Wartburg Castle above Eisenach, Thuringia — a Romanesque castle on a forested ridge, where Martin Luther translated the New Testament in 1521–22 and St Elisabeth of Hungary lived in the 13th century. UNESCO 1999.

Stand in the room where Luther translated the Bible into German

Wartburg Castle skip-the-line — 900 years of Thuringian history on a forested ridge above Eisenach: Romanesque great hall, Luther's cell, Minnesingers' Hall, St Elisabeth's rooms.

See ticket options
  • 1067 Founded on a Thuringian ridge above Eisenach
  • 1521–22 Luther's Bible-translation hideout
  • UNESCO World Heritage Site, 1999
  • 450 K / yr Annual castle visitors

Choose your ticket

Adult

Ages 19+

€30

  • Castle palas + Luther's Cell + Minnesingers' Hall
  • Treasury + St Elisabeth rooms
  • Skip-the-line priority queue
  • Photo permission included
Reserve my adult ticket

Youth

Ages 7–18

€20

  • Full castle interior
  • Skip-the-line priority queue
  • Free under age 7 at the gate
Reserve my youth ticket

Reduced

Disabled · students · trainees

€24

  • Full castle interior
  • Skip-the-line priority queue
  • Bring valid ID at entry
Reserve my reduced ticket
4.8 from 42 verified travellers
Friedrich S.
Basel, Switzerland
“Stood in Luther's Cell for a full minute without saying anything. That's the room where German as a modern language began. The desk, the ink-stain on the wall where the tale says he threw an inkwell at the devil — it's all there.”
March 2026
Angela T.
Copenhagen, Denmark
“The guided tour is worth adding. Without it, you're looking at old rooms. With it, you understand why the 19th-century restoration happened, what Wagner was doing with Tannhäuser, and how Luther worked in ten months what took committees decades.”
February 2026
Henrik N.
Bergen, Norway
“Day trip from Frankfurt. 1h45m each way by IC train, comfortable. Bus 10 up, shuttle down. The view from the castle walls across the Thuringian Forest is the reason Luther called it 'mein Patmos'. Peaceful in a way nowhere in Frankfurt is.”
January 2026
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5-minute audio guide

Your 5-minute Wartburg pre-visit briefing

A short, calm narrative — Luther's eleven-week translation, the Romanesque Palas, Wagner's singing contest, and how to get up the hill from Eisenach. Listen on the train from Frankfurt or Berlin.

  • Luther's ten months as 'Junker Jörg' — and the eleven weeks that gave us modern German
  • The Luther Room: what's original, what's nineteenth-century, and the inkwell stain
  • The twelfth-century Palas: best-preserved Romanesque great hall in Germany
  • The Minnesingers' Hall: Moritz von Schwind's painting and Wagner's Tannhäuser
  • Why you need an English-tour slot booked in advance
  • Getting up the hill: bus 10, the shuttle, the donkeys, and the cobble path

Recorded for Wartburg Castle Tickets concierge. Free to download.

About Wartburg Castle

The Wartburg was founded in 1067 by Ludwig der Springer on a forested ridge above Eisenach. Over the next 900 years it collected everything that made German medieval history: the Minnesingers' Contest of 1207 (the one Wagner dramatised in *Tannhäuser*), St Elisabeth of Hungary's childhood marriage and short life there (1211–1228), and — the headline — Martin Luther's ten-month hideout in 1521–1522 after the Diet of Worms, during which he translated the New Testament from Greek into German.

Luther's Bible is why the German language exists in its modern form. He worked in a plain, narrow cell you can still enter — a small timbered room with a wooden desk, an ink pot, and a view across the Thuringian Forest. Nineteenth-century German nationalists turned the whole castle into a shrine to Luther, the Reformation, and German unification, restoring it heavily between 1838 and 1890.

Today the Wartburg holds three things worth the trip: the 12th-century Romanesque Palas (the Great Hall, with the best medieval court architecture in Germany), the Luther Room (unchanged since he worked there), and the Minnesingers' Hall painted with Moritz von Schwind frescoes in the 1850s. UNESCO listed it in 1999 as an outstanding monument to the German feudal period and to Luther's Reformation.

Practical information

Opening hours
Apr–Oct: daily 09:00 – 17:00 (last admission 15:30). Nov–Mar: daily 09:00 – 15:30 (last admission 14:00). Closed 24–25 December.
Address
Auf der Wartburg 1, 99817 Eisenach, Thuringia, Germany
Getting there from Eisenach
From Eisenach Hbf (rail station): bus line 10 to 'Wartburg' (15 min, hourly), then 5-min walk + a steep 15-min climb OR use the shuttle bus from the car park. Taxi from station is ~€15.
Getting there from Frankfurt
Regional + IC train Frankfurt Hbf → Eisenach (1h45m direct, every 2h). A realistic long day trip.
Getting there from Berlin
Direct IC train Berlin Hbf → Eisenach (3h10m). Better as an overnight than a day trip from Berlin.
Time needed
2–2.5 hours for the full castle including Palas, Luther Room, Minnesingers' Hall, Treasury. Add 30 min for the shuttle-or-climb logistics. A half-day total.
The climb
From the main car park to the castle entrance is a 10–15 min steep footpath. A shuttle bus runs regularly in season. Donkey rides available summer weekends for families (honestly — they still do it).
Accessibility
The castle courtyard and some ground-floor rooms are accessible. Luther's Cell, the Palas upper floors, and many transitional stairs are not. Contact us before booking if mobility is a concern.
Photography
Permitted without flash or tripod inside. Luther's Room is the single most-photographed; arrive early. Drones prohibited.

About our service

Wartburg Tickets acts as a facilitator to assist international visitors in purchasing skip-the-line tickets directly from the Wartburg-Stiftung Eisenach, the official operator. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service. Our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, the official ticket site is wartburg.de.

Frequently asked

What's included in the skip-the-line ticket?

Priority entry at the castle gate, plus the full interior circuit: the Romanesque Palas (Great Hall, Singers' Hall, Elisabeth's Bower), Luther's Cell (the room where he translated the New Testament), the Minnesingers' Hall with its 1850s frescoes, the Treasury, and the south wing. The guided-tour tier adds a 60-min English walk-through.

How do I actually get up to the castle?

Three options from the main car park / bus stop: (1) a 10–15 min steep footpath, (2) a shuttle bus that runs every few minutes in peak season for €3, or (3) donkey rides on summer weekends (not a joke). From Eisenach station, bus 10 drops you at the start of any of these.

Is Luther's Cell really the original room?

The room is the authentic surviving cell where Luther worked from May 1521 to March 1522. The wooden desk and the writing materials are reconstructions (the original desk was broken up for relics in the 16th century). The walls, the window, and the alcove — all original. The famous ink-splatter legend about Luther throwing an inkwell at the devil is probably a 19th-century embellishment.

How long does a visit take?

2–2.5 hours for the full castle circuit at a steady pace. The guided tour adds 60 minutes. With the shuttle-or-climb logistics, plan a half-day (3.5–4 hours door-to-door from Eisenach station).

Is it a realistic day trip?

From Frankfurt: yes (1h45m train each way). From Berlin: long day, better as overnight. From Leipzig or Weimar: easy. Pair with Eisenach town — Bach's birthplace (house is a 15-min walk from the station) for a full day of German cultural pilgrimage.

Can we change the date?

Tickets are issued for a specific date and are non-transferable once issued. If your plans change, reply to your confirmation email at least 48 hours before your date and we will rebook your visit to any open slot in the operator's calendar.

Is it suitable for children?

Yes — kids 8+ tend to love the Luther story (especially the inkwell legend), the courtyards, the Bergfried tower, and the summer donkey rides. The climb up is a lot for small legs; take the shuttle. Under-6s free at the gate.

What's your refund policy?

Tickets are issued for a specific date and are non-transferable once issued. If your plans change, reply to your confirmation email at least 48 hours before your date and we will rebook your visit to any open slot in the operator's calendar.

Is the Wartburg the castle in 'Luther' (the 2003 film)?

Yes — the Luther Room scenes in the 2003 Joseph Fiennes film were partly shot on location at the Wartburg, and the establishing shots of the hilltop castle are the real thing. Several other 19th-century paintings of Luther in the cell (most famously Hugo Vogel's) depict this exact room. Standing in it after seeing the film is the most common 'I came specifically for this' moment we hear from American and British visitors.

Can I bring my dog?

Dogs on a lead are welcome in the outer courtyards and on the climb up, but not inside the historic interior, the Palas, the Luther Room, or the Minnesingers' Hall — that is, not on the guided tour. Assistance dogs are admitted everywhere. There is no dog-sitting service at the gate, so plan accordingly if your tour is booked .

How fit do I need to be?

Moderately fit. The 250-metre climb from the upper car park to the castle gate gains about 50 metres of elevation on cobbled path; most able-bodied adults manage it in 10–15 minutes with one breather. Inside the castle, the tour involves narrow spiral staircases between the Palas levels and frequent uneven floors. The shuttle bus solves the outer climb for anyone with knee, heart, or breathing limitations, but the interior staircases are unavoidable on the standard tour.

Is there parking?

Yes — two paid car parks at the foot of the access road. P2 (upper) is closer and saves about a third of the climb but fills by 10:00 on summer weekends; P1 (lower) is larger and adds about 10 minutes' walking to the gate. Both are paid by the day . Coach drop-off is at the upper car park.

Can I get married at the Wartburg?

Yes — the Wartburg-Stiftung licenses the chapel and several historic rooms for civil and religious weddings, and Eisenach Standesamt (registry office) holds civil ceremonies on site. Bookings are handled directly by the foundation and run a year or more in advance. We do not handle weddings — contact wartburg.de directly.

Is there a gift shop?

Yes — a Wartburg-Stiftung shop near the gate sells a curated range of books on Luther and the Reformation, period reproductions, prints, and Thuringian craft items. It avoids the worst of typical tourist tat. A small selection of English-language Luther biographies and Wartburg history books makes it the best place to pick up a serious souvenir.

Is the castle floodlit at night?

Yes — the castle is illuminated after sunset year-round, and the night view from the access road below is one of the iconic Eisenach images. The interior closes after the last tour, but you can walk the access road and outer courtyards into the early evening for photography. The view from the Bergfried tower at dusk in summer is particularly worthwhile.

Do you sell single-tier tickets only, or can I add things later?

You can add Bach-Haus combo, the Frankfurt rail bundle, or upgrade to the English guided tour at any point until 24 hours before your slot. After that, additions go through the on-the-day Wartburg-Stiftung ticket window. The fastest path is to choose at booking — that lets us secure aligned timing.