Koblenz
Germany · Best time to visit: May-Sep.
Choose your pace
Start the day at the sharp green spit of land where the Moselle slides into the broader, faster Rhine — and the 37-metre equestrian Kaiser Wilhelm I rises above the confluence like a stage curtain. Climb the viewing platform behind the statue's plinth: from up there both rivers are visible at once, with the Ehrenbreitstein fortress directly across the water. Morning is the only honest hour here — the eastern bank is lit, the tour-coach crowds from Cologne don't roll in until eleven, and the wind hasn't yet pushed the river spray onto the cameras.
Tip: The postcard photo isn't taken from the statue's base — walk all the way out to the metal tip of the spit. From there the angle compresses the two rivers and the fortress into one frame; from anywhere else they fall apart.
Open in Google Maps →Walk south from the Kaiser statue along Kastorhof, past the twin Romanesque spires of the Basilica of St. Castor — 6 minutes. You drop into the Altstadt's chain of small linked squares: Am Plan with its pastel facades, the Jesuitenplatz with its bronze statue of Johannes Müller, and finally Münzplatz, where the old electoral mint still bears its stone seal. The streets are pedestrian and the sandstone here glows warm in late-morning light — far better now than at midday when the buildings flatten out. Find the Schängelbrunnen in the courtyard behind the city hall: the boy spits a jet of water every two minutes, on the clock.
Tip: Time the Schängelbrunnen — it doesn't spit continuously. Stand to his left (not in front) and you'll get the arc of water against the dark Renaissance archway behind him; head-on the spray washes out the shot.
Open in Google Maps →Münzplatz is two minutes from the Schängelbrunnen; the café faces the square's plane trees from the corner of Münzstraße. It's where Koblenzers themselves eat a fast lunch — wood floors, marble tables, and a chalkboard menu that turns over weekly. Order the Flammkuchen Elsässer Art (Alsatian-style flammkuchen with crème fraîche, smoked bacon and onion, ~11€) and a glass of Mosel Riesling (~5€); the kitchen sends it out in under fifteen minutes. Budget 15-18€ a head. No reservation needed at midday — arrive by 12:15 and you'll get an outdoor table on the square.
Tip: Skip the regular tarte flambée and ask for the day's special Flammkuchen — they rotate seasonal toppings (asparagus in May, pfifferling mushrooms in autumn) that don't appear on the printed menu. The server will only mention it if you ask.
Open in Google Maps →Walk east from Münzplatz down Görgenstraße, cross under the Pfaffendorfer Brücke arch, and the Seilbahn's lower station is right on the Rhine bank — 8 minutes. The cable car (built for the 2011 garden show, now the longest in Germany) glides 890 metres across the river in just under four minutes, dangling you 112 metres above the water with the entire confluence laid out below. Up at the fortress, walk the outer ramparts clockwise — the Hohe Ostfront battery, then the bastion above the cable car — for the cinematic view back across to the Altstadt. Afternoon is deliberate: the sun is now behind you, lighting the Old Town and the Deutsches Eck statue head-on for photos from the ramparts.
Tip: Buy the combination ticket (Seilbahn + Festung, ~19€) at the lower station, not the cable car-only ticket — the fortress courtyard itself requires the upgrade, and the queue at the top to add it later is twice as long. Walk to the Bastion Niederrhein on the north side of the fortress for the only view that captures both rivers and the statue together.
Open in Google Maps →Take the cable car back down; turn left along the Rhine and follow the Konrad-Adenauer-Ufer south — the promenade widens into the Kaiserin-Augusta-Anlagen, a 19th-century riverside park of lawns, plane trees and a small Pegasus fountain. Twelve minutes in, the salmon-pink facade of the Kurfürstliches Schloss appears on your right — the last electoral residence built in Germany, finished in 1786 just three years before the French revolution. You don't go inside; you walk the river-facing terrace as the late sun rakes across the columns. This is the day's deliberate breath — the legs slow down, the river slides past, and a Rhine cruiser usually drifts by around 18:00.
Tip: The benches on the river side of the palace face west — perfect for the moment around 18:30 when the sun drops behind the fortress on the far bank and lights the statues along the balustrade. The lawn side is twenty degrees hotter in summer and full of joggers; stay on the water.
Open in Google Maps →Walk back north along the Rhine, then cut inland at Florinspfaffengasse — 12 minutes to Florinsmarkt. Weinhaus Hubertus is the oldest tavern in Koblenz: a leaning timber-framed house from 1689 with low beams, a tiled stove and a wine list that runs deep into Mosel and Mittelrhein Rieslings. Order the Sauerbraten vom Rind (marinated braised beef with red cabbage and potato dumplings, ~22€) and a glass of dry Riesling from the Bremmer Calmont vineyard (~6€); for a second course the Rheinischer Heringsstipp (pickled herring with apple and onion cream, ~9€) is the true local. Budget 35-45€ a head with wine. Reserve a day ahead — there are only thirty seats and the regulars fill it by 19:45.
Tip: Avoid the riverfront restaurants along the Konrad-Adenauer-Ufer between the cable car and Deutsches Eck — they're tuned to coach-day-trippers with translated menus, 8€ small beers and microwaved schnitzel. The honest kitchens are all one block inland, around Florinsmarkt and Münzplatz. Also: the rose-sellers and bracelet-tiers who work the Deutsches Eck plaza at dusk move into the Altstadt restaurant terraces after dark — a firm 'nein, danke' without eye contact is the only move that works.
Open in Google Maps →From the Hauptbahnhof it is a 20-minute walk north along the Rheinanlagen — keep the river on your right and the morning sun on your back. At the headland, the 37-metre equestrian statue of Kaiser Wilhelm I rises over the exact spit where the Moselle slides into the broad green Rhine. Climb the inner staircase to the platform: from there you watch a cargo barge slip through the seam between the two waters while the cable cars glide overhead toward Ehrenbreitstein.
Tip: Be on the platform before 10:00 — the tour coaches arrive at 10:30 and never thin out again. The signature photograph is not the statue itself but the V-shape of the confluence taken from the upper rampart looking south; shoot it from the left railing where the rivers cleanly part the frame.
Open in Google Maps →Walk three minutes south along Konrad-Adenauer-Ufer — the basilica's twin towers rise above the rose garden as you approach. Founded in 817, this is the oldest church in Koblenz and the room where, in 843, the Treaty of Verdun was negotiated — the document that essentially carved Europe into France, Germany, and the middle lands. The Romanesque-Gothic nave is cool and almost empty before noon.
Tip: In the forecourt stands the Kastorbrunnen — a fountain Napoleon's prefect inscribed in 1812 to commemorate the invasion of Russia. A year later the occupying Russian commander added one wry line below it: "Seen and approved by us, the Russian commandant of the city of Koblenz, 1 January 1814." Read both inscriptions — it is the cheekiest piece of Napoleonic graffiti in Germany.
Open in Google Maps →Walk five minutes west through Florinsmarkt — you'll pass the Schöffenhaus and the famous Augenroller clock above the Old Court House (a carved face that rolls its eyes and sticks out its tongue on the hour). The Wirtshaus is a half-timbered tavern on quiet Am Plan, the kind of low-ceilinged room where the lunchroom hum is in German. Order the Rheinischer Sauerbraten with potato dumplings and red cabbage (€17) and a glass of dry Riesling from a Mosel village twenty kilometres upstream.
Tip: The schnitzel here arrives twice the size of the menu photo — if you are two people, share one and order the apple strudel with vanilla sauce afterwards instead of a second main. Arrive by 12:15 to get the inner courtyard table; after 13:00 the lunch crowd from the courthouse fills every seat.
Open in Google Maps →From the tavern walk two minutes uphill along An der Liebfrauenkirche — the onion-domed twin spires (a 17th-century baroque cap on a Romanesque core) appear suddenly above the rooftops. The church wears its thousand years in layers: Romanesque nave, Gothic choir, baroque towers, all stitched together. The square in front is what was once the Roman castrum — you are standing on the original footprint of Koblenz, founded by Drusus in 8 BC.
Tip: Organist Markus Eichenlaub or his colleagues often practise around 14:30 on weekdays — sit in the rear pew for ten minutes and let the upper-register Mosel-school organ fill the empty nave. It is the most underrated free concert in the city.
Open in Google Maps →From the church walk five minutes south down Marktstraße to Zentralplatz, where the angled stone-and-glass Forum Confluentes building looms over the square. The museum tells the story of the Middle Rhine through paintings, treasures and the 19th-century Romantic landscapes that made this river the cradle of European Romanticism. Roman Janus heads, medieval shipping tools, and a top-floor window framing Deutsches Eck back across the rooftops.
Tip: Skip the temporary shows on the ground floor and head directly to the second-floor Rhine Romantic gallery — Caspar Scheuren, Karl Bodmer, the Turner watercolours. These are the paintings that *invented* the picturesque Rhine in the British imagination; once you have seen them, every castle on tomorrow's cable-car ride will look familiar.
Open in Google Maps →Walk five minutes north back to Florinsmarkt — the half-timbered façade leaning over the cobblestones since 1689 is unmistakable, and the warm light through the small panes pulls you in. Koblenz's oldest tavern: three crooked floors of beam and plaster, a Riesling list that runs to two pages of Mosel villages, and the Saumagen (stuffed pig's stomach with sauerkraut, €23) the regulars come for after work. Pair it with a 2022 dry Riesling from Winningen — the village whose vineyards you can see from tomorrow's fortress.
Tip: Reserve a first-floor window seat — the slope of the wooden floor toward the glass tells you the age of the building. Order the chalk-written daily special at the bar rather than the laminated "German platter" (touristy, mediocre). And one warning for tonight's walk back: avoid the cafés directly facing the river at Deutsches Eck — they charge €7 for an espresso and bus-in their schnitzels frozen. Anything on Münzplatz, Florinsmarkt or Am Plan is real Koblenz; anything within sight of the Kaiser statue is not.
Open in Google Maps →From the Altstadt walk eight minutes north past the Kaiser statue — you'll see the cabins gliding silently overhead toward the cliff. This is the longest cable car in Germany: 890 metres across the Rhine, climbing 112 metres to the fortress in three and a half minutes. As the cabin lifts off, the city map unrolls beneath you — Deutsches Eck dead-centre, the Moselle curling west, river barges crawling under your feet.
Tip: Buy the combined Seilbahn + Festung ticket (€19, round-trip cable car plus fortress entry) at the lower station — it saves a queue at the top. Stand on the right-hand side of the cabin going up: that is the side that frames the Moselle sweep, the cathedral spires, and the Altstadt rooftops. Catch one of the first three cabins after opening — by 11:30 the wait at the lower station stretches to half an hour.
Open in Google Maps →From the upper cable car station walk two minutes along the rampart wall — the fortress complex spreads across the entire basalt plateau. This is one of the largest preserved fortresses in Europe, second in scale only to Gibraltar, built into the cliff over a thousand years and rebuilt by the Prussians after Napoleon blew up the original in 1801. Walk the outer walls first: the south bastion overlooks the exact V of the confluence, the postcard view you have seen on every brochure of the Rhine.
Tip: Most visitors photograph the confluence from the south wall and immediately head back inside. Walk an extra five minutes east to the Lange Linie viewpoint at the far edge of the plateau — the panorama there looks *up* the Moselle valley toward Winningen's vineyards, and you will likely have it entirely to yourself.
Open in Google Maps →Cross the inner parade ground back toward the officers' building — the restaurant terrace runs along the cliff edge facing the Rhine, 112 metres above the water. The city, the confluence, and three church spires sit laid out below your plate. Order the Mosel trout fillet (€21) and a glass of Winningen Riesling — the vineyards on the slope across the river are exactly where the bottle came from.
Tip: Even on busy weekends the eastern end of the terrace (away from the entrance) stays calmer — same view, fewer interruptions, and on warm afternoons the wind off the Rhine cools the table. Skip the desserts here; save room for an afternoon coffee back in Altstadt where the cafés are better and half the price.
Open in Google Maps →Cross the parade ground for two minutes; the museum entrance is in the old artillery building, and the cool stone corridors are a welcome relief after the terrace sun. The state museum threads three Rhineland obsessions — wine, photography, and early industry. Skip the rest and go directly to the "Photography on the Middle Rhine" wing, which traces how 19th-century photographers framed the very river you watched from the fortress walls an hour ago.
Tip: Your fortress ticket already covers entry — do not re-pay at the desk if someone tries to upsell you. In the inner cannon-yard there are usually one or two outdoor sculptures or sound installations included with the temporary exhibitions; circle the yard once on your way out, they change every few months and the locals consider this the museum's best free secret.
Open in Google Maps →Take the cable car back down (your morning ticket is round-trip) and exit south along Rheinanlagen — the 1790s riverside park laid out by the last Elector of Trier. It is a twelve-minute walk along the promenade past plane trees, fountains and the occasional pétanque match. The neoclassical Electoral Palace stands at the south end: the final great residence the Trier prince-electors ever built, finished one year before the French Revolution swept them away.
Tip: The interior is administrative offices now — do not queue at the front entrance; there is nothing to see inside. Walk around to the *rear* (river-facing) façade with the fountain and the formal garden — the late-afternoon western sun lights the entire colonnade and this is where the photograph is. The hidden rose garden behind the palace is the Sunday-afternoon spot for Koblenz families and is free.
Open in Google Maps →Walk ten minutes north along the Rhine and turn left into the Altstadt — Münzplatz opens up around its fountain, and the bistro's terrace runs along the south side under hanging lights. A bistro Koblenz locals have made their dining room for two decades: handwritten menu, market-driven, no English placard outside. The Flammkuchen with crème fraîche and bacon (€12) is the table-favourite starter; the pork cheek braised in Riesling (€23) is the dish to come back for.
Tip: Reserve, or arrive at 19:00 sharp — by 20:00 the terrace is full and the queue stretches across the square. Final pitfall warning for the evening walk back: avoid the restaurants along Am Plan and around Jesuitenplatz that display menus in five languages with photographs on every page — those exist for Rhine river-cruise tourists who have ninety minutes ashore. Münzplatz and the alleys north of it are where Koblenz actually eats; if the menu has photos, walk on.
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Koblenz?
Most travelers enjoy Koblenz in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Koblenz?
The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Koblenz?
A practical starting point is about €100 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Koblenz?
A good first shortlist for Koblenz includes Deutsches Eck, Seilbahn Koblenz & Festung Ehrenbreitstein.