Trier
City Guide

Trier

Alemania · Best time to visit: May-Oct.

Guide coming in Español, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €55.00/day
Best season May-Oct
Language German
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Berlin
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Where Rome Never Left — Two Thousand Years in a Single Walk

09:00

Porta Nigra

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

From the Hauptbahnhof, walk seven minutes southeast along Theodor-Heuss-Allee — the massive dark silhouette rising above the trees at the end of the avenue is your destination. Built around 170 AD from sandstone blocks fitted together without mortar, the Porta Nigra is the best-preserved Roman city gate north of the Alps. Its name — the Black Gate — comes from centuries of dark weathering that give the stone an almost brooding presence, but in early morning light the eastern facade glows amber and every chisel mark left by Roman stonemasons becomes visible.

Tip: The symmetrical shot from Porta-Nigra-Platz is obligatory, but then walk around to the eastern side where the unrestored half reveals raw Roman stonework — the contrast between the medieval church conversion on one side and the untouched structure on the other tells 1,850 years in a single frame. Skip the interior climb (around 4 euros): the best views of the gate are from street level.

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10:15

Trier Cathedral

Religious
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk south along Simeonstrasse, Trier's main pedestrian boulevard, past the medieval Dreikoenigenhaus with its raised doorway — built high so a ladder could be pulled up against intruders — then cut diagonally across the Hauptmarkt past the Petrusbrunnen fountain and the fire-red Steipe banquet hall, ten minutes total. The Dom has stood on this site since 326 AD, making it Germany's oldest cathedral: the fortress-like Romanesque west facade with its mismatched towers — one round, one square — was built not just for worship but as a statement of imperial power. Pressed against its south wall, the Liebfrauenkirche, one of Germany's earliest Gothic churches, creates a striking collision of two architectural eras visible in a single glance.

Tip: Stand on Domfreihof about 20 metres back from the main entrance to capture both the Romanesque Dom and Gothic Liebfrauenkirche in one wide-angle shot — the stylistic tension between them is the photograph. Then walk through the narrow passage between the two churches to find a quiet cloister garden that most visitors miss entirely.

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12:00

Zum Domstein

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €16

Cross Domfreihof back to the Hauptmarkt — three minutes on foot. Zum Domstein sits directly on the main square and is one of the only restaurants in Germany serving dishes reconstructed from Apicius, the ancient Roman cookbook. For a quick power-walk lunch, grab a terrace table facing the Petrusbrunnen fountain and order the Flammkuchen mit Speck (around 10 euros) or the Roemischer Patina, a baked herb-and-egg dish from the original recipe (around 12 euros), with a glass of local Mosel Riesling (around 5 euros). Budget 15 to 18 euros per person.

Tip: Arrive right at noon to beat the tour-group wave that floods the square between 12:30 and 13:00. Skip the multi-course Roman tasting menu — it is slow and heavy. Save your appetite for a proper Mosel dinner tonight.

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13:00

Basilica of Constantine

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk south past the Liebfrauenkirche along Liebfrauenstrasse, then through a quiet lane onto Konstantinplatz — seven minutes total. The sheer scale hits you before the history does: a single brick hall 67 metres long and 33 metres tall, built around 310 AD as Emperor Constantine's throne room and the largest surviving audience hall from the Roman world. The rows of arched windows along the exterior were an engineering trick — they narrow toward the far end, creating forced perspective that made the emperor on his throne appear impossibly distant and powerful.

Tip: The best exterior photograph is from the southeast corner of the Palastgarten behind the building, where the massive red-brick apse towers above the rose garden with the pink rococo Electoral Palace in the foreground — Roman power framed by baroque elegance. Spend your remaining time wandering the manicured Palastgarten; it is one of the most peaceful corners of the city.

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14:30

Roman Amphitheatre

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Exit the Palastgarten from its southern gate and walk south along Olewiger Strasse — the towering ruins of the Kaiserthermen, imperial baths that were never actually used as baths, loom through the fence on your right — then continue gently uphill for another ten minutes as the city falls away behind you. The amphitheatre appears embedded in the hillside: a 20,000-seat arena from around 100 AD where gladiators fought and prisoners were executed. Walk up the grassy eastern bank — the original stone seating terrace — and look down into the oval arena with Mosel vineyards rising on the hills behind it, a scene virtually unchanged in two millennia.

Tip: Afternoon sun lights the arena floor from the west, making 14:00 to 16:00 the ideal window for photographs from the eastern hillside rim. After your visit, continue ten minutes further south along Olewiger Strasse to reach Olewig, Trier's historic wine village, where several Weingueter offer Riesling tastings to fill the afternoon before dinner. Warning: the snack kiosks near the Kaiserthermen ruins on your walk here charge nearly double what any cafe in the old town would — walk past without slowing down.

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19:00

Weinstube Kesselstatt

Food
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €35

Walk back north along Olewiger Strasse and Kaiserstrasse, twenty minutes through quiet residential streets, to Liebfrauenstrasse — the lane between the Dom and Liebfrauenkirche you passed this morning, now glowing in evening light. Weinstube Kesselstatt belongs to the Reichsgraf von Kesselstatt estate, one of the most prestigious wine houses on the Mosel, and its hidden courtyard garden is one of the loveliest dinner settings in Trier. Order the Winzersteak mit Rieslingsosse with roasted potatoes (around 20 euros) or the pan-fried Mosel Zander with seasonal vegetables (around 22 euros), paired with the estate's own Kaseler Nies'chen Riesling — a wine you genuinely cannot find outside this region. Budget 30 to 40 euros per person.

Tip: Call ahead to reserve a courtyard table — the garden seats only about thirty and fills by 19:30 in summer. If the courtyard is taken, the vaulted stone interior has its own atmosphere. Ask for the estate's Graacher Himmelreich Riesling if you prefer something drier. The Hauptbahnhof is a twelve-minute walk northwest from here — perfect timing for an evening train home.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Trier?

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

What's the best time to visit Trier?

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

What's the daily budget for Trier?

A practical starting point is about €55 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Trier?

A good first shortlist for Trier includes Porta Nigra, Basilica of Constantine, Roman Amphitheatre.