North Rhine-Westphalia
Düsseldorf
Stay near the Altstadt or Königsallee, hop in from DUS in 13 minutes, and plan for two nights — that's about all this Rhineland city asks of you.
Best length
2 nights (3 if pairing with Cologne)
Airport
Düsseldorf (DUS), ~8km north of the centre
Airport to centre
SkyTrain + S11 to Hauptbahnhof ~13 min; taxi ~20 min
Best base
Altstadt for nightlife; Stadtmitte/Kö for shopping and quiet
In short
Düsseldorf at a glance
Düsseldorf works best as a short 2-night city break or a shopping-and-Altstadt long weekend: stay within walking distance of the old town or the Königsallee, drink Altbier in the 'longest bar in the world', walk the Rheinuferpromenade at sunset, and use the U-Bahn rather than taxis. Most first-timers over-plan it and find two full days is plenty before pairing it with Cologne 25 minutes down the line.
The short version
- Stay near the Altstadt or the Königsallee — both keep you walking distance from the riverside and the U-Bahn.
- Drink Altbier the local way: the round dark beer keeps coming in 0.25l glasses until you put your beermat on top.
- Pair Düsseldorf with Cologne, 25 minutes away by frequent regional train, rather than trying to fill three full days here.
- Use the SkyTrain plus S11 from DUS for the simplest arrival — it is about 13 minutes to the Hauptbahnhof and far cheaper than a taxi.
- Two full days covers the Altstadt, the Kö, the MedienHafen architecture and the Rhine promenade without rushing.
Düsseldorf is two cities in a tight loop: the buttoned-up fashion capital of the Königsallee and the Kö-Bogen arcades, and the riotous Altstadt next door, where 260-odd bars earn the boast of the ‘longest bar in the world’ and a round dark Altbier keeps arriving until you cover the glass with your beermat. The mistake UK visitors make is treating it like Berlin or Munich and blocking out three or four sightseeing days — there simply aren’t that many headline sights, and you’ll feel it on day three. The trick is to lean into what the city is actually good at: shopping, river terraces and an evening on the Altbier.
Two nights is the honest answer for most first trips — one for the Altstadt and the Rheinuferpromenade, one for the Kö and the Gehry towers of the MedienHafen. If you want longer, don’t pad Düsseldorf; ride the regional train 25 minutes south to Cologne and let the two cities share the week. Below, the structured planning — where to base yourself, the 13-minute hop in from DUS, what it costs in pounds, and how the trade-fair calendar can wreck a hotel budget — picks up from here.
Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.
Top things to do in Düsseldorf
Altstadt — 'die längste Theke der Welt'
Düsseldorf's old town crams roughly 260 bars and pubs into about half a square kilometre, which earns it the nickname 'the longest bar in the world'. You come here to drink Altbier at the brewery taps — Uerige, Schumacher, Füchschen — rather than for monuments. It is free to wander, an Altbier runs about €2.50 a glass, and a weekday visit is your best shot at a seat.
Königsallee (the Kö)
The Königsallee — the Kö — is Düsseldorf's grand shopping boulevard: a tree-lined ornamental canal flanked on one side by flagship designer stores and the curved Kö-Bogen arcades. For many visitors it is the reason to come. It is free to walk and worth a slow stroll even if you are buying nothing — the architecture, the water and the people-watching are the point.
Where to stay first
The areas that make a first visit easier — not an exhaustive directory.
Altstadt
££ mid-rangeThe old-town core and the heart of the brewery scene — walk everywhere, fall out of a bar into bed. Brilliant for a first short trip if you want nightlife on the doorstep, but expect Friday and Saturday noise until the small hours.
Best for: Nightlife, first short trips, Altbier crawls
Stadtmitte / Königsallee
££ mid-rangeThe grid around the Kö and Schadowstraße shopping: quieter at night than the Altstadt, well served by U-Bahn, and an easy walk to both the old town and the main station. The sensible default if you want sleep and shopping.
Best for: Shopping, couples, quieter nights
Pempelfort / Zooviertel
£ valueA leafier residential district just north of the centre with independent cafés, the Hofgarten park and better-value rooms. Slightly removed from the action but two or three U-Bahn stops from everything.
Best for: Value, repeat visitors, a local evening
Friedrichstadt (around Hauptbahnhof)
£ valueHandy for early trains and the airport S-Bahn, with the cheapest beds in town, but the immediate station area is the least appealing part of the centre. Fine for one night before an onward train, not for a whole stay.
Best for: Early departures, budget one-nighters
Airport to city centre
| Option | Time | Cost | Book ahead? |
|---|---|---|---|
| SkyTrain + S11 to Hauptbahnhof | ~13 min | VRR single about €3.40 | Simplest and cheapest; trains every 20 min |
| S1 / RE regional train to Hauptbahnhof | ~12-15 min | about €3.40-€5 | From the separate DUS airport long-distance station |
| Taxi to the centre | ~15-20 min | usually €25-€35 | Good for late arrivals or heavy luggage |
When to go
Sweet spot: Late April to September for terrace weather on the Rheinuferpromenade, plus mid-July for the Größte Kirmes am Rhein funfair and late November for the Christmas markets around the Marktplatz. May, June and September give the best balance of warm evenings, open river terraces and lower fair-week pricing.
Summer is busiest and best for the riverside and beer gardens; the big trade fairs scattered through spring and autumn spike hotel prices regardless of weather. Late November to Christmas brings markets and the Altbier-warming season but cold, grey days. January to March is cheapest and quietest unless a major Messe lands.
What it costs
UK return flights to Düsseldorf (DUS) are often £35-£90 off-peak when booked ahead on easyJet, Eurowings or BA from London, Manchester, Edinburgh and Birmingham; trade-fair weeks and short-notice fares push that to £150-£250.
Daily budget per person
Düsseldorf's prices swing hardest on the Messe (trade-fair) calendar, not the season — a €90 room can become €300 during a big fair. The everyday saver is the Altstadt itself: a round dark Altbier is about €2.50 and the breweries do hearty, cheap plates.
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