Heidelberg Castle old town Germany

Visiting Heidelberg Castle and Old Town

Heidelberg Castle has been a ruin since 1693, and that’s precisely what makes it magnificent. The French army blew it up during the Nine Years’ War, and nobody ever bothered to fully rebuild it — because the ruin turned out to be more beautiful than the original.

The castle sits on the Königstuhl hill 80 metres above Heidelberg’s old town, overlooking the Neckar River valley in a scene that made it the defining image of German Romanticism. Turner painted it. Goethe wrote about it. Mark Twain called Heidelberg the finest place he’d ever seen. The ruins, the old town, and the Neckar together form one of the most photographed compositions in Germany — and the guided tours, the river cruise, and the walking tours show you the full picture from every angle.

Heidelberg Castle hilltop panorama overlooking old town
The castle sits on the Königstuhl like a crown on Heidelberg’s head — visible from every point in the old town and from both banks of the Neckar. The red sandstone ruins catch the light differently at every hour, shifting from warm pink at dawn to deep crimson at sunset.
Heidelberg Castle ruins and terraced gardens
The castle gardens — originally Renaissance terraces designed by Friedrich V for his English bride, Elizabeth Stuart — have been partially restored but retain their romantic wildness. The view from the upper terrace over the rooftops to the Neckar and the hills beyond is the image that launched a thousand postcards.
Best castle tour: Discover Heidelberg Castle Tour — $46, 2 hours with a historian guide inside the castle grounds.

Best city walk: Old Town Walking Tour — $18, 1.5 hours covering the old town’s history, university, and architecture.

Best on water: Neckar River Cruise — the castle from the water, with a complimentary drink included.

Official site: schloss-heidelberg.de — visitor info, opening hours, funicular schedules.

Getting to the Castle

The castle is accessible three ways from the old town: the Bergbahn (funicular), which departs from the Kornmarkt station and delivers you to the castle entrance in about 3 minutes; the steep walking path from the Kornmarkt that takes about 15-20 minutes through wooded switchbacks; or the longer but gentler route via the Klingenteich gate.

Heidelberg Old Bridge gate tower
The Old Bridge (Alte Brücke) gate tower — a medieval defensive structure that marks the southern entrance to the old town from across the Neckar. The bridge and the castle above it create the composition that has defined Heidelberg’s identity for centuries and appears in nearly every painting and photograph of the city.

The Bergbahn ticket (included in the €9 castle entry) covers the return funicular ride plus castle entry and access to the castle courtyard, the Great Barrel, and the German Pharmacy Museum inside the castle. The funicular continues beyond the castle to the Königstuhl summit (additional ticket), where there’s a TV tower, a forest playground, and walking trails through the Odenwald forest.

Heidelberg Neckar River with bridge and old town
The Neckar River flowing through Heidelberg with the Old Bridge in the foreground and the castle ruins rising behind. This view — from the northern bank of the river — is the classic Heidelberg photograph, and it’s the perspective you get from the Neckar River cruise.

What You’ll See in the Castle

The castle isn’t one building — it’s a complex of structures from different centuries, each built by a different Elector of the Palatinate. The oldest sections date from the 13th century. The most impressive — the Ottheinrichsbau (Ottheinrich Building) — is a Renaissance facade from the 1550s that’s considered one of the finest examples of German Renaissance architecture, even in its ruined state.

Heidelberg Castle inner courtyard
The castle courtyard is surrounded by buildings from different centuries — each Elector added his own wing in the style of his era. The result is an unintentional architectural museum where Gothic, Renaissance, and Baroque structures face each other across the same cobblestone space.

The Great Barrel (Großes Fass) — the world’s largest wine barrel, holding 219,000 litres. Built in 1751, it was filled only three times (the castle had its own vineyard). The barrel is genuinely enormous — you can walk on the platform above it — and the story of its construction and the court dwarf who served as its guardian is one of the more entertaining things the guides tell you.

Heidelberg Castle exterior architectural detail
The Ottheinrichsbau facade — even in ruins, the carved figures, columns, and decorative panels represent one of the high points of German Renaissance architecture. The quality of the stonework is remarkable, and the guided tours spend time at this building explaining the iconographic programme of the carvings.

The German Pharmacy Museum (Deutsches Apotheken-Museum) — housed inside the castle, this museum traces the history of pharmacy from ancient Egypt to the 20th century. Original apothecary workshops, laboratory equipment, and medicine jars fill the rooms. It’s included in the castle ticket and takes about 30-45 minutes to explore.

View from Heidelberg Castle terrace
The terrace view from the castle looks directly down onto the old town’s red rooftops, with the Neckar River and the hills of the Odenwald beyond. On clear days you can see as far as the Rhine plain. This is the viewpoint that made Heidelberg famous — and photographs taken from here appear in every guidebook and travel blog.

The castle grounds and gardens — the terraced gardens (Hortus Palatinus) were once among the most famous gardens in Europe, designed by Salomon de Caus for Friedrich V as a wedding present for his bride Elizabeth Stuart. The gardens were never completed (Friedrich lost his throne in 1620), but the terraces, grottos, and remaining structures hint at the intended grandeur. The garden walk includes viewpoints over the old town and the Neckar valley that are among the best in the city.

Close view of Heidelberg Castle tower
The castle towers show the damage from the 1693 French destruction — shattered walls, roofless chambers, and the iconic split tower (Krautturm) that was cracked in half by an explosion. The damage is left deliberately unrepaired as part of the castle’s Romantic appeal.

The Old Town Below

Heidelberg’s Altstadt (old town) stretches along the south bank of the Neckar for about 1.5 kilometres. The main street — Hauptstraße — claims to be the longest pedestrian shopping street in Europe at 1.6km. The walking tour covers the highlights in about 90 minutes.

Heidelberg old town rooftops view
The old town rooftops seen from the castle or the Philosophers’ Walk — a sea of terracotta tiles punctuated by church spires and the university buildings that have dominated Heidelberg’s character since 1386.

The University — Heidelberg University, founded in 1386, is Germany’s oldest. The old university building on Universitätsplatz houses the Student Prison (Studentenkarzer) — a room where misbehaving students were locked up from 1778 to 1914. The walls are covered in their graffiti — names, dates, messages, and caricatures — and it’s one of the old town’s quirkiest attractions. The walking tours always include it.

Heidelberg University Square
The university buildings are woven into the fabric of the old town rather than isolated on a campus. Students, travelers, and residents share the same streets and squares — which gives Heidelberg a youthful energy that many tourist-heavy cities lack.

The Heiliggeistkirche (Church of the Holy Spirit) — the main church on the Marktplatz, a Gothic structure that once housed the famous Bibliotheca Palatina (the most important library in the German-speaking world until it was looted by the Catholic League in 1623 and shipped to Rome). Market stalls have occupied the spaces between the church’s buttresses since the Middle Ages, and some are still there today.

Heidelberg market square with Heiliggeistkirche
The Heiliggeistkirche dominates the Marktplatz — the church’s Gothic architecture and the surrounding market stalls create a scene that hasn’t changed in structure since the medieval period, even if the products on sale have evolved from bread and livestock to bratwurst and souvenirs.
Heidelberg city centre street
The Hauptstraße — Heidelberg’s main pedestrian street — runs the full length of the old town from the Bismarckplatz to the Karlstor gate. Shopping, cafes, restaurants, and historic buildings line both sides, and the castle is visible above the rooftops from almost every point along the route.

The Neckar River Cruise

The Neckar cruise takes you upstream from the old town along the river, giving you the waterside perspective of the castle, the Old Bridge, and the forested hills. The cruise includes a complimentary drink and lasts about 50-60 minutes. The boats depart from near the Old Bridge.

Heidelberg riverside with old town
The old town from the Neckar — the waterside facades, the church spires, and the castle above create a layered composition that the river cruise shows you from the ideal vantage point. The calm river also provides reflections that double the visual impact on still days.

The cruise is the most popular activity in Heidelberg by visitor volume, though many visitors combine it with a castle visit and walking tour for a full day that covers the city from water level, street level, and hilltop.

Heidelberg river valley panorama
The Neckar valley upstream from Heidelberg narrows into a forested gorge — the cruise passes through this section, where the hills close in on both sides and the castle becomes a distant silhouette behind you. The return journey gives you the full castle panorama as you approach the old town.

The Philosophers’ Walk

The Philosophenweg (Philosophers’ Walk) on the north bank of the Neckar is one of the most famous walks in Germany. The path runs along the hillside opposite the castle, offering a perspective that has attracted writers, artists, and philosophers for centuries. Goethe walked here. Hegel walked here. The name isn’t marketing — it’s history.

Heidelberg Philosophers' Walk viewpoint
The Philosophers’ Walk offers the best overall view of Heidelberg — the castle, the old town, the church spires, and the Neckar all visible in a single panorama. The walk takes about 30-40 minutes and is best done in the late afternoon when the sun illuminates the castle’s western facade.

The walk climbs steeply from the north end of the Old Bridge before levelling out along the hillside. The south-facing slope creates a microclimate that’s warmer than the rest of the city — you’ll see Mediterranean plants (figs, olives, wisteria) that don’t normally grow this far north. The walk is free, open year-round, and can be done independently at any time. The walking tours don’t usually include it (it’s across the river from the old town), but the guides recommend it for after the tour.

Heidelberg sunset over the Neckar River
Sunset over the Neckar from the Philosophers’ Walk — the golden light hits the castle and the old town simultaneously, creating the scene that inspired the German Romantic movement. This is arguably the most beautiful sunset viewpoint in any German city.
Historic Heidelberg bridge at sunset
The Old Bridge (Alte Brücke) at golden hour — the sandstone arches catch the warm light and the reflection stretches across the Neckar. The bridge was rebuilt after WWII using the original stones from the riverbed, and its twin gate towers have been the symbol of Heidelberg since the Middle Ages.

Heidelberg’s History

Heidelberg’s story begins with the castle. The first fortification appeared on the Königstuhl in the 13th century, and successive Electors of the Palatinate expanded it over the next 400 years into one of the grandest palaces in Germany. The Electoral Palatinate was one of the most powerful states in the Holy Roman Empire — the Elector Palatine was one of seven princes who chose the Emperor.

The castle’s destruction came in two waves. In 1622, during the Thirty Years’ War, Catholic League forces captured and stripped it. In 1689 and 1693, Louis XIV’s French armies systematically destroyed both the castle and the town as part of the devastation of the Palatinate. The castle was partially rebuilt in the 18th century, struck by lightning in 1764, and then abandoned. When the Romantic movement discovered the ruins in the early 19th century, the aesthetic appeal of the decay — ivy on broken walls, trees growing from shattered towers — made Heidelberg Castle one of the most painted and written-about buildings in Europe.

Heidelberg old town with church spire
Heidelberg’s old town was rebuilt after the French destruction of 1693 in a Baroque style that replaced the medieval original. The result is unusually uniform — most of the buildings date from the early 18th century, giving the old town a visual coherence that’s different from the medieval jumble of Rothenburg or Nuremberg.

Heidelberg University — founded in 1386 — has shaped the city’s character for over 600 years. It’s the oldest university in present-day Germany, and its alumni include Hegel, Hannah Arendt, Max Weber, Robert Bunsen, and Helmut Kohl. The student population (about 30,000 in a city of 160,000) keeps Heidelberg younger and livelier than its tourist image suggests. The Untere Straße and the Marstallstraße area are the student bar districts — cheaper and more authentic than the tourist restaurants on the Hauptstraße.

Heidelberg student quarter and bar area
The student quarter — concentrated around the Untere Straße south of the Kornmarkt — has the best-value restaurants and bars in the old town. The walking tour guides know which places serve the best local food (try the Studentenküss cafe on the Hauptstraße for its Heidelberg specialties).
Aerial view of Heidelberg old town
The elevated view of Heidelberg shows how tightly the old town fits between the castle hill and the Neckar — a narrow strip of red rooftops threading along the southern riverbank, backed by forested hills that extend into the Odenwald nature park.

Best Tours to Book

1. Discover Heidelberg Castle Tour — $46

Heidelberg Castle guided tour
The dedicated castle tour with a historian guide — 2 hours covering the castle complex in detail. Visitor feedback consistently praises the guide’s ability to bring the ruins to life with stories that the audio guide and information panels don’t cover.

Two hours inside the castle grounds with a local historian. The guide covers the architectural history of each building, the Elector who built it, the destruction and the Romantic rediscovery. At $46 (excluding the €9 castle entry ticket), it’s the premium option — but the depth of information you get is incomparable to visiting independently. Our review covers what the guide adds beyond the standard audio guide.

2. Old Town Walking Tour — $18

Heidelberg old town walking tour
The budget-friendly walking tour that covers the old town’s highlights in 90 minutes. The guide is engaging and knowledgeable, and the compact format works well for visitors who want the overview without committing a full day.

Ninety minutes through the old town’s greatest hits — the Marktplatz, the university, the Student Prison, the Heiliggeistkirche, and the Old Bridge. At $18, it’s excellent value and the best introduction to Heidelberg’s ground-level history. Combine it with the castle tour (separately or on the same day) for the full picture. Our review covers the route and what makes the local guides’ perspective special.

3. Neckar River Sightseeing Cruise

Heidelberg Neckar River sightseeing cruise
The most popular Heidelberg activity by visitor volume — the Neckar cruise shows you the castle, Old Bridge, and old town from the water. A complimentary drink is included, and the cruise runs upstream through the forested valley before returning.

The cruise covers the stretch of Neckar that gives you the classic Heidelberg panorama — castle above, old town below, river in between. The complimentary drink is a nice touch, and the 50-60 minute duration is well-judged. The cruise is the most-reviewed activity in Heidelberg for good reason: the perspective from the water is genuinely different from anything you see on land. Our review covers the boat type and the best seats for photography.

Heidelberg Neckar valley scenery
The Neckar valley upstream from Heidelberg narrows into a forested gorge that feels surprisingly wild given its proximity to the city. The cruise route passes through this section, and the landscape changes from urban waterfront to rural river valley within minutes.
Heidelberg Old Bridge tower gate
The Old Bridge gate from the old town side — walking through the medieval tower onto the bridge gives you the perspective that travellers have had for centuries. The bridge is pedestrian-only and is the main route to the Philosophers’ Walk on the northern bank.

Practical Tips

Getting to Heidelberg: Direct trains from Frankfurt (50 min, frequent), Stuttgart (40 min), and Mannheim (15 min). From Munich, the journey takes about 3 hours with one change. The Hauptbahnhof is about 15 minutes by tram/bus from the old town.

Castle entry: €9 includes the funicular, castle courtyard, Great Barrel, and Pharmacy Museum. Interior guided tours (castle rooms) are €6 extra. The private guided tours (€46+) are separate from the entry ticket.

When to visit: Spring (April-June) and autumn (September-October) are best — warm enough for outdoor sightseeing, fewer crowds than summer. The castle illuminations (Schlossbeleuchtung) happen three times per year (usually June, July, September) — the castle is lit with fireworks and red flares. It’s spectacular and worth planning around.

How long: A full day is ideal — morning at the castle, midday walking tour, afternoon Neckar cruise, evening Philosophers’ Walk. Half a day works if you prioritise the castle and one other activity.

Budget: Castle entry: €9. Funicular: included. Walking tour: $18. Castle tour: $46. Neckar cruise: varies. Lunch in old town: €10-15. A full day: about €60-80.

Other Germany Day Trips and Tours

Heidelberg pairs naturally with the Rothenburg and Romantic Road day trip — both show Germany’s medieval heritage from different angles. Rothenburg is the preserved small town; Heidelberg is the university city with castle ruins. Together they cover the range of what medieval Germany looked like.

From Frankfurt, the Cologne Rhine cruises offer a different river experience — the Rhine is wider and more industrial than the Neckar, and the cathedral in Cologne is the contrast to Heidelberg’s castle: one intact and overwhelming, the other ruined and romantic.

For visitors based in Munich, the Neuschwanstein Castle day trip and the Dachau memorial tour round out a Bavaria trip that covers fairytales, history, and the full emotional range of German cultural heritage.