Berlin Landmarks Map
Find Berlin's central landmarks, memorials, museums, and viewpoints, mapped by type with the nearest U-Bahn or S-Bahn for each.
Tap a pin for the honest local take and the nearest station. Free, no signup, built by a Berlin walking guide.
Berlin's must-see sights are spread across the centre, from the Brandenburg Gate in the west to Alexanderplatz in the east. This map plots the landmarks, memorials, museums, and viewpoints that matter most, sorted by what you want to see, with the nearest U-Bahn or S-Bahn for each. No signup, no ads, built by a guide who walks the city every week.
Why This Map Exists
Berlin does not have one tidy old town where every famous sight sits in a single square. The landmarks are spread out, and tourists lose hours criss-crossing the city without a plan. This map fixes that. Pick what you want to see and it shows you where each spot is, plus the nearest station, so you can group them into a sensible walking day.
What You Can Filter
Landmarks. Brandenburg Gate, Reichstag, the TV Tower, Berliner Dom, Gendarmenmarkt, Rotes Rathaus, and the World Clock.
History and memorials. The Holocaust Memorial, Berlin Wall Memorial, Topography of Terror, East Side Gallery, and Checkpoint Charlie.
Museums. Museum Island, the Humboldt Forum, and the Pergamon Museum (check what is open during its long renovation).
Views and parks. Tiergarten and the Victory Column, Tempelhofer Feld, and the rooftop terrace of the Humboldt Forum.
The Brandenburg Gate Is Just the Start
Most first-time visitors centre their day on the Brandenburg Gate, then run out of plan. The gate marks the western edge of the historic core. The story keeps going east along Unter den Linden, through Museum Island, to Alexanderplatz. Group the western landmarks (gate, Reichstag, Holocaust Memorial, Tiergarten) into one walk, and the eastern core into another.
Landmarks on the Free Walking Tour
The yellow stars mark sights on, or right beside, the BerlinWalk free walking tour. We start at the World Clock on Alexanderplatz and walk the eastern historic core, the TV Tower, Rotes Rathaus, Museum Island, Berliner Dom, and the Humboldt Forum, finishing near Hackescher Markt. It is the half of central Berlin that most visitors rush past on their way to the Brandenburg Gate.