
The complete guide to taking your holiday like a German
According to the German Tourism Association (DRV), a record-breaking 56 million Germans took at least one holiday of five days or longer in 2024.
The average German took about 13 days for their main holiday in 2024, just edging past the previous year's figures – and the spending is as impressive as the logistics: German holidaymakers shelled out €90 billion on travel last year, with the average longer holiday costing around €1,319 per person.
Despite growing flexibility, the most popular time to travel continues to be the traditional summer months of July, August and September, according to travel analysis by the Holiday and Travel Research Association (FUR).
Now that we've established when to go, how many millions of other people will be going at the same time, and how long to go for – it's time to jump straight into our first lesson on how to holiday like a German.
Lesson one: Where to go
For domestic holidaymakers, Bavarian folk festivals provide a chance to revel in Germany's rich beer culture. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Bernd Weißbrod
Where does the average German go in search of holiday bliss?
For 36 percent of Germans, the answer is that there's no place quite like home.
Among domestic holiday destinations, Bavaria is the most popular with German holidaymakers, followed by Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Niedersachsen, according to Statista.
READ ALSO:
Five of Germany's busiest tourist attractions and where to go instead
For holidaymakers willing to leave the comforts of home (and car) behind, however, the top short-haul foreign destinations are Spain (hello Mallorca), Italy, and Turkey.
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Spain remains unchallenged as the number one international destination, with German visitors making up the largest foreign tourist group on the Balearic Islands, according to the Mallorca Tourism Board.
A significant minority of German travellers (16.4 percent) felt the need to escape Europe altogether in 2024, with Southeast Asia being a particularly popular destination for long-haul trips.
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The new direct flights from Germany this summer
Shouldn't I try to avoid very popular destinations?
It's certainly worth thinking about. Studies show a so-called 'Green Shift' is taking place in the German travel mind – on paper, anyway.
An ADAC survey from December 2024 found that 72 percent of Germans see overtourism as a real problem, and a majority express at least some concern over the impact of tourism on climate change. Almost 61 percent claim they have intentionally avoided destinations suffering from overtourism.
READ ALSO:
F
ive cooler holiday destinations you can get to from Germany by train
It may be necessary to treat these findings with a pinch of salt, however. According to a recent QTA travel advisor
poll
, when it comes to actually booking their holiday, the vast majority of holidaymakers still make their decision based on the weather, the price, and reliable Wi-Fi.
Only eight percent of travel agents noted clients who had actually decided to change their travel plans on the basis of overtourism.
In order to holiday like a German, it doesn't hurt to be self-aware and feel slightly guilty, but it's still important to put practical considerations above principals when it comes to the crunch.
Lesson Two: Where to Stay?
A tourist couple sunbathes on Palma Beach in Palma de Mallorca. Photo: JAIME REINA/AFP.
Germans are renowned for their ability to plan ahead – maps printed, wet weather gear safely stowed, and emergency snacks on hand – and the idea of leaving things to the last minute is becoming harder and harder to bear.
According to the
ADAC
, 44 percent of people in the country booked their main vacation for 2024 at least four months in advance, compared to only 39 percent in 2022 and 35 percent in 2020.
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Resort hotels remain popular, especially in traditional holiday hotspots (think Turkey's Riviera or Mallorca's Playa de Palma).
About half of the total travel market turnover in 2024 came from package tours and holidays offered by tour operators, with the other half made up of individually arranged trips, according to the
German Travel Association
.
Campsites and Airbnb-style options also saw increased demand in last year, especially among families and younger travellers.
READ ALSO:
How to save money on a camping holiday in Germany
Lesson three: How to blend in
You might think that holidaying like a German should involve wearing socks with sandals and eagerly claiming a sun-lounger before dawn.
But in reality this couldn't be further from the truth.
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In fact, generally speaking Germans practice the art of blending into their surroundings on holiday.
According to the YouGov / Airbnb study, only 11 percent of Germans are willing to admit to ever
wearing socks with their sandals
, and only 16 percent own up to rising early to place their towel on a sun-lounger.
What's more, over 50 percent of Germans are eager to sample regional dishes when they travel, with just 11 percent admitting they still want to eat Schnitzel and potato salad wherever they find themselves.
Sixty-four percent of German travellers say they make some effort to speak the local language, and 58 percent are 'keen to see their destination through the eyes of locals.'
Perhaps most tellingly of all, 76 percent describe themselves as open to new experiences and cultures.
And yet strangely, despite all these efforts in the direction of cosmopolitanism, nearly three-quarters of respondents to the survey say they can still spot their compatriots on the beach with just a glance.
Follow our simple guide, and this year, maybe that could include you!
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Local Germany
an hour ago
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Everything you can and can't bring with you when you travel to Germany
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DW
a day ago
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German holiday blues: Slow train to the coast – DW – 07/27/2025
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You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter, Berlin Briefing.


Local Germany
2 days ago
- Local Germany
One in five in Germany can't afford a weeklong holiday
In the summer, many Germans pack up their socks and sandals and head off to destinations across Europe and around the world. Germans often say that anywhere in the world you go, you can find German tourists. With an average of 28 paid vacation days per year, many Germans have ample opportunity to travel. But financial constraints keep vacation out of reach for about one in five Germans. Across Germany, 21 percent of people live in households that reported they could not afford a week's vacation last year, according to the Germany's Statistical Office (Destatis) . That amounts to 17.4 million people. Destatis conducts this survey to assess the material and social quality of life of people living in Germany. The survey asked individuals if they live in a household that could afford to go on vacation for a week in 2024. A vacation could include staying with friends or relatives, or staying at the family's own vacation home. READ ALSO: The complete guide to taking your holiday like a German The percentage of people who can afford to go on a weeklong vacation varies greatly across the German states, statistics show. Bremen had the highest proportion of households that couldn't afford vacation at around 35 percent. Bavaria had the lowest at under 15 percent. Saarland also had a relatively high percentage of residents who couldn't afford a vacation in 2024, at 28.8 percent. In Lower Saxony, 25.7 percent of people couldn't afford to vacation for a week. In Rhineland-Palatinate, it was 24.8 percent, in Thuringia it was 24.2 percent, and in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania it was 24 percent. Advertisement In Berlin, like in Bavaria, fewer than 15 percent of people reported living in households that were unable to afford a week of vacation last year. In Saxony, the number was 16.4 percent, and in Hamburg it was 18.5 percent. Some groups struggle more than others to afford vacation Single parents and single adults without children found it particularly difficult to afford going on vacation in 2024, statistics show. Destatis found that 38 percent of people living in single-parent households were unable to afford a weeklong holiday. Nearly one in three single adults living alone was also unable to afford a week of vacation last year. The same went for two-parent households with three or more children. Two-adult households without children were able to afford going on vacation most easily, with only 15 percent of people reporting living in a household that can't afford a vacation. READ ALSO: Hotels, transport and food - How the cost of travel in Germany is rising this summer Advertisement Germans afford more vacations that people in most European countries Across the EU, 27 percent of people live in households that could not afford a week's vacation, according to the European statistics agency Eurostat. That number was particularly high in Romania, where nearly 60 percent of people could not afford to go on vacation in 2024. In Bulgaria and Greece, more than 40 percent of people lived in households that could not afford a week of vacation. In Luxembourg, only 9 percent of people reported being unable to afford a weeklong vacation, and in both Sweden and the Netherlands the number was under 15 percent.