Konstanz
Alemania · Best time to visit: May-Sep.
Choose your pace
From the train station forecourt, cross Bahnhofplatz and walk 200 m onto the harbor mole — the lake opens in front of you and on a clear morning the Alps stand faint on the southern horizon. Imperia is a nine-meter concrete courtesan who rotates once every four minutes, cradling a tiny naked Pope and Emperor in her palms — the city's wink at the medieval Council that ran scandalously off the rails here in 1414. Catch her now while the mole is still empty: the morning sun hits her face from the east, the tour boats start loading at 09:45, and by 10:00 the photo line is twenty people deep.
Tip: Stand on the inland side of the statue for the classic angle — Pope and Emperor visible in her hands, lake and Alps behind. If you also want a 45-minute lake cruise, the BSB kiosk at the mole opens at 09:30; the 11:00 boat is the only one that returns in time for the rest of the day.
Open in Google Maps →Walk three minutes back down the mole and turn left — the 70-meter ochre warehouse with the steep tiled roof is the Konzilgebäude. Built in 1388 as a grain hall, it housed the only papal conclave ever held outside Rome: in 1417 Cardinal Otto Colonna walked out of here as Pope Martin V, ending the Western Schism. The morning sun is still on the eastern facade now; by afternoon it backlights and you only get a silhouette.
Tip: Circle to the lakeside terrace behind the building — a quiet bench faces Imperia across the harbor and most visitors never find it. The bronze plaque on the south wall lists every cardinal who voted in 1417; the building is an event hall today, so don't try to go inside, the exterior is the entire story.
Open in Google Maps →Walk five minutes north up Bahnhofstrasse to Marktstätte square, then turn west onto Konradigasse — the green brewery sign hangs over the door. Konstanz brews its own unfiltered beer right here in copper kettles you can see from your table, and a half-meter pretzel arrives the moment you sit down. Order the Maultaschen (Swabian ravioli in onion butter, €13) or the Käsespätzle (€12) — both are made in-house and out of the kitchen within fifteen minutes, exactly what a layover lunch needs.
Tip: Sit at the long wooden tables directly under the brew kettles rather than outside on Konradigasse — the kitchen window is right there and your food comes out faster. Skip the schnitzel; it's fine but not what they do best. A small Heller (their house lager, brewed three meters from your seat) is €3.50.
Open in Google Maps →Walk four minutes north through Münsterplatz — the sandstone spire is in your sightline the whole way. The cathedral dodged the Reformation, the Thirty Years' War, and Allied bombs in 1945: the city left every streetlight burning at night so the bomber pilots mistook Konstanz for Swiss Kreuzlingen across the border and turned away. Climb the 193 steps of the tower now while the midday haze has burned off — you can see Switzerland, the full length of the lake, and on a clear day the snow line of the Säntis.
Tip: The tower entrance is a small side door on the right of the nave with a wooden 'Turm' sign — easy to miss. Keep climbing past the first platform (the keeper's level) to the top gallery for the 360° view; the lower one is glassed in. Cash only, €3 exact, no machine.
Open in Google Maps →Exit the Münster's north door and drop down Niederburggasse into the medieval quarter — within fifty meters the lanes narrow, the half-timbered houses lean in, and the noise of the old town disappears. Weavers, fishermen and tanners have lived continuously on these blocks since the 11th century, and the courtyards still have stone water troughs and ivy-covered wells. Wander to the Rheintorturm at the north end, cross the Old Rhine Bridge for the postcard angle, then trace the river back along Rheinsteig as the late-afternoon light turns gold on the water — the sun sinks behind the Petershausen towers around 19:30 in summer.
Tip: The cul-de-sac off Brückengasse called Stadelhofen has a quiet courtyard with a covered well — local lunch spot, almost no tourists find it. For the postcard shot, cross the Rhine bridge to the Petershausen side and turn around immediately: both towers frame the medieval roofline. Stay on the east footpath of the bridge for the unobstructed angle.
Open in Google Maps →Walk four minutes west along Spanierstrasse from the Rheintorturm — the timber-framed building with red shutters and iron lanterns is unmistakable. This is where Konstanzers come for proper Bodensee food: Felchen (whitefish caught that morning in the lake, €22) pan-fried with brown butter and toasted almonds, or Kalbsleberle (veal liver with caramelized apples and house-made Spätzle, €19). Ask for a table in the rear Stube where the locals sit under the old beams, and pair it with a glass of Spätburgunder from the Meersburg vineyards directly across the water.
Tip: Reserve two days ahead in summer through constanzer-wirtshaus.de — after 19:30 walk-ins wait close to an hour. The cluster of restaurants behind Imperia on the harbor mole, the ones with English-only menus and laminated photos, are 30% more expensive for half the quality and exist purely for ferry day-trippers — never eat there. If Wirtshaus is full, walk one block to Brasserie Colette Tim Raue, never back to the harbor.
Open in Google Maps →Begin in the heart of the medieval old town at the cathedral square — the Munster opens at 10:00, and you want the first slot for the 193-step tower climb before the day's coach groups arrive. From the platform the entire crescent of the Bodensee unfolds, with the red rooftops of Niederburg in the foreground and on a clear day the silhouette of the Swiss Alps to the south.
Tip: The tower closes at 17:00 and last climb is 30 minutes before — don't postpone it to afternoon. Inside, find the bronze handle on the western door: Konstanzers rub it for luck before a journey.
Open in Google Maps →Leave the cathedral and walk south down Hussenstrasse for 8 minutes to the harbor. The long stone Konzilgebaude is the only place in history where a Pope was elected outside Rome (Martin V, 1417); beside it the 9-metre Imperia rotates slowly every four minutes, holding a stripped emperor and pope in her hands as the city's wry commentary on the Council that once filled these streets.
Tip: Imperia completes a full rotation every 4 minutes. Stand on the harbour mole at her left side: lake, Imperia and the Konzilgebaude line up perfectly in a single frame — the postcard shot most tourists shoot from the wrong angle.
Open in Google Maps →A 6-minute walk back into the old town through Marktstatte. The Wirtshaus is the city's most loved Swabian kitchen — wooden booths, locals at every table by 12:30. Order the Felchen Mullerin (Bodensee whitefish pan-fried in butter, EUR 22) and Maultaschen in clear broth (EUR 14); both are dishes Konstanzers eat weekly.
Tip: Reserve a day ahead online or arrive by 12:15 to walk in. Skip the English tourist menu — the chalkboard Tageskarte is where the kitchen actually shines, and where the day's fresh lake catch is listed.
Open in Google Maps →Three minutes on foot from the restaurant up Rosgartenstrasse. The museum is set inside a 14th-century guildhouse where Konstanz merchants once gathered. The treasure is the Richental Chronicle's painted pages — an eyewitness illustrated record of the 1414-18 Council that drew 70,000 people to a city of 6,000, including the trial and burning of Jan Hus.
Tip: Go straight to the second floor for the Richental Chronicle facsimile — most visitors miss it because the entry hall pulls you toward the natural history wing first. Closes 17:00 on weekends, 18:00 weekdays.
Open in Google Maps →Cross Marktstatte and walk straight to the lake — 7 minutes. The Stadtgarten opens onto the Seestrasse promenade, where late-afternoon sun falls directly on the water and turns Imperia's silhouette gold. Stroll past the swans and the old casino all the way to the Steigenberger Inselhotel — a former Dominican monastery on its own small island reached by a short bridge.
Tip: Sunset over the Bodensee falls behind the Insel hotel; walk to the wooden pier at Stadtgarten's south end about 30 minutes before sundown for the cleanest reflection in the water and a clear view of the Swiss shore opposite.
Open in Google Maps →Five minutes back along the harbour from Stadtgarten. A vast 1920s harbour warehouse converted into a beer hall and grill — long communal tables, a wood-fired oven, lake breeze through open arches. Order the Konstanzer Tellerle (a tasting plate of Felchen, Spatzle and pork shoulder, EUR 24) with a half-litre of house Bodensee Pils (EUR 4.20).
Tip: Sit on the eastern terrace facing the water — the best half of the room for evening light. Tourist trap warning: avoid the line of look-alike 'lake-view' restaurants between Imperia and the train station — most are EUR 18 photo-menu pasta places; locals eat at Hafenhalle, Constanzer Wirtshaus, or upstairs at Munsterhof.
Open in Google Maps →Board the 09:00 BSB ferry from Konstanz harbour pier 1 — a 45-minute glide past the Insel hotel and the wooded shore to the flower island. Mainau opens 09:00 so you'll arrive just after the first bus groups, when the rose garden is still cool and the bees loud. Walk anti-clockwise: rhododendron valley, Italian rose garden, Mediterranean terrace, then the baroque palace courtyard where the Bernadotte family still live upstairs.
Tip: Buy the combined ferry+entry ticket at the harbour kiosk — cheaper than separate tickets. In May-June the rhododendron valley is at its absolute peak; most guides skip it because it's downhill from the castle, do not.
Open in Google Maps →A 5-minute walk through the palm avenue from the rose garden. The Swedish Inn — the Bernadottes are half-Swedish — sits in a half-timbered cottage with a herb-garden terrace facing the lake. Order the smoked Bodensee char on crispbread (EUR 21) or the lingonberry-glazed Wildschwein (EUR 26); both are house signatures the kitchen has cooked the same way for decades.
Tip: Reservations by phone only (+49 7531 303-156) — they don't take terrace walk-ins at midday in season. Ask for table 12 or 14: both face directly down the lake toward Switzerland.
Open in Google Maps →Three minutes downhill toward the southern shore of the island. Germany's largest butterfly house — 1,000 free-flying butterflies from 80 tropical species in a glass dome kept at 26 degrees. After the morning's slow garden pace this is sudden colour and warmth; expect species to land on your sleeve within minutes of stepping inside.
Tip: Wear something bright — a red or orange shirt pulls butterflies onto your shoulder reliably. The greenhouse heat is real: leave coats and heavy bags in the free lockers at the entrance, and don't bring open drinks.
Open in Google Maps →Catch the 14:30 ferry back from Mainau, arriving at Konstanz harbour around 15:00. Walk 8 minutes north through the old town along Wessenbergstrasse into the Niederburg — the oldest part of Konstanz, narrow lanes that survived WWII intact because the city left every light on and Allied bombers took it for Swiss territory. Drift through Brueckengasse and Niederburggasse: ivy walls, hidden courtyards, the tiny Romanesque chapel of St. Pauls.
Tip: Step into the courtyard at Niederburggasse 24 — it's a private but unlocked passage to a 13th-century well. Locals nod and walk through; outsiders almost always miss the gate entirely because there's no sign.
Open in Google Maps →Walk south down Wessenbergstrasse for 4 minutes to the central square. Marktstatte is Konstanz's living room: cafes around the Kaiserbrunnen fountain (four Habsburg emperors at the corners, all wearing the same disdainful expression) and the southbound axis ending at the Schnetztor — the only medieval city gate still standing, with a small museum upstairs.
Tip: The Schnetztor clock has been running continuously since 1421 — the city's oldest mechanism still in motion. From the south side of the gate, the view straight up Hussenstrasse to the Munster spire is the cleanest postcard frame of Konstanz; very few visitors find this angle.
Open in Google Maps →A 6-minute walk north up Hussenstrasse from the Schnetztor to the cathedral square. Refined regional kitchen in a baroque townhouse directly facing the Munster — vaulted dining room, the city's best Swabian cellar. The Bodensee whitefish on lentils with brown butter (EUR 32) and the venison ravioli with chanterelles (EUR 28) are the kitchen's signature plates.
Tip: Reserve at least two days ahead and ask for a window table — the floodlit Munster framed through the glass is the entire point of dining here at night. Pitfall warnings for Konstanz: the row of restaurants on Hafenstrasse 6-12 advertise 'fresh Bodensee Felchen' but mostly serve frozen imports (the real catch is rare and pricier); and ignore anyone near Imperia offering a 'free city tour with shopping stop' — the tour ends at a watch shop with theatrical 'discounts'.
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Konstanz?
Most travelers enjoy Konstanz in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Konstanz?
The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Konstanz?
A practical starting point is about €80 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Konstanz?
A good first shortlist for Konstanz includes Imperia Statue & Konstanz Harbor, Konzilgebäude.