
10-Day Germany Road Trip: The Complete Itinerary
This 10-day loop covers Germany's highlight reel without backtracking: Frankfurt (arrival) → Rhine Valley → Cologne → Black Forest → Munich → Neuschwanstein Castle → Regensburg → Dresden → Berlin (departure). Total driving is roughly 12–14 hours across the whole trip, well spread out. If you only have 7 days, cut the Black Forest and Regensburg and fly between Munich and Berlin instead of driving the long final stretch.
Most '10 days in Germany' itineraries either loop back on themselves inefficiently or try to cram in too many overnight stops. This route is a single, sensible west-to-east arc: fly into Frankfurt, drive south and east through Bavaria, then finish in Berlin and fly out — no backtracking, no wasted driving hours.
The route at a glance
| Days | Stop | Driving from previous stop |
|---|---|---|
| 1–2 | Frankfurt + Rhine Valley day trip | Arrival |
| 3 | Cologne | ~2 hours |
| 4 | Black Forest (Triberg / Freiburg area) | ~3 hours |
| 5–6 | Munich | ~3 hours |
| — | Day trip: Neuschwanstein Castle | ~2 hours each way from Munich |
| 7 | Regensburg | ~1.5 hours |
| 8 | Dresden | ~3.5 hours |
| 9–10 | Berlin (departure) | ~2 hours |
Day 1–2: Frankfurt and the Rhine Valley
Frankfurt itself is a quick 1-day stop at most (it's Germany's financial and airport hub, not its most charming city), but it's the natural arrival point given how many international flights land there. Use day 2 for a Rhine Valley detour — the UNESCO-listed stretch between Koblenz and Bingen, lined with over 20 medieval castles above vineyard terraces. A short river cruise or a scenic drive along the B9/B42 roads both work well.
Day 3: Cologne
A short 2-hour drive gets you to Cologne, where the cathedral alone justifies the stop — plus a proper Kölsch beer hall dinner in the old town. See our full Cologne guide for the details.
Day 4: The Black Forest

The Black Forest is about scenery and pace rather than one single landmark — dense pine forest, half-timbered villages, and Triberg's waterfall (Germany's highest). It's a genuinely lovely driving day, and a good change of rhythm between two cathedral cities.
Day 5–6: Munich (+ Neuschwanstein day trip)
Two nights in Munich covers the old town, a beer garden evening, and the essential Neuschwanstein Castle day trip (see our full castles & landmarks guide). Book the castle entry ticket online well before this day of your trip, not the morning of.
Day 7: Regensburg

An easy, worthwhile detour most itineraries skip entirely: Regensburg has one of Germany's best-preserved medieval old towns, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, sitting quietly on the Danube with a fraction of Munich's tourist crowds. A half-day is enough to wander the old town and cross the 12th-century Stone Bridge.
Day 8: Dresden

Dresden's baroque old town was devastatingly destroyed in WWII firebombing and rebuilt over decades since — the Frauenkirche's reconstruction (completed 2005, using original stones where possible) is a genuinely moving story in itself, not just an architecturally pretty stop. It's also home to one of Germany's oldest and most atmospheric Christmas markets if your December dates line up.
Day 9–10: Berlin
Two nights closes the loop in Berlin — enough for the Brandenburg Gate, Reichstag dome (book ahead), and the Wall history, plus a spare evening for the city's nightlife if you have the energy left after nine days on the road. Fly out from Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) rather than looping back to Frankfurt.
Book both the Neuschwanstein Castle ticket and the Reichstag dome registration online before you leave home, not once you're on the road — both routinely sell out same-day slots in peak season (May–September), and there's no walk-up workaround for the Reichstag.
Short on time? What to cut
- 7 days instead of 10: drop the Black Forest and Regensburg, and take a 1-hour flight between Munich and Berlin instead of the long final drive.
- 5 days: pick Berlin OR Munich (not both) plus one Rhine-area stop — see our Berlin vs. Munich comparison to decide which city fits your trip better.
- Renting a car isn't required for this whole route — most stops are also reachable by Germany's excellent ICE train network, just with less flexibility for the Black Forest and Rhine Valley legs specifically.












































