The Bundesliga Pilgrimage: 7 Days Chasing Football's Greatest Stages Across Germany
7-day Bundesliga road trip: Signal Iduna Park, Allianz Arena & Volksparkstadion across Dortmund, Munich, and Hamburg
Raul Luca
4/14/202618 min read
There is a religion in Germany, and its cathedrals are made of concrete and floodlights. It has no one denomination — only the relentless, primal roar of the crowd, the thump of leather on grass, and a nation's soul distilled into ninety minutes of football. This seven-day itinerary is a devotional journey through three of the Bundesliga's most legendary temples: the thunderous Signal Iduna Park in Dortmund, the glowing, shape-shifting Allianz Arena in Munich, and the storied Volksparkstadion in Hamburg. You'll go behind the scenes where only players walk, stand in stands that have shaken with Champions League noise, and discover the cities that forged these clubs in the first place. Lace up. The whistle is about to blow.
⭐ Hidden Gems are marked throughout this guide — these are lesser-known spots that locals love and tourists rarely find. You can also view this itinerary in the app and customize it for your own trip.
Day 1: Arrival in Dortmund — Yellow City, Black Soul
Morning
Welcome to Dortmund — a city that was once defined by coal and steel, and is now defined, perhaps more powerfully, by black and yellow. The largest city in the Ruhr region of North Rhine-Westphalia with a population of more than half a million, Dortmund has been shaped by its production-centered past, focused primarily on steel, coal, and — equally vital — beer. Football is now a firm element of that mix as those industries declined.
Drop your bags at the a&o Hostel Dortmund Hauptbahnhof, a budget-smart basecamp sitting practically on top of the main train station. It sits right next to the main train station, making arrival and departure very easy. Both private rooms and dorms are available, with prices starting from €30 for a dorm bed and private rooms beginning at €70. It's no-frills, perfectly clean, and — most importantly — gets you onto the U-Bahn and towards the stadium in minutes.
Once you've settled in, fuel up with a proper German breakfast. Walk ten minutes to Café Extrablatt on Westenhellweg, where you'll find generous breakfast plates, strong coffee, and a terrace to watch the city come alive. Dortmund is a working city, and mornings here have an honest, purposeful energy.
Afternoon
After breakfast, make your way to the German Football Museum (Deutsches Fußballmuseum), located a short walk from your hostel, right next to the Hauptbahnhof. The German Football Museum in Dortmund is the national museum of German football — more than a museum, it is a world of experience for the whole family; a cultural place of the past, present, and future of football.
The building is not divided into floors, but into halftimes. The first half is devoted to the national team — their victories, their defeats, their history. The second half is dedicated to team colors, fan culture, reporters' voices, and other cultural aspects of the game. Overall, the museum shows a kind of cultural history in many facets, and in a highly entertaining way.
Don't rush — your journey begins with the trip to the stadium. Through the players' tunnel, you reach the "Miracle of Bern." The original ball from the 1954 World Cup final awaits you along with the "Heroes of Bern." The museum is interactive throughout, with every exhibit available in English. Budget around €18 for adults, and give yourself at least two hours.
Practical tip: The museum is located directly next to Dortmund Hauptbahnhof. It has been located in Dortmund since 2015, no more than an hour away from five Bundesliga stadiums. It's the perfect warm-up act for what awaits you over the next two days.
From the museum, head towards the Alter Markt — Dortmund's historic old market square, ringed with brewhouses that have been serving frothy local ales for centuries. Beer enthusiasts can sample local brews at traditional brewhouses around the Alter Markt. Pull up a stool and let the city absorb you.
Evening
For dinner, make a beeline for ⭐ Mit Schmackes, a rustic tavern that is unmissably Dortmund. Mit Schmackes is a rustic tavern known for its delicious sausages, burgers, schnitzels, and vegetarian options. It was co-founded by BVB veteran Kevin Grosskreutz and offers hearty German dishes like Pfefferpotthast and Malocherpfanne. The tavern also serves as a BVB fan meeting point with multiple screens for watching soccer matches. This is where local football culture eats. Expect buzzing matchday energy even on off-nights, a dartingly good schnitzel, and the unmistakable feeling of being among the faithful.
After dinner, don't miss a late beer in Kreuzviertel — Dortmund's coolest neighborhood. Kreuzviertel is excellent for nightlife, with many bars and restaurants. The city center also offers diverse options. Both areas are very walkable. Think cobbled streets, craft beer bars, and football conversations that roll late into the night.
Stay: a&o Hostel Dortmund Hauptbahnhof (Days 1–2)
Day 2: Signal Iduna Park — Standing Before the Yellow Wall
Morning
Today is the day. No museum can fully prepare you for this.
Grab a quick breakfast from one of the bakeries near the Hauptbahnhof — Café Rüber near the station serves excellent fresh rolls and strong filter coffee for a few euros — then catch the U45 or U46 toward the stadium. Situated just south of the city center, Signal Iduna Park is served by numerous local rail lines. The U42, U45, and U46 all travel to the stadium, with the Stadion station only open on matchdays.
When you emerge from the underground, Signal Iduna Park doesn't creep up on you — it erupts into view. One of the wonders of the modern world, Borussia Dortmund's Signal Iduna Park is a footballing cathedral, a place all fans should visit at least once in their lives. Packed to its 81,365 capacity almost every game, it is Germany's largest stadium and has the largest single terrace for standing supporters in Europe, with 24,454 filling its world-famous Südtribüne (south stand) to create the awe-inspiring "Yellow Wall."
Begin your visit at the Borusseum — BVB's official club museum, attached to the stadium itself. Step into the heart of German football with an entry ticket to the Borusseum, Borussia Dortmund's official museum. Located in Dortmund, this immersive experience takes you on a journey through the club's legendary history, from its founding in 1909 to its modern-day triumphs. Wander through engaging exhibits filled with original memorabilia, captivating photos, and fascinating stories that bring the spirit of Borussia Dortmund to life.
Discover curious exhibits, sing BVB songs on a replica of the small south stand, or follow the "yellow thread" through the permanent exhibition, which will lead you to the treasure chamber at the end, where you can marvel at the "Big Five": Champions League Cup, World Cup, Championship trophy, DFB Cup, and the European Cup.
Admission: Around $10 per adult. The Borusseum is open from 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. on regular days — but on BVB home match days, the museum closes at the start of the match. Plan accordingly.
Afternoon
After the Borusseum, it's time for the Signal Iduna Park Stadium Walk — a self-guided tour of the stadium itself. This self-guided tour of Signal Iduna Park is an accessible way for visitors to get a behind-the-scenes look at Borussia Dortmund's home. It's flexible — your start time can be any time between 10 am and 6 pm, and you're free to explore at your own pace during that window.
You'll pass all the key areas of the stadium, such as the south stand, the players' locker room, the mixed zone, and the coaching bench right by the pitch. To make the most of your experience, scan the QR codes at selected stations for exciting behind-the-scenes insights.
Two things particularly stand out: the opportunity to walk the famous player tunnel — the narrowest in the Bundesliga — and to sit in the coaching area. These intimate moments bring you closer to the game's thrill than many larger, guided tours.
The price is just around $10, making this one of the best value football experiences in Europe. Give yourself a full 60–90 minutes inside.
For lunch, head to the BVB FanWelt adjacent to the stadium, which has a variety of food kiosks. Or, for something more local: travel back toward the city center by train and find a spot to eat around the Alter Markt — the walk from the underground back through Dortmund lets you absorb more of the city at your own pace.
⭐ Practical Gem: Try Pfefferkorn's No. 1 am Markt for a traditional Dortmund lunch of schnitzel or Westphalian sausage. Nestled in a prime location at the square, it's a delightful restaurant and pub that offers an inviting terrace with stunning views. The interior exudes a charming vintage ambiance, making it perfect for both casual dining and special occasions. Locals love it. Tourists almost never find it.
Evening
Tonight, if BVB have a home match during your stay — and you should time this trip to coincide with one — the evening will take on an entirely different dimension. The whole city walks around in yellow, everyone is cozy, and puppet tents are everywhere for a snack and a drink. The U-Bahn carriage becomes a moving supporters' club. By the time the floodlights fire up and 80,000 voices lock into the first chant, you'll understand why people fly from across the world just to be here.
If there's no match, Dortmund's Kreuzviertel is your playground. Try Salon des Amateurs — a legendary local DJ bar in the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf mold — or simply sit at a bar, order a Dortmunder Actien-Bier, and toast the Yellow Wall.
Stay: a&o Hostel Dortmund Hauptbahnhof (Night 2)
Day 3: Dortmund to Munich — The Rivals' Route
Morning
A last Dortmund morning deserves a proper send-off. Head to ⭐ Bäckerei Domröse near the Hauptbahnhof — a proper neighborhood bakery, not a chain, where local workers grab their rolls and coffee before the shift. It's the kind of place that doesn't have an Instagram account and doesn't need one. Order a Käsebrötchen (cheese roll) and a flat white, take a corner table, and watch Dortmund go about its morning.
Before departing, take a quick stroll through Westfalenpark — a vast 70-hectare park right next to the stadium. Explore Westfalenpark's 70-hectare oasis featuring over 3,000 rose varieties and themed gardens. Ascend the 220-meter Florianturm for breathtaking city views or glide above the landscape in the park's scenic cable car. It's a genuinely beautiful, undervisited urban green space — and the Florianturm tower gives a spectacular aerial perspective of Signal Iduna Park itself.
Afternoon — Travel Day
From Dortmund Hauptbahnhof, board the ICE high-speed train to München Hauptbahnhof (Munich Central Station). The journey takes approximately 4 hours and costs roughly €30–€60 with an advance ticket. Germany's rail network makes this inter-city route smooth and comfortable — grab a window seat and watch the German landscape change from Ruhr industry to Bavarian countryside.
Arrive in Munich by mid-afternoon. Check in to the Wombat's City Hostel Munich, a fan favorite among budget travelers near the Hauptbahnhof. It's lively, well-run, and perfectly positioned for the U-Bahn lines that will get you everywhere you need to go over the next two days. Private rooms are available from around €70/night.
Once settled, walk to Marienplatz — Munich's beating heart — and get your bearings. This is one of Europe's great city centers: the soaring neo-Gothic Neues Rathaus with its famous Glockenspiel, the cobbled lanes of the Altstadt, and the irresistible smell of Weißwurst drifting from every corner.
For dinner, keep it classic: head to Hofbräuhaus for the full Bavarian welcome. Yes, it's touristy. Yes, it's magnificent. Lederhosen-clad servers carry absurd numbers of litre-mugs, the oompah band rolls from 7 p.m., and the roast pork with dumplings is the kind of dish that makes you want to never leave. Expect to pay €15–€20 for a main.
Stay: Wombat's City Hostel Munich (Days 3–4)
Day 4: Allianz Arena — The Spaceship That Glows Red
Morning
Munich mornings deserve a ritual. Walk to the Viktualienmarkt — the city's legendary open-air food market, just south of Marienplatz. Arrive by 9 a.m. and it's already buzzing: stalls piled with pretzels, Obatzda (Bavarian cheese spread), fresh produce, and sausages of every possible variety. Grab a coffee from one of the market stalls, a warm pretzel the size of a frisbee, and take a seat at the outdoor Biergarten in the center. This is a deeply local experience — Munich's Marienplatz, Viktualienmarkt, and world-class museums are just a short U-Bahn ride from everything.
From the Viktualienmarkt, take the U-Bahn to Marienplatz and then the U6 north. Take the S-Bahn from Munich Main Station or Munich East Station to Marienplatz. From there, take the U6 underground line in the direction of Garching-Forschungszentrum to Fröttmaning. The travel time from Marienplatz to Fröttmaning is approximately 16 minutes. Then allow 15–20 minutes to walk to the stadium along the Esplanade.
Morning/Afternoon — Allianz Arena
As you approach the Allianz Arena across the flat esplanade, the building defies ordinary architectural logic. It looks like something assembled by an architect who also designed spacecraft. Renowned Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron designed the stadium, envisioning a venue that would stand out globally. The most distinctive feature is its revolutionary ETFE facade — 2,784 air-inflated panels capable of changing color to match FC Bayern Munich's red, TSV 1860 Munich's blue, or white for the German national team.
Book the combined Arena Tour + FC Bayern Museum package — this combines a tour of the FC Bayern stadium with a visit to the club museum, running approximately 2.5 hours and available daily from 10:00–18:00.
The Bayern Munich stadium tour ticket price for adults (14 years and older) is €25. Concessions cost €22, while children (6–13 years) pay only €11.
Inside the arena, the guided tour is a genuinely theatrical experience. On a guided tour, you'll be taken to the tunnel at the Allianz Arena and have the chance to view it through the eyes of the players by walking out to the pitch. Your guide will talk you through the fascinating details behind a stadium unique in world football, while you get the chance to see the press conference area and the manager's dugout.
Then move into the FC Bayern Museum. Unlike more traditional football museums, the FC Bayern Museum not only includes countless incredible items — trophies, shoes, and kits worn by major Bayern stars of past and present — it also gives visitors the chance to experience the emotions felt during key moments in the club's history using cutting-edge exhibition technology.
Join a journey through time in Germany's largest club museum, from the founding of FC Bayern in 1900 to their current successes. Countless trophies, amazing exhibits, and innovative media technology combine to create an impressive mix of information, emotion, and interaction.
Practical tip: If you're doing a tour that starts after 4:00 pm, visit the museum before you go on the stadium tour. Otherwise, the museum will close before you can see it. Also note that only cashless payments are accepted at the ticket counter on site.
Afternoon
For lunch, head back toward central Munich and grab a seat at ⭐ Wirtshaus in der Au — a beloved traditional Wirtshaus (tavern) in the Au district, a short walk from the Deutsches Museum. This is where Munich families have been eating Schweinsbraten and Knödel (roast pork and bread dumplings) for generations. No tourists, no English menus at the bar, and absolutely no apologies for being magnificently, unapologetically Bavarian. Mains from €10–€15.
From lunch, take a wander through Maxvorstadt — Munich's museum quarter — or, for the football-obsessed, detour past the FC Bayern Campus (the club's training facility in north Munich). It's not open to the public, but even the sight of it — vast, gleaming, purpose-built — speaks to Bayern's industrial-scale ambition.
Evening
Tonight, Munich rewards you. Walk along the Englischer Garten as the evening light turns the chestnuts golden, and stop at the famous Chinesischer Turm Biergarten for a proper Bavarian evening under the trees with a Mass (litre) of Augustiner Bräu. At around €10 per litre, it's one of the best deals in one of the most beautiful outdoor settings in Europe.
For dinner proper, try Zum Dürnbräu in the Altstadt — a centuries-old inn that feels like it hasn't changed much since Bavarian knights ate here. The atmosphere is warm, the food is rich, and the dark wood paneling makes you feel extraordinarily embedded in this city's history.
Stay: Wombat's City Hostel Munich (Night 4)
Day 5: Munich's Football Culture — Olympiapark & City Exploration
Morning
Munich is more than the Allianz Arena. This morning belongs to the Olympiapark — site of the 1972 Olympics and, for decades, the home of Bayern Munich before the Allianz Arena was built. The historic Olympic grounds and park remain one of Munich's most atmospheric spaces. The Olympic Stadium — a gorgeous, tensile-roofed masterpiece of 1970s design — is still used for concerts and events, and the surrounding park is a beloved green lung for locals.
Grab breakfast at the ⭐ Rischart Café on Marienplatz — Munich's best beloved bakery chain, where locals who know will always pick the Butterbrezel and a proper Milchkaffee over the tourist traps. Marienplatz sits at the heart of Munich's city center, and the café fills up fast. Arrive before 9 a.m.
Spend the mid-morning exploring the Olympiapark. Climb the Olympic Tower (Olympiaturm) for panoramic views that on a clear day extend to the Alps. From up here, you can spot the Allianz Arena's white bubble to the north, the old Olympic Stadium below, and the BMW Museum and Welt complex next door. The BMW Museum and Welt offer automotive history and innovation — and for many visitors, it's a fascinating parallel to the precision engineering of Bayern's football operation.
Afternoon
After lunch at one of the many excellent spots around Olympiapark — try the Olympic Park restaurant terrace for a scenic meal with stadium views — walk or cycle (bike rentals are everywhere) through the English Garden, the largest city park in Europe.
For an afternoon activity that gets the blood pumping: rent a stand-up paddleboard on the Kleinhesseloher See in the English Garden — a beloved local pastime. Or watch the surfers who ride the artificial wave at the Eisbach river, near the southern entrance to the park — one of Munich's most extraordinary hidden spectacles.
⭐ The Eisbach wave is Munich's most local secret: a permanent standing wave on the small Eisbach stream where surfers queue up to ride, year-round, in the middle of a city park. No sign, no entry fee, no crowds — just skill and pure delight. Find it at the Prinzregentenstraße bridge near the Haus der Kunst art museum.
Evening
Tonight, transfer to Hamburg. From München Hauptbahnhof, the ICE to Hamburg Hauptbahnhof takes around 6 hours — book in advance for fares as low as €30–€50. The train leaves the Bavarian landscape behind and pushes north through Nuremberg, Würzburg, and Hanover. It's a long ride, but Germany's trains are supremely comfortable.
Arrive in Hamburg late evening. Check in to the ⭐ Superbude Hotel Hostel St. Pauli — one of Germany's most characterful budget properties, located in the legendary St. Pauli district. The rooms are stylishly designed, the vibe is creative and welcoming, and the rooftop terrace is the perfect place to sip a beer and get your bearings in Hamburg's most electrifying neighborhood. Private rooms from around €75/night.
Grab a late-night currywurst from a street stand on the Reeperbahn — this is St. Pauli, Hamburg's famous entertainment district — before calling it a night.
Stay: Superbude Hotel Hostel St. Pauli (Days 5–7)
Day 6: Volksparkstadion — The North's Eternal Fortress
Morning
Hamburg wakes up differently than Dortmund or Munich. The air has salt in it. The city is bigger, cooler, more cosmopolitan. It's a port city that absorbed the world's cultures and created something distinctly its own.
Start the day with breakfast at ⭐ Café Götz in the Altona district — a genuine neighborhood institution where you're likely to be the only non-local in the room. It opens early, the coffee is excellent, and the Rührei (scrambled eggs) with dark bread is the most underrated breakfast in Hamburg. Budget around €7–€10. Altona itself is a remarkable neighborhood — an old working-class fishing district that has reinvented itself as one of Hamburg's most creative and livable quartiers without losing its soul.
After breakfast, take the S-Bahn (Stellingen station) to Volksparkstadion. Public transport, especially the S-Bahn to Stellingen station, is highly recommended to avoid traffic and parking issues. From Stellingen, it's a 10-minute walk through a wooded area that fans describe as brilliantly atmospheric even before the ground comes into view.
Morning/Afternoon — Volksparkstadion
With a capacity of over 57,000 spectators, it is the home ground of Hamburger SV. Since its opening in 1953 and through numerous modernizations, the Volksparkstadion has developed into one of the most important sports venues in Germany. The impressive atmosphere at Bundesliga matches and major events makes the stadium a unique place for fans and visitors alike.
Book the public stadium tour in advance through HSV's official website. Several times a day, HSV offers public stadium tours at the Volksparkstadion. During the stadium tour, the tour guide shows you areas of the Volksparkstadion that would otherwise remain hidden. You'll get an exciting insight into the history of the different HSV venues as well as into the processes of the stadium.
In addition to the grandstand and press areas, the tour takes you through VIP rooms, the bus hall, mixed zone, and guest cabin. As a grand finale, you will walk through the players' tunnel to the holy turf with the entrance anthem "HSV forever." Afterward, you can use your ticket to visit the HSV Museum.
The public stadium tours are conducted in German, however the tour guides can also speak English and are happy to answer questions. If you're interested in a private English tour, you can book it separately.
The HSV Museum that follows is well worth a look. While many teams with recent stadiums have expansive museums built on or next to their ground, Hamburg's is surprisingly modest in size given the fairly impressive haul in it. Definitely worth a look for any football fan — the somewhat understated layout actually adds a degree of charm and personality that many of these lack.
Practical tip: Admission is approximately €12 per person for the guided tour. Booking tours in advance is recommended, especially during peak tourist seasons or holidays, to secure your preferred time slot.
For a cheap eat at the stadium, follow the example of local fans and try Die Raute — the official fan restaurant at the Volksparkstadion. At Die Raute, you can enjoy Germany's national dish, Currywurst — a curry sausage and chips smothered in tomato ketchup, washed down with an ice-cold beer or soft drink. It doesn't get more authentically Hamburg than this, and it'll set you back around €5–€8.
Afternoon
Back in Hamburg proper, spend the afternoon exploring the legendary Speicherstadt — the vast red-brick warehouse district along the harbor, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, that once stored spices and coffee for the world. Walk the bridges, peer into the canals, and soak in the mercantile grandeur.
From Speicherstadt, cross into HafenCity — Europe's largest inner-city urban development project, where the skyline is still rising but already extraordinary. Visit the Elbphilharmonie concert hall, a wave-shaped architectural wonder perched atop a historic warehouse. Even if you don't have concert tickets, the public plaza on the 8th floor (the "Plaza") is free to access and offers one of the most stunning panoramas in Europe — a 360-degree sweep of the Elbe, the port, and Hamburg stretching to the horizon.
Evening
Dinner tonight should be spent in St. Pauli — your neighborhood, your playground. Bullerei in the Schanzenviertel is a Hamburg institution: a converted slaughterhouse turned bold, open-concept restaurant by celebrity chef Tim Mälzer. The meat-focused menu is exceptional, the atmosphere is lively, and it perfectly captures Hamburg's ability to reinvent industrial space into something magnificent. Expect to spend €20–€35 for a main.
After dinner, don't sleep early. Attending a Hamburger SV match at Volksparkstadion is an immersion into one of Germany's most passionate football cultures. The stadium, home to HSV since 1953, boasts a legendary atmosphere, particularly from the Nordtribüne where the ultras create a constant roar of support. Fans often describe the energy as electrifying, making it a truly memorable experience even for those new to German football. If there's a home match on your final evening — even better. The Hamburg football faithful are as passionate as any in Germany, and the atmosphere around the stadium before kickoff is one you won't forget.
Stay: Superbude Hotel Hostel St. Pauli (Night 6)
Day 7: Hamburg's Football Culture & Departure
Morning
One last morning in Hamburg — and it's a good one.
Walk down to the Fischmarkt (fish market) near the Elbe docks. Open from early morning on Sundays (and most Saturdays too), this is the city's most chaotic, joyful, and utterly Hamburg institution: a floating chaos of fish, fruit, bread, and shouting traders. Grab a Fischbrötchen (fish bread roll) from a local stall — a Hamburg specialty that costs around €3–€5 and tastes like the North Sea. This is your cheap eat of the day, and arguably the most authentic meal of the entire trip.
After the market, stroll along the Landungsbrücken docks — the landing bridges at the Elbe waterfront where ferries and harbor cruise boats come and go. The vista of the harbor, with its container ships and tugboats moving through slow water, feels ancient and industrial and beautiful all at once.
Afternoon
Return to the Schanzenviertel neighborhood for a final exploration — this is Hamburg's hippest district, full of independent record shops, vintage clothing stores, and coffee roasters. Pop into ⭐ Café Koppel near the Alsterpark for a final coffee and slice of cake. It's a small community café that runs partially as a creative cooperative — the kind of place you'd only find if a local pointed you there.
For a final football pilgrimage, revisit the area around Volksparkstadion if time allows — many fans take a moment to simply sit in the stands (if there's an event opening them), or wander the perimeter of the stadium in the quiet hours before departure. The training ground sits adjacent to the main stadium, and it's not uncommon to see first-team players during non-matchday sessions if you arrive at the right time of morning.
Evening
Departure from Hamburg. Hamburg Hauptbahnhof connects directly to Hamburg Airport (HHB) by S-Bahn in about 25 minutes. For return flights from elsewhere in Germany, Hamburg's long-distance rail connections to Frankfurt, Berlin, and Munich are all excellent via ICE.
As your train or flight lifts away from northern Germany, you'll carry something that can't be bought in any club shop: the memory of three cities, three stadiums, and the profound, beautiful proof that football in Germany is not just a sport. It is architecture. It is memory. It is community. It is noise, silence, yellow walls and red facades and singing through fog and rain. It is, perhaps above all, perfectly, magnificently alive.
Practical Summary
Best time to visit: Bundesliga season runs August–May; avoid international breaks for stadium tours
Match tickets: Book directly with each club — BVB at bvb.de, Bayern at fcbayern.com, HSV at hsv.de — months in advance for big games
Train travel: Book ICE inter-city trains early at bahn.de; Dortmund–Munich ~€30–60; Munich–Hamburg ~€30–60 advance
Estimated daily budget: €60–€100/day including accommodation, meals, and activities
Stadium tour bookings: BVB via bvb.de/en; Allianz Arena via allianz-arena.com; HSV via hsv.de/en
Transport apps: DB Navigator (trains), MVV app (Munich), HVV app (Hamburg)
Language: English is widely spoken in tourist areas — but a simple "Danke" goes a long way
Sources & Inspiration
Turn This Itinerary Into Your Personal Trip Plan
If you're feeling inspired to plan your own adventure, BTravelrs is here to help! You can view this itinerary in the app, build and customize your own trip from it, and easily book through our trusted partners like Booking.com for flights and accommodations, Economy Bookings for car rentals, Viator for experiences/tours, and Airalo for eSIMs, all in one place.
Booking through us allows BTravelrs to remain free to use and us to bring more amazing articles like this! 😉
Happy Travels!
Your Ultimate Travel Companion
Connect
© 2026. All rights reserved.


