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Römerberg and the Altstadt, Germany
Römerberg and the Altstadt

Hesse

Römerberg and the Altstadt

Frankfurt's half-timbered old-town square and the reconstructed Dom-Römer quarter — the postcard city that survived between the banking towers, best walked early before the tour groups.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Frankfurt, Germany

Opening hours

Open access (always open). The square and old-town lanes are public and free at any hour; the cathedral, the Römer's interior, museums and cafes around the square keep their own daytime hours, busiest at midday and during the Christmas market. Confirm current hours on the official site.

Tickets

Free — no ticket needed to walk the Römerberg, the Ostzeile and the Dom-Römer quarter. You only pay if you go inside the cathedral tower, visit the museums on the nearby Museumsufer, or eat and drink at the cafes around the square.

Time needed

Around an hour for a relaxed loop of the square and the rebuilt quarter to the cathedral; longer with a museum or the cathedral tower.

In short

Visiting Römerberg and the Altstadt

Römerberg is Frankfurt's central old-town square: the half-timbered Römer town hall, the photogenic Ostzeile houses and the adjacent rebuilt Dom-Römer quarter linking it to the cathedral. Almost all of it is faithful post-war and recent reconstruction rather than original, but it's the postcard Frankfurt that survives among the banking towers. It is free to wander, small, and best walked early before the tour groups and cruise crowds arrive.

The postcard between the towers

Frankfurt is a city of glass banking towers, which makes the Römerberg something of a relief: a compact old-town square of stepped-gable, half-timbered facades that looks like every postcard of Germany you’ve ever seen. The star turn is the Römer, the city’s town hall since the fifteenth century with its distinctive triple gable, facing the Ostzeile — a row of richly painted timber houses that photographs beautifully. Just beyond, the recently completed Dom-Römer quarter threads a lane of reconstructed old-town houses across to the red-sandstone cathedral.

There’s an honest caveat worth carrying with you: almost none of this is original. The medieval Altstadt was destroyed in 1944, so what you see is faithful reconstruction — some post-war, the Dom-Römer quarter only finished in recent years. That doesn’t make it a fake; it’s genuinely handsome and atmospheric, and rebuilding it was a deliberate choice. Just don’t arrive expecting an untouched medieval centre.

Doing it right

The whole thing is free to wander and refreshingly small — you can loop the square and walk the Dom-Römer lane to the cathedral in under an hour. You only pay if you climb the cathedral tower, visit one of the museums, or sit down at the cafe tables that spread across the square.

Because it’s compact, it crowds fast. Come early in the morning, before the day-trip coaches and river-cruise groups arrive, and you get the facades, the clear photos and a bit of quiet; by midday it’s shoulder-to-shoulder, and in December it’s swallowed by the (excellent, but heaving) Christmas market. To build it into a fuller half-day, carry on to the cathedral, cross the Main to the museum embankment, or head to Sachsenhausen for an apple-wine tavern. As a quick, free dose of old Frankfurt amid the skyscrapers, it’s well worth the hour.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Frankfurt city guide.

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Römerberg and the Altstadt FAQs

Is Frankfurt's old town original or rebuilt?
Almost entirely rebuilt. The medieval Altstadt was destroyed in 1944, so the Römer town hall, the picturesque Ostzeile houses and the recent Dom-Römer quarter are faithful reconstructions rather than originals. Knowing that, it's still genuinely attractive and atmospheric — just don't expect an untouched medieval centre like Rothenburg.
Is the Römerberg worth visiting?
Yes, for an hour. It's small and busy, but it's the one corner of postcard old Frankfurt amid the glass banking towers, and the recently rebuilt Dom-Römer lanes leading to the cathedral are a pleasant stroll. Pair it with the cathedral, the Museumsufer across the river or a Sachsenhausen apple-wine tavern to make a fuller half-day.
When is the best time to go?
Early morning, before the day-trip and river-cruise groups fill the square. It's compact, so it crowds quickly around midday and is at its busiest during the famous Christmas market in December. An early loop gives you the half-timbered facades and clear photos before the crowds and the cafe tables spread out.