Regensburg
City Guide

Regensburg

Germany · Best time to visit: May-Sep.

Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €80.00/day
Best season May-Sep
Language German
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Berlin
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

A Power Walk Through Bavaria's Medieval Heart — From Princely Palace to 800-Year-Old Beer Garden Along the Danube

09:00

Schloss Thurn und Taxis (St. Emmeram Palace)

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Start the day at Bavaria's largest inhabited private residence, still home to the Thurn und Taxis princely family — the dynasty that invented Europe's modern postal service in 1500. At this hour the courtyards and St. Emmeram Basilica are quiet, with long morning shadows picking out the Baroque stucco and the Carolingian stonework beneath. Walk the perimeter, step inside the free-entry basilica for ten minutes of layered history, then leave before the first tour groups arrive at 10:30.

Tip: Enter via Emmeramsplatz rather than the main ticket office — the courtyard, basilica and cloister are all free and open 1.5 hours before the paid palace tours begin. Inside the basilica, the tomb of St. Emmeram (Bavaria's patron saint) sits behind the high altar — ornate Baroque stucco layered over a 700 AD Carolingian core, unique in Germany.

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11:00

Regensburg Old Town — Haidplatz, Altes Rathaus & Porta Praetoria

Neighborhood
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Walk 600 m north from Emmeramsplatz through Neupfarrplatz, crossing from princely gardens into the beating medieval heart where 1,500 listed buildings survived WWII intact. Loop Haidplatz (where emperors once watched tournaments at the Goldenes Kreuz inn), pass under the arcade of the Altes Rathaus where the Holy Roman Empire's Reichstag met for 140 years, then end at Porta Praetoria — a genuine Roman gate from AD 179 wedged casually into a bishop's wall, the oldest stone building in Bavaria. Mid-morning is when Regensburg wakes up slowly and the cobblestones are almost yours.

Tip: Look up at the left pillar of the Altes Rathaus entrance arch to spot three iron hooks — the official medieval measurements (Ellen, Schuh, Klafter) that Regensburg merchants were legally held to. Behind the building, an alley called 'Wahlenstraße' holds the city's oldest patrician tower-houses from 1200 — head up to catch that Italian-style skyline of stone watchtowers that most day-trippers walk right past.

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13:00

Regensburg Cathedral (Dom St. Peter)

Religious
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

From Porta Praetoria, walk 200 m south down Kramgasse — a corridor of medieval townhouses that opens suddenly onto Domplatz, where the Gothic twin spires erupt 105 m into the sky. By 13:00 the square is lit in full midday sun and the crowds thin as locals peel off for lunch, leaving the plaza at its most photographable. Walk the exterior perimeter slowly to find the grinning 'Teufelchen' (little devil) carved on the south wall — an obscure piece of medieval humor even most Regensburgers forget is there.

Tip: The 'Dombaumeister' (master builder) carved his own self-portrait into the south-west buttress around eye level — a medieval architect's cameo signing off on his life's work. Skip the paid interior tour today and instead plan a return on a Thursday or Saturday at 18:00 for the Regensburger Domspatzen vespers (founded 975 AD, the oldest boys' choir in the world) — entry is free.

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14:15

Historische Wurstkuchl

Food
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €15

Walk 150 m north down Brückstraße — the lane slopes toward the river and the squat medieval stone hut materialises right at the water's edge, exactly where it has stood since 1146. Wurstkuchl has fed stonemasons building the Stone Bridge, emperors, Danube bargemen and now you — serving one thing for 880 years: finger-sized Regensburger sausages grilled over beechwood embers, sliced into hand-cut sauerkraut, smeared with a secret sweet mustard. You're here at 14:15 precisely to skip both the lunch crush and the 15:00 tour-group wave, and claim a river-facing bench with the Stone Bridge looming 20 m away.

Tip: Order '6 Würstl mit Kraut' (€12.50) — six beechwood-grilled sausages on sauerkraut with a thick slice of rye. Cash only, no cards. Ask for an extra dollop of 'Hausmacher Senf' (the house sweet mustard, secret recipe since the 1800s) — locals rate it the best in Bavaria. Skip the soup of the day entirely; the sausages are the whole point, and 6 is the correct quantity (8 is too much, 4 is an insult).

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15:30

Stone Bridge (Steinerne Brücke) & Stadtamhof

Landmark
Duration: 3h Estimated cost: €0

Step straight out of Wurstkuchl onto the south ramp and cross the 308 m Stone Bridge slowly — the 900-year-old engineering marvel that made Regensburg rich and became the architectural model for London Bridge and Prague's Charles Bridge. Pause mid-span for the signature Regensburg skyline: cathedral spires rising above red-tiled roofs with the Danube curling east beneath your feet. On the far side, wander Stadtamhof — an entire island village of 18th-century pastel houses, quiet as the old town is busy, with riverside benches where you can simply sit and watch the current run as the afternoon tips toward golden hour.

Tip: The signature skyline shot is NOT from the bridge itself — walk 80 m east along the Stadtamhof north shore past the Andreasstadel to the riverside promenade. Late-afternoon light (16:00-17:30 in summer) hits the cathedral facade square-on; stay until 19:00 to watch the stone turn honey-orange in golden hour. The bridge's middle arch was rebuilt after 1945 flood damage — look closely at the keystones to spot the subtly lighter modern stone among the 12th-century originals.

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19:00

Spitalgarten

Food
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €25

From the Stone Bridge's north end, walk 250 m west along the Danube promenade — river on your left, mature chestnut trees overhead — and the wooden gates of Spitalgarten open into one of Bavaria's oldest beer gardens, continuously poured since 1226 by the adjoining St. Katharinenspital almshouse brewery. Self-serve at the outdoor counter for the full experience: grab a Spital Dunkel (their dark lager, brewed 20 m from your table) and carry your tray to a long communal bench under the chestnuts. The cathedral spires poke over the rooftops across the river — 800 years of the same beer, the same view, the same almshouse foundation still pouring it.

Tip: Order 'Schweinsbraten mit Knödel' (roast pork with potato dumpling, €14.50) or half a 'Schweinshaxn' (crispy pork knuckle, €18) at the hot counter; the cold counter does Obazda cheese spread + pretzel for €6 if you want lighter. A Mass (1 L) of Spital Dunkel is €5.50, a Halbe (0.5 L) €3.20 — cash on the bench, no table service outdoors. TOURIST TRAP WARNING: avoid the restaurants on the south bank directly beside the Stone Bridge (the ones with the English menus in the window) — they mark up 40% and serve pre-cooked frozen sausages. Spitalgarten is where actual Regensburgers drink on a Tuesday — follow the locals, not the guidebook signs.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Regensburg?

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

What's the best time to visit Regensburg?

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

What's the daily budget for Regensburg?

A practical starting point is about €80 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Regensburg?

A good first shortlist for Regensburg includes Schloss Thurn und Taxis (St. Emmeram Palace), Stone Bridge (Steinerne Brücke) & Stadtamhof.