Erfurt, Germany

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Erfurt is the capital of Thuringia and one of Germany's most complete medieval city centres — its Old Town survived the Second World War largely intact and preserves 1,000 years of merchants, monasteries, and reformers. The city is home to three major draws: the Domberg with the Cathedral and St Severus Church, the Krämerbrücke (Europe's longest inhabited bridge), and the 2023-inscribed UNESCO Medieval Jewish Heritage ensemble. Martin Luther studied here (1501–1505), and the ICE rail hub at Erfurt Hauptbahnhof has since December 2017 connected the city to Frankfurt in 1h45, Munich in 2h15, and Berlin in under 2 hours.

Domberg — Cathedral & Gloriosa Bell

Gothic Erfurt Cathedral + Romanesque-Gothic St Severus Church atop 70 processional steps — and the Gloriosa, the world's largest free-swinging medieval bell (1497), rung only on Christmas, Easter and New Year.

Krämerbrücke — Inhabited Medieval Bridge

Europe's longest inhabited bridge (120 m, 32 half-timbered houses over the Gera river), continuously in commercial use since the 13th century — antiques, goldsmithing, chocolate, and a medieval bridge chapel still standing.

UNESCO Jewish Medieval Heritage (2023)

The Alte Synagoge (~1094, one of Europe's oldest preserved medieval synagogues), the Mikwe (spring-fed ritual bath), and the Erfurt Treasure — Germany's newest UNESCO site, opened as a museum in 2009.

Luther's Erfurt — Augustinian Monastery

University of Erfurt (1501–05), the Augustinian Monastery where Luther was ordained priest (1507), and the formative years before the Reformation — the monastery is open for guided tours with Luther's reconstructed cell.

Egapark & Horticultural Tradition

45-hectare public horticultural park built on the legacy of Erfurt's medieval seed trade and two IGA International Garden Exhibitions (1961, 1974) — roses, tulips, cactus house, butterfly garden, and the Cyriaksburg fortress panorama.

ICE Rail Hub — Thuringia Day Trips

Erfurt Hauptbahnhof (VDE 8, Dec 2017): Frankfurt 1h45, Munich 2h15, Berlin 1h55 — plus Weimar 15 min, Eisenach 40 min, Jena 30 min by regional rail. The natural base for the Thuringia cultural corridor.

Practical Info

Safety: Erfurt is a safe city for visitors. The Old Town and Domplatz area are well-lit and busy until late in summer. Standard urban precautions apply near the Hauptbahnhof at night. Language: German throughout; Thüringian dialect is moderate, standard German understood everywhere. English spoken at tourist sites (Alte Synagoge, Cathedral, Augustinian Monastery), the ICE station, and major hotels. Basic German phrases help in smaller restaurants and local shops. Currency: Euro (EUR). ATMs on the Anger and at Hauptbahnhof. Cards accepted in most hotels and restaurants; cash preferred at market stalls and smaller Old Town shops.
Travel Overview

Erfurt rewards a dedicated two-to-three-day stay, though its proximity to Weimar (15 minutes by regional rail) and Eisenach (40 minutes) makes it a natural hub for the wider Thuringia cultural corridor. The Old Town is compact — the Domberg, Krämerbrücke, Alte Synagoge, and the Anger pedestrian zone are all within a 20-minute walk of one another — but each deserves unhurried time. The city avoided significant bombing in the Second World War (the Allied command designated it a potential administrative capital for occupied Germany), which means the medieval street pattern, the half-timbered merchant quarter, and the Gothic and Romanesque churches survive in largely original fabric, not postwar reconstruction. The three anchor points of Erfurt are: the Domberg (Cathedral Hill), where the Gothic Erfurt Cathedral and the Romanesque-Gothic Church of St Severus rise side by side above 70-step processional stairs; the Krämerbrücke (Merchants' Bridge), 120 metres of inhabited bridge with 32 half-timbered houses built along its length over the River Gera; and the Alte Synagoge on Waagegasse, the medieval synagogue (built ~1094) that is now the centrepiece of the 2023 UNESCO Medieval Jewish Heritage inscription. The Augustinian Monastery where Martin Luther was ordained as a monk in 1506 stands in the southern Old Town; the Egapark garden grounds on the western edge reflect the city's long horticultural tradition in seed cultivation and export. As a transport hub, Erfurt Hauptbahnhof anchors the state's regional rail web: Weimar (15 min, every 20 min), Jena (30 min, frequent), Gotha (18 min), Eisenach (40 min), and Mühlhausen (60 min) — all on Thüringer Verkehrsverbund (VMT) flat fares. The station has direct ICE connections to Frankfurt, Munich, Leipzig, and Berlin courtesy of the VDE 8 high-speed line completed December 2017.

Discover Erfurt

The Domberg (Cathedral Hill) is Erfurt's defining landmark — a broad promontory rising at the western edge of the Old Town, crowned by two of the most striking medieval churches in Germany. The Gothic Erfurt Cathedral (Dom St Marien), whose construction in its present form spans the 14th and 15th centuries, houses the Gloriosa: cast in 1497 by Gerhard van Wou, the Gloriosa is the world's largest free-swinging medieval bell — 2.57 metres in diameter, 11.5 tonnes — and is rung only on major church festivals (Christmas, Easter, New Year's) because the vibrations risk structural damage to the cathedral's tower. The Cathedral's choir stalls (1350–1370, intricate gothic oak carvings), the Wolfram candelabrum (1160, the only surviving Romanesque bronze candleholder of this type), and the stained glass of the High Choir (1370–1420) are among the finest examples of medieval cathedral furnishing in central Germany. Next to the Cathedral, the Church of St Severus (Severikirche) is a masterpiece of Thuringian High Gothic — five naves, the largest interior volume of any church in Erfurt, and the tomb of the Holy Severus himself (died 403) in the sacristy crypt. The 70-step processional staircase (Domtreppe) leading up from the Domplatz provides the city's most photographed panorama — the Cathedral's twin towers above, the market square rooflines below — and is free to climb at any time.