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Munich

Where beer is infrastructure, the river is a beach, and tradition is a choice.

The city organises its life around the beer garden, a ritual of chestnut trees and communal tables. But the same city that perfects beer from a wooden cask at Augustiner-Keller now obsesses over cocktail precision in the Glockenbachviertel. The Isar river flows cold and fast from the Alps, its banks a summer beach, its Eisbach tributary a stage for year-round surfing.

The Englischer Garten is larger than New York's Central Park and features a famous, year-round river surfing wave.

The 'Weisswurst Equator' is a cultural line: tradition dictates the white sausage is never eaten after the stroke of noon.

Munich's most vibrant cocktail scene is concentrated in the Glockenbachviertel, a district dense with nationally recognised bars.

  • At beer gardens, it's normal to share tables. Ask 'Ist hier noch frei?' ('Is this spot free?') before you sit.
  • On Sundays, major museums like the Alte Pinakothek and Pinakothek der Moderne offer €1 entry. Go early or expect queues.
  • Look for 'Holzfass' (wooden cask) on beer menus. It's unfiltered, smoother, and the most traditional way to drink Bavarian beer.
  • The city is bike-friendly and flat. Renting a bike is the best way to explore the Englischer Garten and the Isar riverbanks.
  • Cash is still useful, especially for smaller purchases at the Viktualienmarkt or for tipping musicians.
  • Most shops are closed on Sundays. Plan your shopping for Saturday and reserve Sunday for museums, parks, and beer gardens.

Where Things Are

Four neighborhoods to orient your first visit