Hamburg is Germany's maritime city — a port bigger than Rotterdam in feel if not tonnage, with more bridges than Venice and Amsterdam combined. The redeveloped HafenCity around the Elbphilharmonie has reshaped the waterfront, the Reeperbahn still delivers its famous nightlife, and the Alster lakes give the centre an unusually green, watery character.
✈️ Get deal alerts for Zagreb → Hamburg — free
- 🏠 Deals from your home airport, first
- 🆓 Free to start — no credit card needed
- ⚡ Plus & Pro unlock all deals & features
How FairFares works
Not search results — real price drops, verified before they reach you.
Scan daily
3,000+ routes checked multiple times a day
Compare history
Each fare measured against months of price data
Score & rank
Only genuine drops surface — no fake "deals"
Alert you
Instant notification when your route drops
Quick facts
Timezone
Berlin
Currency
€ EUR
Language
German
City transfer
~25 min
S-Bahn / Taxi / Bus
Best time to visit
best weatherdeals available
Don't miss
Visit the Elbphilharmonie's public plaza (the Plaza level is free) at any time of day for unbeatable harbour views — then book a concert in advance if you can. Even the acoustics in the foyer are designed to be experienced.
Walk the Alster Lakes at dusk — rent a kayak or paddleboard from Alster Touristik on the Binnenalster for about €15/hour and paddle out as the city lights come on. Early September is perfect.
Get to the Fischmarkt by 6am on a Sunday — the auction hall opens at dawn and the fish sellers' theatrical pitches are legendary. Eat an Aalsuppe (eel soup) from one of the stalls before 8am when it winds down.
Explore HafenCity on foot — Europe's largest inner-city development has hit its stride and the combination of red-brick warehouse conversions and bold contemporary architecture around the Magdeburger Hafen is genuinely impressive. Free to wander, best on a weekday morning.
Weekend itinerary · 2 days
Day 1
Speicherstadt and HafenCity
Start in the UNESCO-listed red-brick warehouse district — the narrow canals between the warehouse blocks are most atmospheric at low tide when the reflections are sharpest. Walk east into HafenCity and up the Elbphilharmonie Plaza (free, open daily).
Hamburg Harbour boat tour
The HADAG ferry Line 62 from Landungsbrücken runs working harbour routes for €3.60 (a normal transit ticket) — this is how locals cross the Elbe and you get a port tour for free.
Schanzenviertel afternoon
Hamburg's most creative neighbourhood — vintage shops, independent record stores, and the Rote Flora squat that's been occupied since 1989. The area around Schulterblatt is good for an early evening drink.
Bullerei
Tim Mälzer's restaurant in a converted slaughterhouse in the Schanzenviertel — excellent beef, good wine list, lively atmosphere. Book ahead for dinner.
Day 2
Fischmarkt (if Sunday)
The Sunday market opens at 5am in summer — join the last-of-the-night crowd buying smoked fish, fresh flowers, and fruit while a live band plays in the auction hall. Completely unique to Hamburg.
Hamburger Kunsthalle
Spend the morning with the Caspar David Friedrich collection and the 20th-century German art galleries — one of Germany's finest art museums and rarely crowded before noon.
Alster lake walk and Planten un Blomen
Walk the Außenalster circumference (7.5km, flat) or cut through the gorgeous Planten un Blomen park — the Japanese garden is a genuine surprise in northern Germany.
Mutterland am Michel
A deli and café near the Michaeliskirche serving the finest northern German provisions — have the Labskaus (Hamburg's traditional sailor stew) as a proper introduction to local food.
Travel tips
- →Go up the Elbphilharmonie Plaza — it's free and the city's best viewpoint, no concert ticket required
- →Take a harbour ferry on line 62 rather than a tourist boat — same views at HVV transit prices
- →Sunday morning's Fischmarkt has been running since 1703 and is more party than market by dawn
More Weekend deals in Germany
Planning a trip to Hamburg?
Hamburg travel guide →