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Frankfurt Highlights: Self‑Guided City Tour

By CloudGuide S.L
Free cancellation available
Price is AU$11 per adult

Features

  • Free cancellation available
  • 6h 30m
  • Mobile voucher
  • Instant confirmation

Overview

Discover Frankfurt with our self-guided audio tour, exploring Germany’s financial capital at your own pace. Begin at the Römerberg where reconstructed medieval buildings and the historic Rathaus recall the city destroyed in World War II and lovingly rebuilt. Wander the Museum Embankment where 13 world-class museums line the Main River, including the Städel with 700 years of European art. Visit Goethe’s birthplace, restored to its 18th-century appearance. Marvel at Germany’s only true skyscraper skyline and climb the Main Tower for panoramic views. Experience traditional apple wine taverns in Sachsenhausen serving Handkäse mit Musik and Grüne Soße. Stroll through the Palmengarten’s tropical greenhouses and explore the Kleinmarkthalle covered market. Walk the Main River promenade across the Eiserner Steg bridge at sunset as the skyline transforms, capturing the fusion of financial power, cultural wealth, and Hessian tradition that makes Frankfurt Germany’s most international city.

Activity location

  • Roemerberg
    • Roemerberg 27
    • 60311, Frankfurt, Hesse, Germany

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • Römerberg
    • Römerberg
    • 60311, Frankfurt am Main, Hessen, Germany

Check availability


Frankfurt Highlights: Self‑Guided City Tour
  • Activity duration is 6 hours and 30 minutes6h 30m
    6h 30m
  • English
Language options: English
Price details
AU$11.37 x 1 AdultAU$11.37

Total
Price is AU$11.37

What's included, what's not

  • What's includedWhat's included
    Digital Map.
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Access to the audio guide for 45+ Frankfurt attractions and hidden spots.
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Self-guided walking tour (app)
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Private transport
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Our app-based self-guided tour has no physical guide on-site.
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Entry fees to tourist attractions or museums.

Know before you book

  • Not recommended for travellers with spinal injuries
  • Not recommended for travellers with poor cardiovascular health
  • Public transport options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels

Activity itinerary

Roemerberg

  • 30m
Frankfurt's historic heart was almost completely destroyed in 1944 Allied bombing raids but rebuilt in the 1950s, its half-timbered buildings and Gothic town hall reclaiming the medieval atmosphere that once made this among Germany's most picturesque squares. The Römer—actually three connected gabled buildings—has served as city hall since 1405, its Kaisersaal hosting coronation banquets for Holy Roman Emperors whose portraits still line the walls. The Fountain of Justice, the reconstructed Ostzeile facades, and the old Nikolai Church create the traditional German cityscape that elsewhere survives but here represents a deliberate act of cultural recovery.

Frankfurt Cathedral

  • 1h
The Imperial Cathedral of St. Bartholomew served as the election site for Holy Roman Emperors from 1356 and their coronation church from 1562, its red sandstone tower rising above the reconstructed old town as Frankfurt's most important religious monument. The cathedral survived the war damaged but standing, making it one of few authentic medieval structures in the city centre. The treasury, archaeological excavations beneath the church revealing even older structures, and the tower climb offering skyline views reward exploration beyond the nave.

Goethe House (Pass by)

The birthplace of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe—Germany's Shakespeare, its greatest literary figure—has been restored to its prosperous 18th-century appearance, complete with the desk where he wrote The Sorrows of Young Werther and early drafts of Faust. The adjacent museum adds context through manuscripts, first editions, and the cultural history of Goethe's era while the house itself transports visitors into the bourgeois world that produced Germany's literary genius. The meticulous reconstruction following wartime destruction demonstrates Frankfurt's commitment to reclaiming its cultural heritage.

Museumsufer

  • 1h
Frankfurt's remarkable museum district lines both banks of the Main River with 13 major institutions—the Städel, German Film Museum, Museum of World Cultures, and others—in one of Europe's most concentrated cultural zones. The Städel Museum alone houses one of Germany's most important art collections, from medieval altarpieces through Impressionism to contemporary works. The riverside promenade connecting the museums, weekend flea markets on the southern bank, and the bridges offering skyline views create experiences beyond the museum galleries themselves.

Stadel Museum (Pass by)

One of Germany's oldest and most important art museums houses 700 years of European art in a collection founded in 1815 and continuously expanded through gifts, purchases, and the spectacular underground expansion completed in 2012. The medieval and Renaissance German collections, Impressionist paintings, and contemporary works provide comprehensive survey while masterpieces by Botticelli, Dürer, Vermeer, and Monet justify extended visits. The garden extension's subterranean galleries, lit by circular skylights, demonstrate how contemporary architecture can complement historical collections.

MAIN TOWER (Pass by)

Germany's only true skyscraper cluster creates a Manhattan-on-Main silhouette that symbolises Frankfurt's status as Europe's financial capital and home of the European Central Bank. The Main Tower's public observation deck 200 metres above street level provides panoramic views while the surrounding district's glass towers house the banks, insurance companies, and financial institutions that drive the German economy. The contrast between the reconstructed old town and the contemporary financial district encapsulates Frankfurt's split personality as historical trading city and modern money centre.

Sachsenhausen

  • 1h
The area south of the Main preserves Frankfurt's traditional Apfelwein (apple wine) culture in dozens of taverns where communal tables, ceramic jugs called Bembel, and the simple Hessian cuisine create atmosphere lost in the modern city centre. The authentic establishments serve Handkäse mit Musik (hand cheese with onion-vinegar dressing), schnitzel, and Grüne Soße—the herb sauce that Goethe immortalised—alongside the tart, refreshing cider that distinguishes Frankfurt from beer-dominated Germany. The neighborhood's residential streets, weekend flea market, and the Museum Embankment's southern anchor make Sachsenhausen essential for experiencing local Frankfurt.

Palmengarten (Pass by)

One of Germany's largest botanical gardens cultivates plants from every climate zone across 22 hectares of outdoor gardens, glasshouses, and the tropical rainforest house whose 19th-century iron structure represents Victorian botanical ambition. The rose garden, alpine rock garden, and seasonal flower displays provide outdoor attractions while the greenhouses offer year-round tropical and subtropical experiences regardless of Frankfurt's continental climate. The garden's position adjacent to the university and its use by residents for jogging, picnicking, and Sunday strolls reveal its importance beyond tourist attraction.

Kleinmarkthalle

  • 1h
Frankfurt's covered market hall has served the city since 1954, its 156 stalls selling fresh produce, meats, cheeses, flowers, and the international specialities reflecting Frankfurt's diverse population. The market provides both practical shopping—locals actually buy their groceries here—and culinary tourism through the wine bar upstairs, the ready-to-eat options throughout, and the opportunity to sample regional products. The surrounding streets' food shops and the market's position near the Zeil shopping district make it convenient for combining culture and commerce.

Old Opera House (Alte Oper) (Pass by)

The Old Opera House—destroyed in 1944, rebuilt only in 1981 after decades of debate—has become Frankfurt's most elegant concert and event venue, its Italian Renaissance facade concealing thoroughly modern concert halls within. The Opernplatz in front provides one of Frankfurt's most popular gathering spaces while the building's rebirth symbolises the city's ongoing recovery of cultural landmarks lost in the war. Evening performances, the surrounding upscale shopping district, and the illuminated facade make the opera area particularly appealing after dark.

River Main

  • 1h
The riverfront walkways on both sides of the Main provide Frankfurt's most pleasant strolling, with views of the skyline, the museum district, and the historic bridges that connect the city centre to Sachsenhausen. The Eiserner Steg pedestrian bridge—a 19th-century iron structure now famously covered with love locks—offers the classic Frankfurt photography position while boats, cyclists, and evening joggers share the riverside paths. The combination of skyline views, museum access, and the Sachsenhausen apple wine taverns make the river promenade the natural conclusion to any Frankfurt exploration.

Location

Activity location

  • LOB_ACTIVITIESLOB_ACTIVITIES
    Roemerberg
    • Roemerberg 27
    • 60311, Frankfurt, Hesse, Germany

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • PEOPLEPEOPLE
    Römerberg
    • Römerberg
    • 60311, Frankfurt am Main, Hessen, Germany

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