes

When is the best time to visit Berlin?+

May through September. Summer brings the techno season alive, outdoor beer gardens on the Spree, and street art festivals. September is ideal—warm but less crowded. Winter (December-February) is colder but atmospheric, with fewer tourists and the Christmas markets lighting Charlottenburg and Mitte.

How many days do I need in Berlin?+

Seven days gives you the Wall, museums, one proper club night, Kreuzberg food, and Potsdam. Fourteen days lets you extend to the Potsdam palaces, Dresden region, or deeper into neighborhoods like Prenzlauer Berg and Wedding. Fewer than four days misses the weight of Berlin's history.

Do I need a visa for Berlin?+

US, UK, and Canadian passport holders get 90 days visa-free in the Schengen zone (which includes Germany). Other nationalities may need a Schengen visa. Confirm with your embassy before booking—visa processing takes 4–6 weeks.

What is the cost of a custom Berlin tour?+

Seven-day custom tours start at €1,700 per person, covering guide fees, curated experiences, and private access to museums. Fourteen-day tours with regional extensions (Potsdam, Dresden) range €3,200–€4,500. Accommodation, meals, and club entries are additional. Prices vary by group size and season (May–September is peak).

What should I pack for Berlin?+

May–September: light layers, comfortable walking shoes (you'll cover 15+ km per day), sunscreen. Bring cash for Spätkaufs and smaller restaurants—many don't accept cards. Comfortable club clothes for techno nights. September–October: a light jacket. Winter requires a heavy coat, hat, and gloves. Berlin is casual; dress for walking, not appearances.

La gente también pregunta

  • What is there to do in Berlin for 3 days?
  • Is Berlin safe for tourists?
  • How much does it cost to visit Berlin for a week?
  • What is the Berlin Wall and where can you see it?
  • Is Berghain nightclub worth visiting, and how do you get in?
  • What is the best neighborhood to stay in Berlin?
  • Can you visit Potsdam from Berlin on a day trip?
  • What food should I eat in Berlin?

¿Listo para planificar tu viaje a Berlin?

Chatea con nuestro concierge IA — dos minutos para describir el viaje de tus sueños.

Start planning — free