Home Germany Berlin Reichstag Building
The Reichstag building seen from the west. Inscription translates to "For/To the German People"
Berlin, Germany Worth it

Reichstag Building

Go, and book the moment you have dates. The dome is one of the best free city views in Europe and the architecture has a real point to it. The only thing that ruins it is showing up unregistered in summer, so plan ahead and aim for a sunset slot.

Photo: Mfield, Matthew Field (GFDL 1.2), via Wikimedia Commons

Germany's parliament sits inside a 19th-century stone shell, but the reason to come is the glass dome Norman Foster bolted on top in the 1990s, which you can walk up for free. The catch is the word free: you must register in advance, and in summer the good slots vanish within days of opening three months out. Book the moment your dates are set, pick a slot around sunset, and bring the exact ID you registered with or they will turn you away at the door.

Is Reichstag Building worth it?Worth it

Worth it for

  • Anyone who wants a free, high panorama of central Berlin
  • Architecture and modern-history fans
  • Sunset and blue-hour photographers

You can skip if

  • You did not register and it is peak summer with no same-day spots left
  • Tight security queues and a slow walk up a ramp are not worth a view to you
Straight from recent visitors

What travelers flag about Reichstag Building

We weighed recent Berlin traveler opinion on the Reichstag against the provider reviews. These are the themes that came up again and again.

  • The dome is free, but register aheadReported by many

    Going up the glass dome for one of the best free views in Berlin costs nothing, but you must register in advance on the Bundestag's own site with your passport or ID details, and summer slots fill days ahead. Do not pay a tour just to reach the dome. If you left it too late, the rooftop Kaefer restaurant is another way up.

  • Aim for a sunset slotReported by several

    The dome is open late, and blue hour over the government quarter is the slot photographers chase. Bring the ID you registered with, allow time for airport-style security, and grab the free audio guide inside, which narrates the city as you spiral up the ramp.

Sourced from recent traveler discussions, not provider reviews. We only flag what several visitors independently reported, and the bars show how widely each point came up.

It's free

No ticket needed for Reichstag Building

Going up the Reichstag's glass dome is free, but it is not walk-up: you register in advance on the Bundestag's official site with your passport details, and slots fill days ahead in summer. Once booked, the spiralling ramp and the view over central Berlin are one of the best free things in the city, best at sunset, with a free audio guide included. Do not pay a tour operator just to reach the dome.

A guided government-quarter or Cold War history walk adds context and takes the Reichstag as a centerpiece, but the dome itself is free once you have registered.

Which ticket should you buy?

The dome is free but never first-come walk-in during summer. Register through the official Bundestag visitor service as early as three months out, and bring the exact ID you registered with.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
Dome visit (free, registered) Walk-up access to the glass dome and roof terrace plus the position-aware audio guide, booked through the official Bundestag system The standard visit. This is what almost everyone should book.
Guided tour of the building A guided walk through parts of the parliament with the history and how the Bundestag works, also registered in advance Visitors who want more than the dome and care about the politics and the building's past
Rooftop restaurant reservation (Käfer) A table at the rooftop restaurant, which also grants access to the dome via your reservation People who want a meal with the view and a guaranteed way in when dome slots are gone
Platz der Republik 1, 11011 Berlin, Germany View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

What it is

The Reichstag is the seat of the Bundestag, Germany's federal parliament. The original building dates to the 1890s, burned in the 1933 fire that the Nazis used as a pretext to seize power, and sat as a scarred ruin through the Cold War. After reunification it was gutted and rebuilt, and Foster crowned it with a transparent dome meant to put the public symbolically above its politicians.

That dome is the whole experience for visitors. You spiral up two ramps that wind around a mirrored central cone, the city opens up around you through the glass, and an audio guide keyed to your position points out what you are looking at. It is genuinely one of the better free things to do in any European capital, which is exactly why it is hard to get into.

How to register

Entry is free but requires advance registration through the Bundestag's official visitor system. Registration opens around three months ahead. In peak summer the popular late-morning and midday slots fill within the first week, so book early. In the quieter winter months you can often get in with a couple of weeks' notice.

If you did not book ahead, there is a service center near the building where you can try for any same-day spots that open up, but you have to claim them at least a couple of hours before your visit and there is no guarantee. Whatever you book, everyone in your party must be named on the registration, and you bring the matching passport or ID. No ID, no entry, full stop.

Visiting and timing

The dome and roof terrace are open daily into the late evening, with last admission a couple of hours before midnight. Security is airport-style: a checkpoint, a queue, then a lift up to the roof. Give yourself time for that on top of your slot.

For the view, a slot starting around sunset is the prize. You get the city in daylight, the colors turn over while you are up there, and then Berlin lights up. The audio guide runs as you climb, the terrace has a cafe, and the dome stays open later than the parliament itself. Allow roughly an hour for the dome, more if you eat.

Reichstag building seen from the west, before sunset Photo: Jürgen Matern (CC BY-SA 3.0), via Wikimedia Commons

Reichstag Building: FAQs

Yes, entry to the dome and roof terrace is free. What it costs you is planning: you must register in advance and bring the ID you registered with. There is no paid skip-the-line for the dome itself.

Registration opens about three months out. In summer, book as early as you can because the best daytime slots go within days. In winter a week or two ahead is usually enough.

Try the visitor service center near the building for same-day openings. You have to claim a spot at least a couple of hours before your visit, and availability is not guaranteed, especially in peak season.

Yes, and it has to match the name on your registration exactly. Everyone in the group must be registered individually. Without the matching passport or ID you will be turned away at security.

Around sunset. You catch the city in daylight, watch the light change from inside the glass, and then see Berlin lit up. The dome stays open well into the evening.

Brandenburger Tor station (U5 and S-Bahn S1, S2, S25, S26) is a short walk, and Berlin Hauptbahnhof is roughly 10 to 15 minutes on foot. Bus 100 also stops nearby at the Reichstag.

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