I’ve even heard that in some places, there is a fee for entering the city.
Jugendherbergen (Youth Hostels) are everywhere in Germany, making travel affordable even in expensive cities especially if you’re under 28 and/or don’t mind sharing a room.
The same might apply in other countries, I wouldn’t know. Except in France where I know it’s not the case because they are sadly underfunded.
I rarely hear people around me say that they have traveled to Germany. Maybe it’s because Germany is not as popular as Italy and France in terms of reputation. In my stereotypes, it seems that Germany doesn’t have anything else attractive except its industry.
Germany has tons of awesome old castles, nice inner cities and some cute villages with old architecture. If you like pork then you will also like German food.
Some places I can recommend are Heidelberg, Freiburg, Dinkelsbühl. Berlin has loads of history and techno if you’re into that.
If you like nature, you can do lovely bike tours along rivers, along the Lahn, Rhein, Danube, etc. Alternatively go for a hike in the black forest, the Odenwald, Saxon Switzerland or the Alps
Don’t just go anywhere though, some cities were bombed to shit in WW2 and then badly rebuilt.
I hope that Germany can preserve its traditional industrial system just as it preserves those traditional and ancient castles. It should not engage in the so-called new energy vehicles. Tesla is just rubbish.
On second thought, maybe stay in china.
jokes aside what made you say that? :D Tesla is indeed rubbish but electric vehicles are still better than those that burn fossil fuels. Most electric cars in Europe are made in Europe or Asia, and are not Tesla’s.
Where I want to go is my freedom. It’s not up to you to tell me that I should stay in China.I’m not targeting Tesla specifically. I’m saying that all new energy electric vehicles are industrial waste.
I was joking. Again, what makes you say that?
Industry is irrelevant for tourism. No, Germany absolutely has beautiful towns and landscapes, although it’s not like the countries you mentioned where almost every place in a popular region meets that definition. That’s where travel blogs and guides come in handy to find the places worth visiting.
Of course, I like Germany very much. My car is a German Mercedes-Benz, and my coffee grinder is a German Comandante. Many of my things are from Germany. However, I have never been to Germany.
What would you consider a low price level? My mom and I have been to a lot of places that aren’t traditionally known as cheap, but we usually stay in places with a kitchen (aparthotels, mainly, we avoid airbnb) and grocery shop so we spend far less on food than a lot of people would. We also travel outside of peak season, primarily to avoid the crowds but it’s also less expensive.
I think the low prices are as follows: 20 euros per person for each lunch or dinner, 50 euros for accommodation in a hotel, and 1 euro for using the toilet.
I think most of Europe has places that can accommodate that, especially if you travel outside of big cities. I’d put more of my budget into a place to stay and slightly less into food, but that’s my personal preference, and I’ve found tons of meals out for a lot less than that. I don’t think we spent more than maybe 40 euros for a meal for two anywhere in Spain, including wine/beer, and many were more like 25. Even Berlin and Munich were pretty reasonable and we made up the difference by going to Aldi for some of our breakfast/dinner food.
Low price compared to what currency? That’s the key question.
One can live a day with around 150 euros per person.
Sorry, I understand now. That’s a lot of money. I don’t find that low priced. And I live in a very country. Australia.
Where do you come from, out of interest? If you don’t mind.
And I live in a very country.
Very country! Many joy! So people!
china
Where? España
Deutschland?
Vilnius has a very nice old city centre, great food and very good beers. It’s pretty cheap and might fit in well with a round trip in the baltics. Haven’t been to Latvia or Estonia yet, but the people I know that have been, have been pretty positive about it.
Fr! The old town really has its own unique charm. It’s like a whole different world, full of those old - school vibes that you just can’t find anywhere else. So dope!
Czech Republic maybe, due to them having a different (and lower) currency? Prague is beautiful and Brno, while smaller, is quaint.
Ah prague, the place where scammers who do nothing but evolutionise from umbrellas to bus drivers
I’ve been to Prague 7 times and never scammed
Greece
Hungary
Just avoid anything that isn’t Budapest x)
Here are some pictures:
You mention 150€/day in the comment thread. I’m struggling to think where in the world you couldn’t stay on that budget if you spend some time looking for cheaper accommodation (hostel or something like airbnb) and mind a bit where you eat. Australia seems (per Wikipedia) to have the highest minimum wage at 18$/hour, ×8h to € comes to 127€/day. Sure, temporary accommodation costs like five times more than more permanent places, but in terms of food and transport you can pretty much do whatever the locals do so that, on the whole, you should be able to meet that budget pretty much anywhere
In Europe, Iceland might be the only place where you’d really have to plan ahead to get to an average of 150€/day as tourist. It’s Europe’s most sparsely populated country and lots of things need to be imported, making essentials like food expensive and accommodation options few and far between. If you don’t want to drive a long distance every day (outside of the wider Reykjavík area at least) you’ll easily spend three quarters of that daily budget on accommodation, and with food being expensive even in supermarkets and needing a rental car to get anywhere, you’ll exceed the budget on a lot of the days
So that’s challenge mode! I’m curious what values people who tried to cheapskate Iceland get to. We were at 290€/day for 2 persons. That’s including the rental car, eating out most days (not at expensive places necessarily, but sometimes simply the only place), and we booked reasonably priced but not always the cheapest option for accommodation. This price excludes costs of attractions like the lava show, boat tour, swimming pool, etc.—the country is plenty beautiful to travel to without needing those necessarily, though I’d recommend all of the above. This amount is for 2 persons, but the car and rooms don’t scale much when you’re alone so a per-person cost price wouldn’t be fair
Only fees I’ve ever heard of were fees for violating clean air districts with a car that hasn’t paid the tax or didn’t qualify.
I’ve traveled all over Germany and never was charged a fee to enter a city.
Is there something called “Beherbergungsabgabe” or “Kulturförderabgabe” in Germany?
Potentially for citizens, or those living in country on a visa. But visiting I’ve never been asked to pay any taxes beyond buying things.
Tallinn Estonia is amazing and for some reason not mentioned yet
Dunno current status, but a few years back Croatia was a popular place to visit. I don’t have the details, but it was recommended to me at the time by multiple parties of the reasonable cost range.
I have to say that “Croatian Rhapsody” is really amazing. It’s so great!
Please, if you don’t have any experience traveling in Europe, don’t reply to my post. I don’t want to reply to any asshole who tells me to use Google to search. I think these people are born with a lack of ability to communicate with others.