Seven days does northern Germany properly. Days 1-2 cover Hamburg's core (Speicherstadt, Miniatur Wunderland, Elbphilharmonie, harbor, Alster, Reeperbahn); Day 3 is a Lübeck day trip; Day 4 is deeper Hamburg with the Sunday Fischmarkt, museums, and the Schanze; Day 5 is a Bremen day trip; Day 6 takes a Berlin overnight (1.5 hours by train) for the capital's highlights; Day 7 returns for a final slow Hamburg day and departure. The Hamburg base plus an easy Berlin hop makes a rounded German trip; regional passes keep the Hanseatic side trips cheap.
A full week is enough to actually understand Hamburg. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.
7-Day Total Budget at a Glance
Budget
$530
Per person, flights excl.
Mid-Range
$1,065
Per person, flights excl.
Luxury
$2,350
Per person, flights excl.
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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule
Speicherstadt + Miniatur Wunderland + Elbphilharmonie
Speicherstadt (UNESCO warehouses) - Miniatur Wunderland - HafenCity - Elbphilharmonie PlazaActivities
- 09:30 Speicherstadt — UNESCO warehouse district 1h30
Start in the Speicherstadt, the world's largest contiguous warehouse complex (built 1883-1927, UNESCO-listed since 2015) — rows of ornate red-brick warehouses on oak piles, reflected in canals and linked by bridges. Wander the lanes and canalside before the crowds build.
Cost: Free to walk TIP: Free to stroll. The Poggenmühlen-Brücke bridge gives the classic Wasserschloss postcard view. Morning light is good; it's also floodlit and photogenic at dusk. Combine with the adjoining modern HafenCity. Wear a rain jacket — harbor weather changes fast. - 11:00 Miniatur Wunderland — world's largest model railway 2h30
Inside the Speicherstadt, Miniatur Wunderland is the world's largest model railway (a Guinness record) — vast, intricately detailed miniature worlds with day-night lighting, thousands of trains and vehicles, and a working model airport. Hamburg's most-visited attraction, fun for all ages.
Cost: ~€23 (book online ahead) TIP: Book a timed slot online a week or more ahead — it sells out daily, and walk-up waits can be long. Allow 2-3 hours; it's bigger and more absorbing than expected. The airport section with planes 'taking off' is a highlight. Cafe on-site. - 14:00 Lunch — fischbrötchen or HafenCity café 1h
Break for Hamburg's signature fish roll. Grab a fischbrötchen (herring or North Sea shrimp, €4-6) from a harbor-side stand, or sit down at a HafenCity café between the Speicherstadt and the Elbphilharmonie.
Cost: €6-15 per person TIP: A fischbrötchen is the quintessential Hamburg quick lunch — try one with North Sea shrimp (Krabben). HafenCity has plenty of cafés if you'd rather sit. Keep some cash for fish stands. Don't overfill — Elphi awaits. - 15:30 Elbphilharmonie — the Plaza & 'Elphi' 1h30
Ride the curved escalator up the Elbphilharmonie ('Elphi'), Herzog & de Meuron's glass-topped concert hall atop a 1875 warehouse base, to the free public Plaza 37m up — a 360-degree wraparound view of the harbor, Speicherstadt, and city.
Cost: Free Plaza (€2 timed ticket skips queue) TIP: The Plaza is free; book a €2 timed online ticket to skip the often-long queue, or take a walk-up ticket from the machine. The escalator 'Tube' is part of the fun. If you can, book a concert (months ahead) for the famous acoustics. Open 9am-midnight. - 19:30 Dinner — traditional Hanseatic or Portuguese Quarter 2h
Dinner near the harbor. For Hamburg classics, the Old Commercial Room (since 1795) does the famous Original Labskaus; for a change of pace, the Portuguese Quarter (Portugiesenviertel) serves grilled fish and bacalhau a short walk away.
Cost: €20-40 per person TIP: Labskaus is the local must-try if you want the full Hanseatic experience. The Portuguese Quarter near St. Michaelis is a relaxed, atmospheric alternative. Reserve on weekends. German dinner starts earlier (around 6-8pm) than southern Europe.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Bakery Franzbrötchen + coffee
Altstadt / HafenCity · €3-8
A Franzbrötchen (Hamburg's cinnamon-butter pastry) with coffee — the local start.
Lunch
Fischbrötchen stand or HafenCity café
Speicherstadt / HafenCity · €6-15
A North Sea shrimp or herring fish roll near the warehouses.
Dinner
Old Commercial Room or Portuguese Quarter
Neustadt / Portugiesenviertel · €20-40
Original Hamburger Labskaus, or grilled fish and bacalhau.
Almost all on foot — Speicherstadt, Miniatur Wunderland, HafenCity, and the Elbphilharmonie are within a walkable, canal-laced band. The U4 serves HafenCity if needed.
DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Harbor & Landungsbrücken + Town Hall + Alster + Reeperbahn
Landungsbrücken - harbor boat/ferry tour - St. Michaelis tower - Town Hall - Inner Alster - Reeperbahn & BeatlesActivities
- 09:30 Landungsbrücken + harbor boat or ferry tour 2h
Head to the St. Pauli Landungsbrücken, the floating piers where the city meets the working Elbe port. Take a 1-hour harbor boat tour (€20-25) past the docks and container terminals, or ride the cheap public HVV ferry (line 62) for the same views at transit prices.
Cost: Boat tour €20-25 / ferry on a day pass TIP: The public ferry (line 62) is a local secret — a harbor cruise on a normal HVV ticket. Sit on the upper deck. Commercial tours add commentary and go closer to specific sights. Either way, the working-port scenery is the appeal. Dress for wind. - 12:00 St. Michaelis ('Michel') tower + fischbrötchen lunch 1h30
Climb (or lift up) the tower of St. Michaelis Church, Hamburg's landmark Baroque 'Michel,' for a sweeping view over the harbor and city, then grab a fischbrötchen at the harbor or in the nearby Portuguese Quarter.
Cost: Tower ~€8 + lunch €6-12 TIP: The Michel's tower view is one of the best in the city for the harbor. The Portuguese Quarter for lunch is right below it. A quick, central pairing before heading to the Town Hall. Tower has both stairs and a lift. - 14:30 Town Hall (Rathaus) + Inner Alster 2h
Walk to the grand neo-Renaissance Rathaus (Town Hall) and its arcaded courtyard, then on to the Inner Alster (Binnenalster), the city-center lake ringed by elegant buildings and the Jungfernstieg promenade, with its fountain jet.
Cost: Free (Rathaus tour ~€5) TIP: The Rathaus exterior and courtyard are free; short guided interior tours run for a few euros. The Jungfernstieg along the Inner Alster is the classic shopping and café strip. In summer, a short Alster lake cruise is a relaxed option. - 17:00 Outer Alster stroll (Außenalster) 1h
If the weather's fine, walk part of the leafy Outer Alster (Außenalster), bordered by parks, villas, and tree-lined paths where locals sail and row — a green contrast to the harbor and a pleasant late-afternoon breather.
Cost: Free TIP: The full loop is 7.4km; a shorter stretch from Jungfernstieg is enough for the atmosphere. Lovely on a clear evening with sailboats out. Skip if it's raining hard and head to dinner early instead. - 20:00 Reeperbahn + Beatles history + dinner/nightlife 3h
Spend the evening on the Reeperbahn in St. Pauli — the neon entertainment mile where the Beatles played 1,200 hours of gigs in 1960-62. See Beatles-Platz (a vinyl-record-shaped plaza with band silhouettes), eat currywurst, and dip into the bars, music venues, and theaters.
Cost: Dinner €10-20 + drinks €5-10 each TIP: Currywurst at a Reeperbahn stand (Heisse Ecke, Lucullus) is the classic late bite. A Beatles walking tour (€20-30) tells the story well. It's broadly safe but touristy and seedy in parts — ignore touts, and note Herbertstraße is off-limits to women and minors. Watch your wallet.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Bakery / hotel breakfast
Altstadt · €3-10
Franzbrötchen and coffee, or a German breakfast spread.
Lunch
Fischbrötchen near St. Michaelis
Neustadt / harbor · €6-12
A harbor fish roll between the tower and the Town Hall.
Dinner
Reeperbahn currywurst or St. Pauli restaurant
St. Pauli · €10-20
Currywurst and fries — the classic Reeperbahn bite before a night out.
Walk plus the U-/S-Bahn. The S1/S3 and U3 reach the Landungsbrücken and Reeperbahn (St. Pauli) quickly. The harbor ferry (line 62) is covered by an HVV day pass.
DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Lübeck day trip — Hanseatic Old Town & marzipan
Train to Lübeck - Holstentor gate - Old Town & brick-Gothic churches - Niederegger marzipan - return to HamburgActivities
- 08:30 Train to Lübeck 1h
Take a regional Deutsche Bahn train from Hamburg Hauptbahnhof to Lübeck — about 45 minutes (roughly twice an hour). The compact UNESCO Old Town, the cradle of the Hanseatic League, is a short walk or bus from the station.
Cost: ~€15-19 one way (cheaper with a regional day pass) TIP: The Schleswig-Holstein-Ticket regional day pass covers several travelers cheaply for the round trip. Catch an early train to maximize the day. Lübeck's Old Town is small and walkable. Buy tickets from machines or the DB app. - 10:00 Holstentor + Old Town walk 2h30
Start at the Holstentor, Lübeck's iconic twin-towered medieval gate, then walk into the Altstadt — an island of brick-Gothic churches (St. Mary's, the Cathedral), gabled merchant houses, and narrow courtyard alleys (Gänge und Höfe).
Cost: Free to walk (Holstentor museum ~€8) TIP: The Holstentor is the postcard shot. St. Mary's Church (Marienkirche) is a brick-Gothic landmark. The hidden courtyards and almshouses are worth seeking out. The whole Old Town is a UNESCO site and easy on foot. - 13:00 Lunch + Niederegger marzipan 1h30
Lunch in the Old Town, then visit the historic Café Niederegger (since 1806), the temple of Lübeck marzipan, for cake and a stop at its small marzipan museum upstairs. Marzipan is Lübeck's signature export.
Cost: Lunch €12-20 + treats €5-10 TIP: Niederegger's marzipan cake and the upstairs marzipan-figure museum are the classic stop. Buy marzipan to take home — it travels well. The café itself is an institution. A relaxed midday before exploring more. - 15:00 Harbor, churches & free time in Lübeck 2h
Wander the Trave riverfront and the old salt warehouses (Salzspeicher), see more of the brick-Gothic churches, or visit the Buddenbrookhaus / European Hansemuseum if open, before catching the train back.
Cost: Free (museums €8-12) TIP: The European Hansemuseum tells the Hanseatic League story well. The riverfront and Salzspeicher are atmospheric. Keep an eye on your return train time — services are roughly twice an hour. - 18:00 Return to Hamburg + farewell dinner 2h30
Take the ~45-minute train back to Hamburg and round off the trip with a final dinner — fresh fish at a harbor restaurant, or a relaxed meal in the Schanzenviertel.
Cost: Train + dinner €20-40 TIP: Confirm the last convenient train before relaxing. Back in Hamburg, a final Pannfisch or fish-of-the-day dinner is a fitting send-off. The Schanze is good for a more casual, lively last evening.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Quick café or station breakfast
Hamburg Hauptbahnhof · €3-8
Coffee and a Franzbrötchen before the early train.
Lunch
Lübeck Old Town + Café Niederegger
Lübeck · €15-30
An Old Town lunch and Lübeck marzipan cake.
Dinner
Hamburg harbor fish or Schanze dinner
Hamburg · €20-40
A farewell Pannfisch or fish-of-the-day back in Hamburg.
Regional Deutsche Bahn train Hamburg ↔ Lübeck, ~45 min each way (~€15-19, cheaper with a Schleswig-Holstein-Ticket day pass). On foot within Lübeck's Old Town.
DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Deeper Hamburg — museums, Schanze & Sunday Fischmarkt
Sunday Fischmarkt (if Sunday) - Speicherstadt museums - International Maritime Museum - Schanzenviertel - Planten un BlomenActivities
- 06:30 Sunday Fischmarkt (if Sunday) or a slow start 2h30
If today is Sunday, get up early for the St. Pauli Fischmarkt (since 1703) — market criers selling fish, fruit, and flowers on the Elbe riverbank, with live bands filling the 1894 Fischauktionshalle. Eat a fischbrötchen amid the chaos. On other days, enjoy a relaxed breakfast instead.
Cost: €5-15 (food) TIP: It runs Sundays only, 5/7am-9:30am, and it's all over by 9:30am — set an alarm and bring cash. The Fischauktionshalle has live music and beer. A classic end to a Reeperbahn night or an early-bird highlight. Skip and sleep in if it's not a Sunday. - 10:30 International Maritime Museum or Speicherstadt museums 2h
Dive into Hamburg's seafaring story at the International Maritime Museum (in a Speicherstadt warehouse), or pick a Speicherstadt museum — the Speicherstadtmuseum (warehouse history), the Spice Museum, or the Hamburg Dungeon for something lighter.
Cost: €10-15 (Dungeon ~€25) TIP: The Maritime Museum is huge — allow plenty of time, or focus on a few floors. The smaller Speicherstadt museums are quick and atmospheric. A good rainy-day plan. Check current hours, as some close Mondays. - 13:00 Lunch in the Schanzenviertel 1h30
Head to the hip Schanzenviertel (Sternschanze) for lunch — a district of cafés, street food, and modern restaurants. Tim Mälzer's Bullerei (in an old slaughterhouse hall) is the marquee spot; plenty of casual and veggie-friendly options surround it.
Cost: €12-30 per person TIP: The Schanze is Hamburg's trendy, café-and-bar neighborhood — good for vegetarians and a younger crowd. Bullerei is worth a reservation for dinner; lunch is more casual. Browse the indie shops afterward. - 15:30 Planten un Blomen park 1h30
Stroll Planten un Blomen, the central botanical park near the old ramparts — themed gardens, a Japanese garden and tea house, greenhouses, and (in summer) water-light organ shows in the evening. A green pause in the city center.
Cost: Free TIP: Free and lovely in fair weather. The Japanese garden is a highlight. In summer, the evening Wasserlichtorgel (water-light show) on the lake is worth timing. Close to the Schanze and the center. - 19:30 Dinner + optional Elbphilharmonie concert 2h30
If you booked ahead, take in an Elbphilharmonie concert tonight for the world-class acoustics; otherwise enjoy a relaxed dinner — modern German in the Schanze, or a final harbor fish dinner.
Cost: Concert €30-150 / dinner €20-40 TIP: Elbphilharmonie concert tickets must be booked months ahead. If you missed out, the building tour or just the Plaza is still worthwhile. A Schanze or harbor dinner is a fine plan B. Reserve restaurants on weekends.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Fischmarkt fischbrötchen (Sun) or bakery
St. Pauli / Altstadt · €4-10
A Sunday-market fish roll, or a Franzbrötchen and coffee otherwise.
Lunch
Schanzenviertel café or Bullerei
Sternschanze · €12-30
Modern German or veggie-friendly fare in the hip Schanze.
Dinner
Schanze dinner or harbor fish
Schanze / harbor · €20-40
Modern German plates, or a final Pannfisch by the water.
U-/S-Bahn plus walking. The S-Bahn and U3 reach Sternschanze and St. Pauli; Speicherstadt and Planten un Blomen are central and walkable.
DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Bremen day trip — market square & Town Musicians
Train to Bremen - Marktplatz & Roland statue - Town Musicians of Bremen - Schnoor quarter - Böttcherstraße - returnActivities
- 08:30 Train to Bremen 1h15
Take a Deutsche Bahn train from Hamburg Hauptbahnhof to Bremen — about 1 hour to 1h15. The medieval center is a short walk or tram from the station. Bremen, another Hanseatic city-state, makes an easy contrast to Hamburg.
Cost: ~€20-30 (cheaper with a Niedersachsen-Ticket day pass) TIP: The Niedersachsen-Ticket regional day pass covers several travelers cheaply round trip. Catch an early train. Bremen's old center is compact and walkable from the Hauptbahnhof. Buy tickets from machines or the DB app. - 10:00 Marktplatz — Town Hall, Roland & cathedral 1h30
Start at Bremen's UNESCO-listed Marktplatz — the ornate Renaissance Town Hall, the medieval Roland statue (a symbol of civic freedom), and St. Peter's Cathedral framing one of Germany's finest market squares.
Cost: Free (Town Hall tour ~€8) TIP: The Town Hall and Roland statue are the UNESCO highlights. The square is photogenic and central. Short guided Town Hall tours run for a few euros. Climb or visit the cathedral if time allows. - 11:30 Town Musicians of Bremen + Böttcherstraße 1h
Find the famous Town Musicians of Bremen statue (donkey, dog, cat, rooster) on the Town Hall's west side — rub the donkey's legs for luck — then walk the Art Nouveau / Expressionist Böttcherstraße, a striking brick lane of galleries and shops.
Cost: Free TIP: The Town Musicians statue references the Brothers Grimm fairy tale — grab the classic photo holding the donkey's front legs. Böttcherstraße is a short, atmospheric architectural detour with craft shops. - 13:00 Lunch + Schnoor quarter 2h
Lunch near the center, then wander the Schnoor — Bremen's oldest quarter, a maze of tiny medieval fishermen's and craftsmen's cottages now full of galleries, cafés, and craft shops.
Cost: Lunch €12-22 + free to wander TIP: The Schnoor's narrow lanes and toy-like houses are the most charming corner of Bremen. Good for coffee, cake, and souvenirs. A relaxed afternoon before the train back. - 16:30 Return to Hamburg + farewell evening 2h30
Take the ~1-hour train back to Hamburg for a final evening — a last harbor fish dinner, an Alster sunset, or a relaxed drink in the Schanze or St. Georg.
Cost: Train + dinner €20-40 TIP: Confirm your return train before lingering. Back in Hamburg, a final harbor dinner or an Alster-side evening rounds things off. Keep a cash buffer for the day.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Station breakfast / bakery
Hamburg Hauptbahnhof · €3-8
Coffee and a Franzbrötchen before the Bremen train.
Lunch
Bremen Marktplatz / Schnoor
Bremen · €12-22
A market-square lunch near the Town Musicians.
Dinner
Farewell Hamburg dinner
Hamburg · €20-40
A last harbor fish dinner or an Alster-side evening.
Deutsche Bahn train Hamburg ↔ Bremen, ~1h-1h15 each way (~€20-30, cheaper with a Niedersachsen-Ticket day pass). On foot within Bremen's compact center.
DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Berlin overnight — the capital's highlights
Train to Berlin - Brandenburg Gate & Reichstag - Museum Island - East Side Gallery - overnight in BerlinActivities
- 08:00 Train to Berlin 2h
Take an ICE high-speed train from Hamburg Hauptbahnhof to Berlin — about 1h45 to 2 hours. Drop your bags at a central hotel near Mitte before exploring. This is an overnight, so pack light for one night.
Cost: €30-70 each way (cheaper booked ahead) TIP: Book the ICE on the DB app 1-2 months ahead for the cheapest 'Sparpreis' fares. Berlin is a comfortable overnight, not a day trip, from Hamburg. Stay near Mitte for walkable sights. Travel light for one night. - 11:00 Brandenburg Gate, Reichstag & Holocaust Memorial 2h30
See Berlin's icons in central Mitte — the Brandenburg Gate, the glass-domed Reichstag (book the free dome in advance), and the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe — a short walk apart.
Cost: Free (Reichstag dome free, pre-book) TIP: Pre-register online for the free Reichstag dome — slots fill up. The Brandenburg Gate and Holocaust Memorial are open and free. This central cluster is the classic first-time Berlin walk. Allow time at each. - 14:30 Museum Island or Checkpoint Charlie + Cold War history 2h30
Choose your Berlin lens: Museum Island (a UNESCO ensemble including the Pergamon and Neues museums) for antiquities, or Checkpoint Charlie and the surrounding Cold War sites for divided-Berlin history.
Cost: Museums €12-19 each TIP: Museum Island is world-class but big — pick one or two museums (note the Pergamon may be partly closed for renovation; check). Checkpoint Charlie is touristy but the nearby history is real. Either makes a strong afternoon. - 18:00 East Side Gallery + dinner in Berlin 3h
Walk a stretch of the East Side Gallery, the painted longest-surviving section of the Berlin Wall, then enjoy dinner in a lively district like Kreuzberg or Prenzlauer Berg — Berlin's food scene is huge and varied.
Cost: Dinner €15-35 per person TIP: The East Side Gallery is free and open-air — the 'Fraternal Kiss' mural is the famous one. Kreuzberg and Prenzlauer Berg are great for dinner and a drink. Berlin nightlife is legendary if you want a late one.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hamburg station breakfast
Hamburg Hauptbahnhof · €3-8
Coffee and a Franzbrötchen before the Berlin train.
Lunch
Berlin Mitte café / street food
Berlin Mitte · €10-20
A quick currywurst or döner — Berlin street-food classics.
Dinner
Kreuzberg or Prenzlauer Berg
Berlin · €15-35
Berlin's diverse dinner scene — international and modern German.
ICE high-speed train Hamburg → Berlin, ~1h45-2h (€30-70, cheaper booked ahead). In Berlin, the U-/S-Bahn and walking cover central Mitte.
DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Berlin morning + return to Hamburg + departure
Berlin morning highlight - train back to Hamburg - final harbor moment - HAM departureActivities
- 09:00 A final Berlin highlight 2h
Catch one more Berlin sight before heading back — the Tiergarten park and Victory Column, the Berliner Dom and Lustgarten, or a relaxed café morning, depending on your train time.
Cost: Free-€10 TIP: Keep it light on a travel day — pick one nearby sight or a slow breakfast. The Tiergarten is a pleasant stroll near the Brandenburg Gate. Watch your train time. Collect your bags from the hotel. - 12:00 Train back to Hamburg 2h
Take the ~2-hour ICE back to Hamburg, arriving early afternoon. If your flight is later, you have time for a final Hamburg moment; if it's a same-day departure, head toward the airport.
Cost: €30-70 TIP: Book the return ICE ahead with the outbound for the best fares. Arriving back in Hamburg gives flexibility for a last fish roll or souvenir run before flying out. - 14:30 Final harbor moment + souvenirs 1h30
Back in Hamburg, squeeze in a last fischbrötchen at the Landungsbrücken or a coffee on the Alster, and pick up souvenirs — maritime crafts, marzipan brought from Lübeck, or local treats.
Cost: €6-20 TIP: A final harbor fish roll is the fitting send-off. The Alster or Speicherstadt make a calm last stroll. Keep an eye on the airport-transfer time. Vacuum-packed treats travel fine in checked bags. - 16:30 Hamburg Airport (HAM) departure 1h30
Head to the airport via the S1 S-Bahn from the center (~25 min, ~€3.60) or a taxi (~€30-35, 20-30 min). HAM is about 8.5km north of the center.
Cost: S-Bahn ~€3.60 / taxi ~€30-35 TIP: Arrive 2 hours before a Schengen flight, more for long-haul connections. The S1 runs every 10 minutes and is the cheapest, most reliable transfer. Buy your ticket on the platform before boarding.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Berlin café breakfast
Berlin · €5-12
A relaxed Berlin breakfast before the train back.
Lunch
Hamburg fischbrötchen
Landungsbrücken · €6-15
A final harbor fish roll back in Hamburg.
Dinner
In-flight or airport dining
HAM / en route · €8-15
A light bite at the airport before departure.
ICE train Berlin → Hamburg, ~2h (€30-70). In Hamburg, walking plus the S1 S-Bahn to HAM airport (~25 min, ~€3.60) or a taxi (~€30-35).
DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Book Hamburg Tours & Tickets
Packing Checklist
- ✓ Passport + check Schengen rules (visa-free 90 days for many passports) and ETIAS from 2026
- ✓ A windproof rain jacket and waterproof shoes — Hamburg's oceanic climate means rain and harbor wind in any season
- ✓ Layers year-round: even summer evenings by the water are cool (highs ~15-22°C / 60-72°F May-Sep)
- ✓ Winter (Nov-Mar): warm coat, hat, gloves — grey, cold, ~3°C, short days, plus Christmas-market evenings
- ✓ Comfortable walking shoes — the central districts are flat but cobbled in places
- ✓ Some cash (€30-50) for fish stands, the Sunday Fischmarkt, bakeries, and small bars
- ✓ Type C/F plug adapter for Germany's 230V outlets
- ✓ Book Miniatur Wunderland online a week+ ahead, and the Elbphilharmonie €2 Plaza timed ticket
- ✓ Regional day-pass tickets (Schleswig-Holstein-Ticket for Lübeck, Niedersachsen-Ticket for Bremen) cover several travelers cheaply
- ✓ An extra layer for the side trips — North German weather is just as changeable in Lübeck and Bremen
- ✓ Leave room for souvenirs — Lübeck marzipan and Hamburg/Bremen maritime crafts travel well
- ✓ Book the Elbphilharmonie concert months ahead if a performance night appeals
- ✓ Berlin overnight: pack a small bag for one night and leave heavier luggage at your Hamburg hotel if returning there
- ✓ Book the Hamburg ↔ Berlin ICE 1-2 months ahead for cheap 'Sparpreis' fares, and pre-register for the free Reichstag dome
- ✓ Departure day: the S1 S-Bahn (~25 min) is the easy, cheap HAM airport transfer — allow 2 hours before a Schengen flight
- ✓ Keep a final cash buffer for the harbor, souvenirs, and the airport run
Hamburg 7-Day Itinerary FAQ
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Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.
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