10 Best Day Trips from Munich — by train, car, and boat
A working guide to getting out of the city, written by someone who has done it more times than was probably necessary
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Una guida di
Lena Hofmann
Aggiornata il
11 maggio 2026
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13 minuti
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10 luoghi · mappa interattiva
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Munich is a city that rewards you for leaving it. That sounds like a contradiction, but anyone who has spent more than three days here knows what I mean. The Bavarian capital is dense with museums, beer halls, and baroque architecture — all of it excellent, all of it exhausting after a while. The city sits in a geographic lottery: the Alps to the south, a chain of glacial lakes to the southwest, forested hills to the north, and Austria within an hour's drive in almost any direction. That combination makes Munich one of the best-positioned cities in Central Europe for day trips, and I don't say that lightly.
But a good day trip isn't just about distance. I've seen people spend four hours getting to a destination, forty-five minutes walking around it in a crowd, and four hours getting back — and call it a success. That's not a day trip; that's a commute with scenery. A genuinely good day trip has a clear transport logic, something worth arriving for, and enough breathing room that you're not checking the return train before you've finished your first coffee. It also has an honest answer to the question: why today, why this place, why this way of getting there?
The ten destinations in this guide were chosen because each one answers that question clearly. Some are famous; some are almost absurdly obscure. I've reached all of them by train, by car, and in a couple of cases by boat — and I'll tell you which method actually works. Crowds, parking realities, schedule gaps, the walk from the station that nobody mentions in the brochure: all of it is here. Use this as a planning document, not a wish list.
At roughly 30 km southwest of the city center, Starnberger See is the easiest serious escape on this list. The S6 S-Bahn line from Munich Hauptbahnhof drops you at Starnberg Nord or Starnberg itself in under 40 minutes, and the trains run frequently enough that you don't need to plan around them — just show up. The lake is large, cold, and genuinely beautiful in the way that glacial lakes in Bavaria tend to be: the Alps frame the southern horizon on clear days, and the water is a shade of blue-green that doesn't look quite real from a distance.
On arrival, walk the lakeside promenade south toward the Starnberg boat landing and take one of the scheduled ferry services across to Possenhofen or down to Berg. The memorial cross in the water near Berg marks where King Ludwig II died in 1886 — a strange, melancholy detail that the lake carries quietly. Rent a bike at the station, swim at one of the designated bathing spots on the eastern shore, or simply sit on the grass and watch the sailboats. This is not a destination that demands activity.
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On summer weekends, the S6 heading back to Munich between 5 PM and 7 PM is packed to the doors. Either leave by 4:30 PM or stay for dinner and take the 8 PM train. Parking in Starnberg town is genuinely difficult on hot Saturdays — the train is the right call here without question.
Herrenchiemsee is one of those places where the logistics are half the experience. From Munich Hauptbahnhof, the regional train (RE) to Prien am Chiemsee takes about 70 minutes — a comfortable, scenic ride through the foothills. From Prien, a narrow-gauge steam railway (the Chiemseebahn, one of the oldest in Germany) runs the short distance to the lake's edge, and from there you board a ferry to the Herreninsel. The castle itself, Ludwig II's unfinished homage to Versailles, sits in the middle of a forested island and is accessible only by this water approach — which means arriving by boat is not optional, it's the point.
Book the castle interior tour in advance during summer; the queue for walk-up tickets moves slowly and the first tour of the day is significantly less crowded than anything after 11 AM. The gardens are free to walk and worth the time even if you skip the interior. The island also has a quieter Augustinian monastery complex that most visitors walk past entirely — don't. Allow at least five hours for the full round trip.
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The last ferry back from the Herreninsel runs earlier than most people expect — check the posted schedule at the dock when you arrive, not when you're ready to leave. Missing it means a long wait or a very expensive taxi situation from Prien.
Achensee sits just across the Austrian border in Tyrol, about 75 km from Munich, and reaching it involves one of the more satisfying train journeys on this list. Take the regional service to Jenbach (roughly 90 minutes from Munich, sometimes with a change at Rosenheim), then board the Achenseebahn — a rack railway dating to 1889 that climbs steeply from the Inn Valley up to the lake. The journey on the rack railway is slow, loud, and entirely worth it. Achensee is Austria's largest lake in Tyrol, flanked by the Karwendel mountains on one side and the Rofan range on the other.
The two villages of Achensee and Maurach sit at the southern end of the lake. Maurach has a cable car up into the Rofan for hiking; Achensee village is quieter, better for swimming and walking the lakeside path northward. Each autumn, the area holds its cattle drive festival — farmers bring their herds down from the summer alpine pastures in a tradition that is genuinely old and not staged for tourists. If your timing is right, it's worth planning around.
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The Achenseebahn runs a limited schedule outside of summer — verify departure times directly with the operator before you go, because missing the last rack railway down to Jenbach strands you in a way that a missed bus does not.
Garmisch-Partenkirchen is reachable by train from Munich Hauptbahnhof in about 90 minutes on the Bayerische Zugspitzbahn service — but if you're planning to go up the Zugspitze itself (Germany's highest peak, just under 2,963 meters), a car gives you more flexibility with the cog railway and cable car connections that depart from Garmisch. The town itself is the merger of two formerly separate villages, and the older Partenkirchen side still has painted facades and narrow lanes that feel distinct from the more touristic Garmisch end. Walk the Philosophenweg above the town for the best unobstructed view of the Zugspitze massif.
For the mountain: the cog railway from Garmisch station takes you to the Zugspitzplatt glacier, from where a cable car reaches the summit. Allow a full day if you're doing the ascent. If you're not, the Partnach Gorge — a narrow, dramatic limestone gorge accessible on foot from the Olympic ski stadium — takes about two hours and costs very little. The gorge path is icy in winter and genuinely slippery; appropriate footwear is not optional.
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Parking in central Garmisch on summer weekends is a slow, frustrating process. The park-and-ride at the edge of town is faster and costs almost nothing. The Zugspitze summit is frequently in cloud by early afternoon — go up in the morning if the forecast is marginal.
Mittenwald is about 90 km south of Munich and sits right on the Austrian border, backed by the Karwendel mountains with a directness that feels almost theatrical. The drive on the A95 and then the B2 takes roughly 80 minutes and is straightforward. The train from Munich also works — about 90 minutes on the same line that serves Garmisch, with Mittenwald as the next stop south — but a car lets you stop at the Isar valley viewpoints along the way.
The town is genuinely small and has remained so, which is increasingly rare in this part of Bavaria. It has been a center of violin-making since the 17th century; the craft is still practiced here and the local museum dedicated to it is compact and specific in a way that large museums rarely manage. Walk the main street, look at the painted house facades (Lüftlmalerei), take the Karwendelbahn cable car up to 2,244 meters for a wide view of the valley, and then walk back down through the forest if your knees are cooperative. The border crossing into Austria at the southern edge of town is unmarked and easy to miss.
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Mittenwald is significantly less crowded than Garmisch despite being equally accessible. If you're choosing between the two on a busy summer weekend and your priority is quiet streets rather than the Zugspitze summit, Mittenwald is the correct answer.
The Wieskirche sits in a meadow in the Pfaffenwinkel region, about 70 km southwest of Munich, and it is a UNESCO World Heritage Site — one of the finest examples of Bavarian Rococo architecture in existence. The church was built between 1745 and 1754 by architect Dominikus Zimmermann, and the interior is a controlled explosion of color, gilding, and ceiling fresco that takes a moment to process when you walk in from the plain exterior. The contrast between outside and inside is the whole point.
This is a car destination. There is a bus from Steingaden, but the connections are infrequent and the walk from the nearest stop is long. Drive the B17 south from Munich, which is the old Romantic Road, and the signposting to Wies is clear. The church is still an active place of worship — be respectful of services if you arrive on a Sunday morning. Combine this with a stop in Steingaden village or continue south to Füssen if you want a fuller day. The meadow around the church is worth a slow walk before or after.
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Tour buses arrive in quantity between 10 AM and 2 PM. Arriving at 9 AM or after 3 PM gives you the interior in relative peace, which matters enormously in a space designed to be experienced quietly. The car park fills fast at peak times — there is overflow parking on the road shoulder.
Abensberg is a small town in Lower Bavaria, about 78 km north of Munich, and it holds one of the more unexpected architectural objects in the region: an observation tower designed by Austrian artist and architect Friedensreich Hundertwasser on the grounds of the Kuchlbauer brewery. Hundertwasser, who died in 2000, was known for his rejection of straight lines, his use of vivid color, and his insistence that architecture should be organic rather than geometric. The tower embodies all of that — it is irregular, colorful, and slightly disorienting in the best way.
The drive from Munich via the A9 north takes about 70 minutes. There is no practical train connection that makes this a comfortable day trip, so a car is necessary. The brewery offers tours that include the tower, and the combination is genuinely worthwhile — Kuchlbauer has been brewing since the 15th century. Abensberg's old town is compact and pleasant for an hour's walk. This is a half-day destination that pairs well with a stop in Kelheim or at the Befreiungshalle monument on the way back.
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The tower tour is ticketed and timed — book ahead in summer because slots fill up, and showing up without a reservation often means a two-hour wait or a turned-away visit. The brewery restaurant is a reasonable lunch option and doesn't require a tower ticket.
This is the outlier on the list, and I include it precisely because it is. The Rottenbuch Radio Tower is a cell phone tower built entirely of wood — a construction method that was not unusual in Germany before 1935, when wood's radio-insulating properties made it a practical choice for mast construction. Most wooden towers of this era have been demolished or replaced; this one survives. It sits near the village of Rottenbuch, about 65 km southwest of Munich, in a quiet stretch of Bavarian countryside.
Rottenbuch itself has a notable Augustinian monastery church with a fine interior worth a look. The combination of the monastery and the tower makes for an unusual half-day: one object of genuine historical importance (the church) and one of genuine historical curiosity (the tower). Drive the A95 south and take the exit toward Peißenberg; the roads through this part of Bavaria are quiet and easy to navigate. This is not a destination for everyone, but if you're the kind of traveler who prefers the specific to the general, it rewards the drive.
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There is almost no tourist infrastructure here — no café at the tower, limited parking, no signage in English. Bring what you need, download an offline map, and treat it as an expedition rather than an attraction. The lack of crowds is the point.
Andechs is only about 34 km southwest of Munich, which makes it the second-closest destination on this list, but the journey requires a small amount of planning that catches people out. Take the S8 or S5 to Herrsching on the Ammersee (about 50 minutes), then walk or take the infrequent bus up the hill to the monastery — the walk takes roughly 45 minutes through forest and is genuinely pleasant. Alternatively, drive directly to the monastery car park, which fills by 10 AM on summer weekends.
The Benedictine monastery at Andechs has been a place of pilgrimage since the Middle Ages and still functions as an active religious community. The church interior is Baroque and worth seeing. The brewery attached to the monastery produces beer that has been made here for centuries; the beer garden on the hilltop terrace has views over the surrounding hills and lakes that justify the climb on their own. This is one of those places where the combination of the sacred and the convivial is handled with complete naturalness — nobody finds it strange to have a beer ten meters from a functioning monastery, because it has always been this way.
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The beer garden opens at 10 AM and the best tables on the terrace go fast. If you arrive by 10:30 AM on a weekend you'll find a seat; by noon you'll be standing. The walk from Herrsching through the forest is the better approach — it earns the arrival.
This entry works differently from the others. Spätzle — the soft egg noodle that is Bavaria and Swabia's answer to pasta — is not a destination in the geographic sense, but it is a destination in the culinary sense, and understanding it changes how you eat across every other stop on this list. Spätzle is made by pressing a wet egg dough through a colander or a dedicated press directly into boiling water; the resulting irregular shapes cook in minutes and can be served as a side dish, fried in butter with onions (Käsespätzle when topped with cheese), or incorporated into soups.
The best way to encounter Spätzle properly is to build it into a day trip rather than treat it as an afterthought. The monastery beer garden at Andechs serves it; restaurants in Garmisch and Mittenwald list it as a standard item; the Chiemsee ferry landing at Prien has a gasthaus where it appears on almost every plate. Order it as a main when it comes as Käsespätzle — the cheese-and-onion version is a full meal, not a side. This is one of those foods that tells you something true about the region's agricultural history and its relationship with simple, durable ingredients.
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Käsespätzle is almost always better at a small gasthaus or brewery restaurant than at any establishment with an English menu displayed outside. If the menu is handwritten on a chalkboard, you're in the right place. Lunch service in rural Bavaria typically ends at 2 PM — don't arrive at 1:45 PM and expect a warm welcome.
There's a version of day-tripping that is really just anxiety management — you leave the city, take photographs of the thing you came to see, and return feeling that you've been efficient. That's not what any of these trips are for. The Starnberger See doesn't care whether you've documented it. The Wieskirche interior takes time to settle into. The rack railway up to Achensee is the experience, not the transport to one.
Munich sits at the center of a radius that contains more variety per kilometer than almost anywhere else in Central Europe — lakes, mountains, monasteries, architectural oddities, living craft traditions. The city is worth your time, but so is everything around it. The trips on this list are not ranked by importance because importance is the wrong frame. They're ranked by distance, which is the only honest measure. Start close, go further, and pay attention to what the journey itself is doing. The return train is always there. The afternoon light on the Karwendel is not.
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What is the best time of year to do day trips from Munich?
Late May through early October covers the broadest range of options — lakes are swimmable from mid-June, mountain cable cars run full schedules from late May, and the Achensee cattle festival happens in autumn. July and August are the busiest months; if you're going to Herrenchiemsee, the Wieskirche, or Garmisch in peak summer, plan to arrive early (before 9:30 AM) or accept crowds. April, May, and September offer the best balance of good weather and manageable visitor numbers. Winter works well for Garmisch and Mittenwald if you're interested in skiing or snow landscapes, but lake destinations are quiet to the point of being closed.
Is a Bayern Ticket worth buying for these trips?
Yes, for almost every train-based destination on this list. The Bayern Ticket covers all regional trains (not ICE or IC) across Bavaria and into some neighboring Austrian destinations for a flat daily fee, and it covers up to five people traveling together at a modest additional cost per person. It's valid from 9 AM on weekdays and all day on weekends. Starnberger See, Chiemsee, Andechs (via Herrsching), and Garmisch are all comfortably covered. For Achensee, you'll need to check whether your specific routing into Austria falls within the ticket's validity — the Jenbach connection sometimes requires a separate Austrian ticket for the final segment.
Which destinations genuinely require a car, and which work better by train?
Require a car: Rottenbuch Radio Tower (no practical public transport), Church of Wies (bus connections exist but are infrequent and require long walks), Kuchlbauer Tower in Abensberg (train exists but the journey involves multiple changes and is slow). Work better by train: Starnberger See (S-Bahn is fast and frequent; parking in Starnberg is a genuine problem on weekends), Chiemsee/Herrenchiemsee (the boat is part of the trip regardless of how you arrive; parking at Prien fills early). Either works reasonably: Garmisch, Mittenwald, Andechs. For Achensee, the train-plus-rack-railway combination is part of the experience and worth choosing over the car.
How early do I need to leave Munich for a comfortable day trip?
For close destinations like Starnberger See or Andechs, leaving by 9 AM is fine and gives you a full day. For Herrenchiemsee, Garmisch, or Achensee, aim for a 7:30–8:00 AM departure — the ferry to the Herreninsel and the Zugspitze cog railway both have queuing realities that punish late arrivals. For the Church of Wies, the drive is under 90 minutes, so a 9 AM departure works if you want to beat the tour buses. The Kuchlbauer Tower tours are ticketed, so your departure time is determined by your booking slot — plan backwards from that.
Are these destinations suitable for day trips with children?
Most of them, yes, with caveats. Starnberger See and Chiemsee are excellent — boats, swimming, open space. Garmisch works well if you're doing the Partnach Gorge rather than the full Zugspitze ascent, which is a long day for young children. Mittenwald's cable car is a hit with older kids. The Church of Wies requires patience from children who aren't interested in Rococo interiors, but the meadow outside is a good counterbalance. The Kuchlbauer Tower is genuinely interesting for children who like unusual buildings. Rottenbuch Radio Tower is probably not worth the drive with children unless you're combining it with the monastery church and a picnic. Andechs is fine for families — the hilltop walk and the open-air beer garden work for all ages.
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