Nymphenburg Palace
Nymphenburg Palace is the sprawling Baroque summer residence of Bavaria's royal Wittelsbach family, built over nearly a century from 1664 to 1758.
About Nymphenburg Palace
Nymphenburg Palace is the sprawling Baroque summer residence of Bavaria's royal Wittelsbach family, built over nearly a century from 1664 to 1758. The EUR 8 combined ticket gets you into the ornate palace rooms, the Marstallmuseum with its spectacular royal carriages (including King Ludwig II's fairy-tale coaches), and the porcelain collection. But honestly, the real star is the 200-hectare formal gardens behind the palace, which are completely free and where you'll spend most of your time wandering between four pavilions tucked into landscaped parkland.
The palace interior feels formal and gilded in typical Baroque fashion, but it's the Marstallmuseum that stops people in their tracks with Ludwig II's incredibly ornate sleighs and state coaches that look straight out of Cinderella. The gardens are where Nymphenburg transforms into something magical: you'll follow tree-lined paths to discover the Rococo masterpiece Amalienburg pavilion, the lakeside Badenburg with its original heated pool, and the deliberately crumbling Magdalenenklause hermitage. The central canal stretches toward the horizon like a smaller Versailles, and families push strollers easily along the wide gravel paths.
Most guides undersell the gardens and oversell the palace rooms. Skip the palace interior entirely if you're short on time and focus on the Marstallmuseum and gardens, especially Amalienburg (EUR 6 extra but worth it). The gardens alone deserve 2-3 hours, and they're stunning in any weather. Getting there takes 25 minutes: U1 or U7 to Rotkreuzplatz, then bus 51 or tram 17 directly to the entrance.
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