Würzburg
City Guide

Würzburg

Deutschland · Best time to visit: Apr-Oct.

Guide coming in Deutsch, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €110.00/day
Best season Apr-Oct
Language German
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Berlin
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

One Day on the Main — Baroque, Wine, and a Fortress on the Hill

09:00

Würzburg Residenz & Hofgarten

Landmark
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €0

Begin at the UNESCO palace just as the Hofgarten gates open — the crowds won't arrive until the Tiepolo staircase tours start at 10. Walk the full length of the east-facing facade first: the soft morning light rakes across Balthasar Neumann's sandstone flourishes and turns the whole thing gold. Then loop behind into the Hofgarten, where clipped yews and rococo putti frame a symmetrical view back at the palace that almost nobody photographs.

Tip: Enter through the Rennweger Ring side gate rather than the main courtyard — you'll come out behind the palace and see the Orangerie parterre before the tour buses arrive. The gardens are free; skip the interior on a day trip (you'd burn 90 minutes and miss the fortress light).

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11:00

Marktplatz & Marienkapelle

Religious
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Leave the Residenz through the main gate and walk west down Hofstraße — 10 minutes past 18th-century townhouses and the green-domed Neumünster on your right. You emerge directly onto Marktplatz, where the late-Gothic red sandstone of the Marienkapelle glows almost pink against the rococo stucco of the Falkenhaus next door. This is the most photographed corner in Franconia for a reason.

Tip: Shoot the Marienkapelle from the southwest corner of the square — the Falkenhaus's white rococo facade frames the red church in the same frame, a contrast you won't get from any other angle. Step inside briefly for Riemenschneider's stone apostles along the portal; the church closes for lunch at 12:30.

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12:00

Bürgerspital zum Heiligen Geist

Food
Duration: 1h15 Estimated cost: €18

Cut north from Marktplatz along Schönbornstraße for 3 minutes to Theaterstraße — the Bürgerspital's cloistered courtyard hides behind an unassuming stone arch. This 700-year-old almshouse-turned-winery still funds elderly care from wine sales, and the Weinstube serves Franconian classics fast enough for a day-tripper. Sit in the chestnut-shaded courtyard, not the formal interior.

Tip: Order Blaue Zipfel (white sausages poached in wine-vinegar broth with onions, €9) and a Schoppen of the house Silvaner (€4.80) — this is the grape Würzburg's terroir was literally built on. Arrive right at 12:00 to skip the Uni lunch rush at 12:30; ask for 'die Karte für den Mittagstisch' and you'll be out in 60 minutes.

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13:30

Alte Mainbrücke

Landmark
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €5

From Bürgerspital, cut south through Marienstraße to the river — 5 minutes along the promenade and the twelve baroque saints come into view, lined up across the span like a stone welcoming committee. Buy a Schoppen at the east end and walk it slowly across: this is Brücken-Schoppen, the unofficial Würzburg ritual, and in summer every local office empties onto the bridge after 4pm. You're here early enough to get the photograph empty.

Tip: Buy a €5 glass (€3 deposit refunded) from the Alte Mainmühle kiosk at the east end — the Müller-Thurgau is the crisp afternoon pour. Stand at the third saint from the west side (St. Kilian with the sword) — from there the fortress's Marienturm aligns perfectly with his halo for a single-frame photograph.

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14:30

Festung Marienberg

Landmark
Duration: 2h30 Estimated cost: €0

Cross to the west bank and take the Tellsteige path up through the Würzburger Stein vineyards — 15 minutes of steady switchback climb, and the red-tiled city unfolds behind you with every turn. Skip the museums at the top (this is a day trip) and walk straight through the main courtyard to the Fürstengarten on the north side, where the terrace juts out over the Main bend. From up here you can see why the bishop-princes ruled for 500 years: the entire old town, the Residenz, and the river all fit in one glance.

Tip: Go to the Fürstengarten first, not the Bastion — it's smaller, almost always empty, and offers the classic postcard angle with the Alte Mainbrücke in the foreground and Residenz on the far right. Golden hour lights the fortress walls from the east side around 17:30 in shoulder season, 20:00 in high summer; descend via the Neutorstraße zigzag (gentler than Tellsteige) to save your knees.

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19:00

Alte Mainmühle

Food
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €38

Descend from the fortress via Neutorstraße and cross back over the Alte Mainbrücke — the Alte Mainmühle's terrace overhangs the river directly below the bridge, with the fortress floodlit on the hill you just came down. This is where the day earns its sit-down: Franconian heartland cooking, local Silvaner by the jug, and a view worth lingering over.

Tip: Reserve the terrace 2+ days ahead and specifically request 'Terrasse flussseitig' (river-facing side). Order Schäufele (slow-roasted pork shoulder with crackling and potato dumpling, €21) or, in season Sep-Apr, Spiegelkarpfen aus dem Main (€23). Pitfall: avoid the Weinstuben along Domstraße with laminated 8-language menus — they charge Munich prices for frozen Franconian imitations. The real wine country sits by the river, not on the cathedral strip.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Würzburg?

Most travelers enjoy Würzburg in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Würzburg?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Würzburg?

A practical starting point is about €110 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Würzburg?

A good first shortlist for Würzburg includes Würzburg Residenz & Hofgarten, Alte Mainbrücke, Festung Marienberg.