Experience the best of Berlin’s historical landmarks on a private taxi tour. Explore at your own pace, stop for photos or breaks, and visit iconic sites like the Brandenburg Gate and Berlin Cathedral. Enjoy the luxury of a personal pickup in a Berlin luxury taxi SUV!
Experience the best of Berlin’s historical landmarks on a private taxi tour. Explore at your own pace, stop for photos or breaks, and visit iconic sites like the Brandenburg Gate and Berlin Cathedral. Enjoy the luxury of a personal pickup in a Berlin luxury taxi SUV!
- Reichstag Building - This splendid Wilhelminian structure, once criticized as a chat room or monkey house, was built outside the city. It holds historical significance as Red Army soldiers famously raised their flag here as a victory symbol, although the iconic photo is a reproduction. For decades, it was largely ignored in West Berlin, being just…
- Reichstag Building - This splendid Wilhelminian structure, once criticized as a chat room or monkey house, was built outside the city. It holds historical significance as Red Army soldiers famously raised their flag here as a victory symbol, although the iconic photo is a reproduction. For decades, it was largely ignored in West Berlin, being just 5 meters from the Wall and not used for official Bundestag sessions. If used, such as for electing the Federal President, East Berlin would promptly issue a reprimand. In the 1990s, it was completely gutted and redesigned for the reunified Bundestag, now with over 700 members. The building also featured the iconic wrapping by artist Christo. The Reichstag dome, now made of glass, represents the new Berlin, replacing the architect’s original gas station roof design.
- Brandenburg Gate - Located on Pariser Platz, this iconic gate is akin to Berlin’s parlor, showcasing the city’s beauty to guests. Surrounded by war and demolition ruins, only the Brandenburg Gate remained, isolated like Paris’s Arc de Triomphe. Access was blocked by a thick wall from the west and a fence from the east. The remaining part of Hotel Adlon was demolished. After the Wall fell, the area was rebuilt in a modernized style, restoring the Liebermannhaus, Academy of the Arts, and the French and American embassies.
- Potsdamer Platz - Originally laid out as an octagon by the soldier king in the 18th century, Leipziger Platz is located at the end of its namesake street before the city gate leading to Potsdam. The now-famous Potsdamer Platz was outside and remains a busy intersection. In the 1920s, 100,000 vehicles passed daily, and it was a hub of nightlife with entertainment venues. Today, it hosts notable buildings like Mercedes (formerly Daimler-Chrysler) and the Sony Center, along with the striking glass tower for Deutsche Bahn’s management. Nearby are important hotels like the Ritz Carlton and new entertainment options. Despite intentions, it struggles to thrive, with even Spielbank Berlin planning to leave.
- Paul-Lobe-Haus - Known as the engine of parliament, this building hosts all parliamentary work. In Parliament, only closing speeches occur; discussions and voting happen in committees. The over 200-meter-long building on three floors offers ample space for this. As a glass parliament, activities are visible from outside. Only the EU and secret committees meet in the largest rotunda facing the Spree above two restaurants, hidden from view.
- Bundeskanzleramt der Bundesregierung - This colossal building stands 36 meters tall with ten floors and 500 office rooms for over 300 employees. The White House could fit inside eight times. Only presidential palaces are larger. The Chancellor’s office is in the top left corner, with an official apartment above, which she doesn’t use, preferring to live across from Museum Island. The apartment is impractical, with the bathroom and bedroom across the street, offering about 200 m² of usable space.
- Bundespressekonferenz e.V. - A modern building with a striking large window in the middle. Behind it, the government is surveyed once or twice a week by accredited journalists from the capital. They sit in front of a blue wall, which is reflected in the facade.
- Humboldthafenbrücke - Here, the east-west border is crossed again. In the port, once a restricted area, the first deaths occurred after the Wall was built. Günter Litfin was shot while trying to swim through the harbor. His brother mourned him until recently in one of the last remaining watchtowers at the Invalidenfriedhof.
- Berlin Central Station - Europe’s largest crossing station, with 300,000 passengers changing trains daily. The station is vast, with 8 underground tracks and as many above ground. In between are huge halls, totaling 5 levels, and numerous shops. To attract visitors, the former main station in West Berlin, Bahnhof Zoo, was downgraded to a regional station without an ICE stop, much to the dismay of Charlottenburg residents. The new central station, located only on the Stadtbahn, was built to connect most of Berlin’s train stations. The underground extends to the Brandenburg Gate, with ongoing S-Bahn construction.
- Friedrichstrasse - One of Berlin’s most famous and longest streets, Friedrichstrasse runs south to Kreuzberg, ending at Mehringplatz and Hallescher Tor. It has distinct sections, with the northern end currently being revitalized. The Tacheles, originally a shopping gallery, extends here. Today, a new district is emerging on an area that could accommodate several villages.
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Berlin Friedrichstrasse Station - During the Wall era, this station was the only one allowing travel from East to West Berlin, such as the Paris-Moscow Express. It was also used for East Berliners’ departures, often without return tickets, leading to adventurous escape attempts. The station was crisscrossed by barriers and customs checkpoints, with Stasi observation walks. The original setup is recreated next door in the Palace of Tears, where East Berliners bid farewell to relatives, often seemingly forever.
(Can be omitted if there is no time left depending on traffic conditions and length of stay at the previous attractions. However, additional time can be booked on site.) - Unter den Linden - Berlin’s first grand boulevard, originally a tranquil bridle path, led from the Berlin Palace westward through the Brandenburg Gate into hunting grounds, now the zoo. Reserved for the elector, it expanded into a significant boulevard as the city grew westward. A debate over planting nut trees or linden trees ended with linden trees prevailing, giving the street its name. Once lined with aristocratic palaces, it now features important buildings like the State Library, Humboldt University, and State Opera. Only the remaining cafes on the median offer coziness.
- Russische Botschaft - After the war, the Soviet Union built Europe’s largest foreign representation here, showcasing their dominance in Berlin. Unlike the von den Linden statutes, which required buildings to align with the street, this palace allowed an inner courtyard. It was designed to please Stalin, though it’s unknown if he ever visited. The attached school includes a swimming pool and ballrooms. Today, it serves the successor states of the USSR, known as GUS.
- Bebelplatz - The Royal Court Library, St. Hedwig Cathedral, State Opera, and Humboldt University form the Forum Fridericianum. In today’s Hotel Club the Rome, the SPD and KPD were forcibly united. The square, once called Opernplatz, features a glass window in the floor pointing to an empty library, marking the site where books deemed unsuitable by Nazis were burned on May 10, 1933. With Humboldt University opposite, the square forms a nice square, as Berliners say. The building was originally a palace for Friedrich II’s younger brother, Heinrich, and later became the nucleus of the royal Friedrich Wilhelm University, now Humboldt University.
- Neue Wache - Once a spectacle under the linden trees, the changing of the guard at the new guard featured East Berlin soldiers marching in goose-step. Now, the guard housed the castle guard, at least a small part of it. Formerly a kind of eternal flame inside, today it holds a piéta, an enlarged sculpture by Käthe Kollwitz mourning her son who died in World War I. It serves as a place of mourning for all victims of war and tyranny, often adorned with statesmanlike wreaths, especially after the national memorial day in November.
- Gendarmenmarkt - Known as Berlin’s most beautiful square, it features the German and French cathedrals, theater, and concert hall. The concert hall, formerly a theater, is framed by the two domes: the German and French cathedrals. Neither are bishop’s seats nor cathedrals, but meetinghouses embellished with cathedral-like towers by Frederick II. The German cathedral now houses a museum for Germany’s parliamentary history, while the French cathedral is used by a Reformed congregation holding services in French. Behind it is a small Huguenot museum, as these refugees built their church here. Rebuilt in GDR times.
- Kronprinzenpalais - Often overlooked, the Kronprinzenpalais and neighboring Kronprinzessinnenpalais served as residences for crown princes and princesses. Connected by a corridor, the Kronprinzessinnenpalais was used as an opera cafe due to its proximity to the State Opera and is currently an exhibition space. The Kronprinzenpalais is used by the administration for the reconstruction of the City Palace / Humboldt Forum.
- Stiftung Neue Synagoge Berlin - Centrum Judaicum - A no-stopping zone with bollards and armed police indicates a Jewish facility in Berlin, guarded day and night. The facade features Moorish style elements, crowned by a golden dome. The synagogue, once accommodating up to 3000 believers, was destroyed in the war. The front building, an entrance portal, was partially rebuilt in Eastern times. It now houses an exhibition on Jewish life in Berlin, with airport-like security measures at the entrance. Built to replace an older synagogue, it symbolized Prussia’s granting of equal civil rights to Jews. Even Chancellor Bismarck attended its inauguration in 1866.
- Deutsches Historisches Museum - Located in the former armory, traditionally housing war implements, the German Historical Museum evolved from a war weapons museum to a military history museum in GDR times. After the Wall fell, it became a central museum of German history, initially planned where the Chancellery stands today. The building was refurbished post-Wall, with frescoes outside and in the courtyard featuring replicas of dying warriors’ death masks. Andreas Schlueter, the baroque Berlin Palace’s builder, contributed as a sculptor.
- Die Hackeschen Hoefe - A tourist favorite, these courtyards were restored post-Wall, showcasing their Art Nouveau charm. Built in 1908 as a showcase courtyard area, they mixed life and work with small factories, printing houses, and workshops. The atria were large and green enough for living on upper floors. Today, they shine in original splendor, with shops offering selected, partly self-made goods. KPM (Königliche Porzellan Manufaktur) exhibits porcelain here, alongside products of the famous East Berlin Ampelmännchen.
- Humboldt Forum - For decades, this site was a parking lot, once home to the Berlin Palace of electors, kings, and emperors. Burned in the war, its silhouette remained, used for post-war exhibitions. Despite criticism, East Berlin demolished it, representing North German baroque. Photographed in detail before demolition, it allows precise reconstruction, including the Schlueter courtyard. The modern concrete building will house non-European art collections and Humboldt University exhibits. Opening as Humboldt Forum in 2021/2022, it features a rooftop terrace.
- Rotes Rathaus - The Red City Hall, named for its bricks, serves as Berlin’s governing mayor’s office, akin to a Prime Minister. In East Berlin times, the magistrate sat here, while the West Berlin ruler was in Schöneberg Town Hall. Built in neo-Gothic style, it offers free visits to interesting rooms, including one with plaster casts of famous statues. Erected in the 1870s, it soon became too small, leading to the construction of the town house with a towering dome. The oldest town hall stood on the long bridge, today’s Rathausbrücke, connecting Berlin and Cölln.
- Nicholas Quarter - A recommended tour with Nikolaikirche, Knoblauchhaus, and more. Experience old Berlin, as the reconstruction in the 1980s aimed to recreate the backdrop, with only three original houses and the Nikolaikirche’s walls. Accommodating 2000 apartments, the architect achieved a feat. Approaching from outside, the height typical of Berlin, it zooms into an older, almost baroque Berlin, ending with the Nikolaikirche, Berlin’s oldest, now a city museum. Nearby is the original Knoblauchhaus, showcasing Biedermeier style and cloth maker family life. Typical Berlin restaurants offer views of the Spree, with St. George slaying the dragon.
- Tiergarten - Once an electoral hunting ground, the zoo was named for its fence keeping animals in and farmers out. Friedrich II, later the Great, disliked hunting, removed the fence, and opened the grounds to Berliners. He redesigned part into a baroque garden, while later kings preferred an English landscape garden, where architect Peter Lenné excelled. He expanded the Schafgraben into the Landwehr Canal, draining the swampy zoo and creating landscapes, lakes, and sightlines. Despite WWII devastation, reforestation with Allied help restored it.
- Victory Column (Siegessaule) - Originally shorter and located in front of the Reichstag, the Victory Column featured three drums with gilded cannons captured from Danes, Austrians, and French in the German wars of unification. The British refused French demands to demolish it post-war, as it was in their occupation sector. Hitler moved it during his People’s Hall construction, adding another drum for future victories, which thankfully never materialized.
- Nordic Embassies - Felleshus - A large green band, intended to look copper, houses the 5 Nordic embassies in chic wooden buildings, connected by a shared canteen supplied by a Norwegian high-end restaurant. Often forgotten, Iceland is one of the five.
- Bellevue Palace - Now the Federal President’s seat, this small palace was built for Friedrich II’s youngest brother, August Ferdinand. Named for its view of Charlottenburg Palace, it was restored post-war for occasional West German Federal President visits, sparking East Berlin protests. Roman Herzog, the first post-reunification Federal President, found it small and impractical, leading to its complete reconstruction as the sole Berlin official residence, alongside Villa Hammerschmidt in Bonn.
- Zoo Berlin - One of Germany’s oldest zoos, it boasts the largest animal and species population, with 16,000 animals of 1,600 species. Founded by King Friedrich Wilhelm IV, who relocated animals from Pfaueninsel, it sacrificed part of his private hunting grounds, the zoo. Buildings reflect the animals’ countries of origin, still charming despite war damage. Berlin also has a second zoo around Friedrichsfelde Palace, due to the city’s division. Both now belong together. The large elephant gate with the monkey enclosure and the lion gate at the Zoo station are particularly striking.
- Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church - The Memorial Church, viewed from the other side, is worth visiting. The new building’s thousands of glass stones, made in France, create a mysterious blue light. It’s surprisingly quiet inside, thanks to a double wall with 2 m of soundproofing air. The fragile concrete structure often requires scaffolding. Behind it, the European Center tower and low-rise building form Berlin’s oldest shopping center, recently 50 years old. Originally with an ice rink, it was later sacrificed for space optimization. Berlin is now the mall capital, with over 70 malls and more planned.
- Hotel am Steinplatz, Autograph Collection - We turn around here as continuing to Charlottenburg Palace would be too far, or at the expense of other highlights. The beautifully restored Art Nouveau building has a special anecdote post-WWII.
- Kurfurstendamm - This western splendor boulevard, almost 5 km to Halensee, was modeled after Paris’s Champs Élysées, which impressed Bismarck after Germany’s victory over France. Today, it lacks magnificent villas and entertainment bars, cafes, and cinemas of George Grosz and Erich Kästner’s time, becoming a shopping mile with chic boutiques and modern flagship stores like Apple and Tesla. As a result, the boulevard is now lonely and deserted at night.
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Uhlandstraße - Here, a pan across from Kantstrasse, which becomes an interesting Chinese quarter, leads to the famous Kurfürstendamm, affectionately abbreviated as Ku’damm by Berliners.
(Can be omitted if there is no time left depending on traffic conditions and length of stay at the previous attractions. However, additional time can be booked on site.) - Kaufhaus des Westens (KaDeWe) - After Breitscheidplatz, we reach Tauentzien, named after a general from the battle against Napoleon, like all other streets straight ahead. Perceived as a continuation or beginning of Ku’damm, it lacks 9 house numbers. Flanked by many shops, mostly with affordable prices, it ends with the deluxe department store KaDeWe, Europe’s largest single department store at 60,000 m². Offering every conceivable luxury, especially on the gourmet floor, from champagne to oysters, fine chocolates, and more types of bread and cheese, it’s a must-visit, despite some calling it “Fressetage.”
- U Wittenbergplatz - Once West Berlin’s most beautiful place, now overshadowed by 1950s buildings, the subway station stands out, crowned by a beautiful building. Several lines cross here, leading to a common train station in the early 20th century. Berlin’s subway can’t compare to Moscow’s, but it’s old, like London’s and Paris’s. From Nollendorfplatz, the former workers’ railway disappears underground here. Charlottenburg, once independent and wealthy, didn’t want a stinking train passing its villas, so it was banished underground. We’ll see how it reemerges towards Nollendorfplatz, marking the transition from Schöneberg to Berlin.
- Breitscheidplatz - Few remember this name, honoring an SPD politician committed to workers. Better known is the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, seen from the other side later. Many think it commemorates war, but it honors Wilhelm I, with his grandson and Hohenzollern family erecting a memorial. Faces of the Holy Family and disciples in the preserved portal resemble Prussian kings and emperors. Originally planned for complete clearance, resistance preserved the tower and west portal. The church tower and hall were built around it in a modern style by Egon Eiermann, allegedly called lipstick and powder compact by Berliners.
- Landwehrkanal - Alongside the Spree, the Landwehr Canal offers good city orientation. Berlin is built by and on water, with groundwater just 80 cm below. Over centuries, everything was dammed, drained, and canalized. The Great Elector brought Dutch experts, and Berlin now has 200 km of waterways. The Landwehr Canal, conceived by landscape architect Peter Joseph Lenné, served multiple functions: a shortcut for the meandering Spree, cargo shipping through new suburbs, and drainage of swampy areas like Kreuzberg and Tiergarten. A boat tour reveals almost all sights from the water, like the Ministry of Defense here.
- U Nollendorfplatz - Notably, the subway emerges or disappears underground, depending on the direction. Built in 1902, the cheaper above-ground construction was chosen over digging into Berlin’s boggy underground. Berlin always had financial worries, unlike the then-independent wealthy city of Charlottenburg, which banished the panting monster underground. People of all genders traveled between Bülowbogen and Nollendorfplatz, with gay “bad boy balls” and lesbian “hallways” crossing all layers, a novelty at the time. Today, Nollendorfplatz/Motzstr. and Wittenbergplatz/Fuggerstr. form Europe’s largest gay district.
- Kulturforum - Built as a counterpart to Museum Island, not a contrast, planning began in the 50s, anticipating city reunification. Buildings like the Philharmonie, New State Library, and New National Gallery were more than additions to the eastern half’s older structures. In the 1990s, the superbly designed and equipped picture gallery was built, housing old masters from Tiziano to Caravaggio to Rembrandt. It’s hard to find behind the crooked piazetta, soon covered by a new building for 20th-century modern art. Designed by Swiss architects Herzog & De Meuron, the exterior resembles a barn, dividing city opinion.
- Bendlerblock - Once the OHA, the army’s high command office, where everyone swore an oath to Hitler. The beautiful canal-facing building was built as the Reichsmarineamt before WWI, later expanded with courtyards. In the first backyard, Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg was shot after his failed attempt on Hitler on July 20, 1944. Today, it’s a branch of the Ministry of Defense (BMVe), with headquarters on the Hardthöhe in Bonn. The minister often stays there. The opposite Shell building, named after a petrol station, is also rented to the BMVe, shifting the Berlin-Bonn balance. The house is restored to its original state, a Bauhaus architect’s steel and concrete construction.
- Neue Nationalgalerie - Don’t miss this architectural highlight: a self-supporting metal roof on a glass building without interior pillars. They stand outside. A bold design by Chicago-emigrated Jewish-German architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. The large exhibition hall lacks walls, displaying 20th-century paintings in the basement. Changing exhibitions occur upstairs, with wooden panels erected. Mies left out walls due to a scribble intended for Mr. Barcadi’s private villa in Cuba, but private villas ended after Castro’s revolution in 1962. Darmstadt rejected the building, making it a modern Berlin icon at the Kulturforum.
- Sony Center - An architectural highlight at Potsdamer Platz, the Sony Center was a major investment in the area. The daring glass and steel construction by German-American architect Helmut Jahn features a sloping roof reminiscent of Fujiyama in Japan. Overlooked during planning was the listed wing of the old Hotel Esplanade, which survived bombing and hosted parties. It was moved 75 m east, roofed with 10 floors, and the ballroom turned outside. Today, it’s available for events.
- Abgeordnetenhaus Berlin - On this small square, buildings from four recent history eras coexist. Coming from Potsdamer Platz along the former Wall’s trace, two Wilhelminian period buildings greet you: Gropius-Bau and today’s Berlin House of Representatives. Berlin, a city-state, has a parliament. Previously, it was the Prussian Landtag, consisting of the manor house on Leipziger Str., now the Federal Council seat, and the House of Commons. Its eventful history includes use as an officers’ mess and socialist planning office. In front, a Wall remnant and the Topography of Terror documentation center.
- Gropius Bau - Once a handicraft museum, built by Martin Gropius, great-uncle of Bauhaus architect Walter Gropius. War-worn, it lay in ruins on the Kreuzberg side of the Wall. Restored, it now hosts major exhibitions, often funded by the Lotto Foundation, on topics from Alexandria to David Bowie. The entrance was initially on the other side to avoid provoking eastern border guards. Battered sculptures at today’s entrance testify to its decay.
- Topography of Terror - South of the Wall remains, an excavation site with an information hall. In the 80s, slopes and undergrowth covered the area, where Suspender Harry allowed Berliners to drive without a license. A lecturer and student began unearthing Nazi history, finding remnants of cellars where Nazi security organs interrogated and mistreated undesirables. Crimes against humanity were planned here, recorded and exhibited in the Topography of Terror (open-air museum and information hall).
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Niederkirchnerstraße - A short, original Wall remnant remains in the city center. Wallpeckers left it perforated, making the “anti-fascist protective wall” less threatening. Eastern rulers felt secure, omitting the usual death strip. Convinced party soldiers occupied the neighboring ministries (now the Ministry of Finance) and planning office (now the House of Representatives). A cable car escape attempt from the former Luftwaffe building to the West succeeded, watched by the Stasi, who mistook it for a Soviet exercise. A brief stop allows close Wall experience and a glimpse of the Topography of Terror.
(Stop can be omitted if Stop CPC) -
Checkpoint Charlie - The Allied checkpoint, named Charly (C) after the American alphabet, with others in Helmstedt (A for Alpha) and Drei-Linden (B for Bravo). Allied control squads passed without Soviet or East German checks. In October 1961, shortly after the Wall’s construction, tensions rose as 8 tanks faced off on both sides, nearly sparking World War III. Travelers worldwide visit, finding little remains: a 50s replica sentry box, with 80s originals in the Allied Museum. A temporary Cold War museum on a derelict site and a privately run Wall Museum with escape attempt curiosities.
(Stop can be omitted if already stop at the wall) -
Alexanderplatz - Everyone talks about Alexanderplatz, once Ochsenplatz, likely named for cattle trading. Outside the oldest city walls, it was an eastern extension including St. Mary’s Church. The square’s origin is where the Galleria Kaufhof forecourt is today. In GDR times, a socialist transformation aimed for a Russian prospectus: ample space for marches, tanks, and weapons, surrounded by modern buildings symbolizing socialism’s modernity, from the House of Tourism to the House of Electrical Engineering to the House of the Teacher. The television tower, Germany’s tallest, stands as proof of socialist engineering and architecture.
(May be omitted depending on the length of time.) -
East Side Gallery - The longest surviving Berlin Wall section (1600 m), not a real “front wall.” The colorfully painted wall West Berliners could touch should have been across the river. Instead, a hinterland wall resembling the Berlin Wall was built, with a sewer pipe ring on top to prevent climbing. Originally guarded and snow-white, it was painted by 180 artists worldwide post-reunification in 1990, featuring the Trabbi driving through the Wall and the Brezhnev-Honecker kiss. Renewed several times, time takes its toll on this historical monument.
(Can be omitted if there is no time left depending on traffic conditions and length of stay at the previous attractions. However, additional time can be booked on site.) -
Oberbaum Bridge - A Berlin landmark, or at least of the Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg district, this east-west district connected by the bridge. Marked by two medieval towers, it was once the city boundary to the east, with the Oberbaum floating in the water to prevent night passage. A customs border, evident from the towers’ coats of arms: the Brandenburg eagle on the left, the Berlin bear on the right. Today, it’s a popular connection on the party mile from Schlesisches Tor to Warschauer Strasse with the RAW site. The subway runs on the first floor, hidden behind battlements, with car and bicycle traffic below.
(Can be omitted if there is no time left depending on traffic conditions and length of stay at the previous attractions. However, additional time can be booked on site.) -
Oranienstraße - Imagine if 1960s road planners’ plans had materialized: a wide motorway cutting through the city, with a junction at Oranienplatz. Pretty old buildings, small restaurants, and trendy shops lining the street today would have vanished, along with Kreuzberg’s alternative culture. Despite gentrification, it has Berlin’s highest rent increase rates.
(Can be omitted if there is no time left depending on traffic conditions and length of stay at the previous attractions. However, additional time can be booked on site.) -
Karl-Marx-Allee - Experience the “confectionery buildings” of former Stalin-Allee, renamed after the dictator’s death. The controversial workers’ palaces led to the June 17, 1953 uprising, brutally crushed by GDR authorities with Soviet tanks. Today, the Stalinist buildings are renovated, forming Germany’s longest monument mile.
(Can be omitted if there is no time left depending on traffic conditions and length of stay at the previous attractions. However, additional time can be booked on site.)

- Private transportation
- On-board WiFi
- In-vehicle air conditioning
- Taxi ride according to the tariff (7% VAT) and city tour (19% VAT) included
- Collection from your desired location in the city (hotel, apartment …)
- Parking fees
- Private transportation
- On-board WiFi
- In-vehicle air conditioning
- Taxi ride according to the tariff (7% VAT) and city tour (19% VAT) included
- Collection from your desired location in the city (hotel, apartment …)
- Parking fees
- Gratuities
- Lunch
- Pick-up from BER airport or outside the S-Bahn ring only for an extra charge (Berlin taxi tariff)
- Gratuities
- Lunch
- Pick-up from BER airport or outside the S-Bahn ring only for an extra charge (Berlin taxi tariff)
Unlike bus tours, a personal taxi tour gives you the freedom to halt at will - whether for a photo op, a quick bite, a break, a coffee, or a lengthy stop to explore and learn about attractions in-depth (like the Berlin Cathedral, Hackesche Höfe, Brandenburg Gate, Gendarmenmarkt, Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, KaDeWe etc.), tailored to your preferences!…
Unlike bus tours, a personal taxi tour gives you the freedom to halt at will - whether for a photo op, a quick bite, a break, a coffee, or a lengthy stop to explore and learn about attractions in-depth (like the Berlin Cathedral, Hackesche Höfe, Brandenburg Gate, Gendarmenmarkt, Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, KaDeWe etc.), tailored to your preferences! Contrastingly, compared to a walking tour, you’re not restricted to a small region of our city. Thus, you get the best of both worlds with a taxi tour, something I’ve always preferred and recommended for friends and family. Experience Berlin’s neighborhoods (Kieze) like Kreuzberg or Friedrichshain, relishing the added convenience of being picked up directly from your place within the S-Bahn-Ring, all while touring in a luxurious Berlin Taxi SUV!
- Child seat for toddlers from six months to three years available, as well as a booster seat for older children. A baby seat can be brought on request (MaxiCosy)
- Wheelchair-friendly transport means: the guest rushes into the raised passenger seat and the wheelchair is taken in the rear
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.