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Munich · Schwabing & Englischer Garten

Englischer Garten

The Englischer Garten is Europe's third largest urban park at 375 hectares, sprawling north from the city center like Munich's green lung.

Englischer Garten, Munich · Schwabing & Englischer Garten
Category
Park & Garden
Duration
3 hours
Best Time
Any time
Entry
Free
Rating
4.7 (67,253)
The place

About Englischer Garten

The Englischer Garten is Europe's third largest urban park at 375 hectares, sprawling north from the city center like Munich's green lung. You'll find genuine urban river surfing on the Eisbach (Europe's only permanent city wave), four beer gardens including the massive 7,000-seat Chinesischer Turm, and surprisingly good swimming spots along the river itself. The park stretches 5km north to south, passing a Greek temple folly with the city's best free viewpoint, a Chinese pagoda, and a proper lake with paddle boats.

Walking through feels like escaping Munich entirely. The southern section buzzes with surfers and sunbathers around the Eisbach, while the middle section opens into rolling meadows where locals sprawl naked (this is Germany, after all). The Monopteros temple sits on an artificial hill offering panoramic city views, and the Chinesischer Turm beer garden creates its own village atmosphere under chestnut trees. Further north, the crowds thin out dramatically around Kleinhesseloher See, where you'll mostly encounter joggers and dog walkers.

Most visitors stick to the southern third and miss the park's real charm up north. The Aumeister beer garden feels like a countryside inn rather than a tourist magnet, and the walk between Chinesischer Turm and the lake is genuinely peaceful. Skip the paddle boats (overpriced tourist trap), but don't miss swimming in the Eisbach if it's warm. A full north-south walk takes 90 minutes, but you'll want to stop for beer, so plan three hours minimum.

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The place

Getting there

Address
Munich, Germany
Neighborhood
Schwabing & Englischer Garten
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Enter at Haus der Kunst to watch the Eisbach surfers first, then walk north: you'll hit all the highlights in order and end at the quieter sections

At Chinesischer Turm beer garden, you can bring your own food to the unmarked outer tables but must buy beer (EUR 9-10 for a Maß): massive money saver for families

The Monopteros temple viewpoint is best at sunset when the Alps are visible on clear days: climb the hill from the east side to avoid the crowds coming from the south

Plan for about 3 hours.

Englischer Garten is in the Schwabing & Englischer Garten neighborhood of Munich. The address is Munich, Germany. The area is well-served by metro.

Yes, entry is free. There may be optional paid exhibits or activities, but the main experience costs nothing.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Comfortable shoes are recommended. Check the weather forecast and dress in layers, especially in shoulder seasons.

Around the corner

Nearby in Schwabing & Englischer Garten

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Eisbach Surfers
Attraction

Eisbach Surfers

You're watching people surf on a river in the middle of Munich, which is exactly as surreal as it sounds. The Eisbach creates a permanent standing wave behind the Haus der Kunst museum where experienced surfers drop into a 1-meter high break that's been running since the 1970s. A concrete ramp built into the riverbed generates the continuous wave, and locals have turned this engineering quirk into Munich's most unlikely sport. You'll see wetsuits, shortboards, and proper surf technique in a city 300 miles from the nearest ocean. There's usually a queue of 5 to 10 surfers waiting on the bridge edge, each taking turns for rides that last 30 seconds to several minutes depending on skill level. The good ones carve back and forth across the wave face like they're in Hawaii, while beginners get swept downstream after a few wobbly seconds. The crowd watching from above cheers for good rides and gasps at spectacular wipeouts. The water rushes past fast and cold, creating genuine surf conditions that demand real skill. Most travel guides treat this like a quick photo stop, but 15 minutes is perfect for watching the rhythm of surfers rotating through. Weekend afternoons bring the biggest crowds and shortest rides, while weekday mornings offer longer sessions with fewer people. Don't expect to try it yourself unless you're an experienced surfer, multiple people have drowned here over the years. The show is completely free and runs year-round, even when it's snowing.

15-30 minExplore
Wedekindplatz
Landmark

Wedekindplatz

Wedekindplatz sits in the heart of residential Schwabing, a tree-lined square surrounded by gorgeous Art Nouveau buildings from the early 1900s. You'll find intricate facades with decorative stonework, wrought-iron balconies, and those distinctive curved lines that define Munich's Jugendstil architecture. The Wednesday and Saturday farmers' market brings out local vendors selling everything from Bavarian cheese to seasonal vegetables, while corner cafés serve proper coffee to neighborhood regulars. The square feels authentically local in a way that's rare in central Munich. Chestnut trees provide shade over wooden market stalls, and you'll hear more German than English as residents shop for their weekly groceries. The pace is unhurried, with people lingering over newspapers at café tables and market vendors who actually remember their regular customers. It's small enough to take in completely in one glance, yet detailed enough to reward closer inspection of the architectural elements. Most travel guides skip this square entirely, which works in your favor. The market is genuinely for locals, not tourists, so prices stay reasonable (expect 2-3 EUR for excellent bread, 4-5 EUR for local cheese). Skip the expensive Leopoldstraße tourist cafés and grab coffee here instead. The square works best as a quick stop while exploring Schwabing, not a destination itself.

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