TheOneToGo Trip Planner

Berlin Itinerary Planner

Plan a Berlin trip in a few taps. TheOneToGo builds an honest, day-by-day itinerary from the places actually worth your time, groups each day so it is walkable, and tells you what to skip. Nothing is placed for payment.

When?
Days
2
Adults
2
Kids
0
Pace
Spend style
Fine-tune (optional)
Interests
Avoid
Free. No sign-up. We never take payment to place anything in your plan.

The stops we'd build a Berlin trip around

One honest pick per place, and why. Open any for the full verdict. The planner arranges these into your days for you.

Good to know before you plan

Where we would spend carefully, or not at all.

  • Berlin TV Tower (Fernsehturm) Worth it with caveats Worth it for the view if you book a timed Fast View slot and go on a clear day. As a walk-up on a busy afternoon with no reservation, it is an overpriced wait for an elevator, so do not do that.
  • Checkpoint Charlie Tourist trap See it, but keep expectations low. The booth is a replica in a tacky, crowded intersection and it's a five-minute photo, not a moving experience.
  • Pergamon Museum Worth it with caveats Worth it only if you go in knowing about the closure and you are fine with the Panorama as a stand-in. If you came for the Ishtar Gate or the full Pergamon Museum, wait, or pick another Museum Island museum instead.
  • Museum Island Worth it with caveats Museum Island is worth your time, just not as a blind every-museum marathon. Start with the Neues Museum and the free exterior, then add a second museum only if its subject genuinely interests you.

Berlin planner FAQ

How does the Berlin itinerary planner work?

Tell it your dates, pace, party and interests. It builds a day-by-day Berlin plan only from places we have actually reviewed, like Berlin TV Tower (Fernsehturm), groups each day so it stays walkable, and flags the tourist traps to skip. You can regenerate, save and share it.

What is worth booking ahead in Berlin?

Berlin TV Tower (Fernsehturm) is the one most people should book in advance. Worth it for the view if you book a timed Fast View slot and go on a clear day.

How many days do you need in Berlin?

Two to three days covers the essentials for most travelers. The planner lets you set anywhere from one to seven days and fills each one around what is genuinely worth your time in Berlin.

Is the Berlin planner free?

Yes. No sign-up, and we never take payment to place anything in your plan. You book tickets through trusted partners at the same price as their own sites.

Want to browse instead? See everything to do in Berlin, or read how we pick.