Third Reich & WWII History in Berlin: A Full-Day Itinerary
Berlin was the capital of the Third Reich, and confronting that history is one of the most sobering things you can do in the city. This full-day itinerary follows the sites of Nazi rule and the Second World War — from a guided walk through the government quarter to the Sachsenhausen memorial — treated with the seriousness and respect they demand, with the best-rated tours to book for each.
At a glance
- 1Third Reich walking tour in the centre
- 2Topography of Terror & WWII sites
- 3Sachsenhausen Memorial half-day
- 4Reflection at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews
Morning: a Third Reich walking tour
Start with a guided Third Reich walking tour through the historic centre, where knowledgeable guides point out the sites of Nazi power that once stood around Wilhelmstrasse and the Brandenburg Gate. You will learn how Hitler came to power, where the key ministries stood, and how the regime reshaped the city. Much has been deliberately left unmarked, so a guide is essential to read this difficult landscape.
Midday: Topography of Terror & WWII sites
Continue to the Topography of Terror, the documentation centre built on the former site of the Gestapo and SS headquarters, standing beside a surviving stretch of the Berlin Wall. Its free exhibition traces the apparatus of Nazi terror in unflinching detail. Nearby WWII sites, including the bunker area and the ruins captured in 1945, are best understood on a guided history walk that connects them into a single narrative.
Afternoon: Sachsenhausen Memorial
Take a guided half-day trip north of the city to the Sachsenhausen Memorial, the site of a former concentration camp preserved as a place of remembrance. This is a solemn visit, and a licensed guide brings the necessary context and sensitivity, telling the stories of those imprisoned here. Allow several hours and travel with a respectful, quiet frame of mind; it is a memorial, not a sightseeing stop.
Evening: a moment of reflection
Return to the centre and close the day at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe near the Brandenburg Gate, walking among its 2,711 concrete stelae as the light fades. It is a quiet, powerful space to reflect on everything the day has covered, and on why Berlin chooses to remember its darkest history so openly and honestly.
Book the experiences in this itinerary
Top-rated tours for exactly what this plan recommends in Berlin — prices per person.







