Frauenkirche
Cultural Site
About Frauenkirche
The Frauenkirche is Munich's cathedral and the city's most recognizable landmark, a brick Gothic fortress topped by twin green copper onion domes that have anchored the skyline since 1525. You'll find an austere late Gothic interior that feels surprisingly spacious despite the plain brick walls, plus the famous Devil's Footprint near the entrance where legend says Satan stamped his foot in anger. The real draw is the South Tower: EUR 7 gets you a lift partway up, then stairs to 99 meters for the best panoramic view in Munich.
Inside, the cathedral feels unexpectedly stark after the impressive exterior, with whitewashed walls and minimal decoration that creates an almost Protestant atmosphere. The Devil's Footprint is a black stone mark in the floor that tour groups cluster around, though the story behind it is more charming than the actual sight. Climbing the South Tower means sharing a small elevator with other visitors, then huffing up narrow stone steps, but the payoff is spectacular: the entire city spreads below you, and on clear days the Alps create a dramatic southern backdrop.
Most guides don't mention that the cathedral interior is genuinely underwhelming compared to other European cathedrals, so don't feel obligated to linger if architecture isn't your thing. The tower climb is absolutely worth EUR 7, especially compared to the New Town Hall's more expensive and lower viewpoint at EUR 6. Skip the visit entirely during services when the tower closes, and avoid late afternoons when haze obscures the Alpine views.
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