- 130 km South of Munich
- ~2 hours By car, each way
- ~4 hours Train + bus, each way
- No direct Train to the castle
- 30–45 min Uphill walk from village
Quick comparison: four ways from Munich
| Method | Door-to-door time | Approx. cost / person | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Train + bus (DIY) | ~4–4.5 h each way | €30–45 round trip (regional ticket) | Budget and solo travellers comfortable with connections |
| Driving | ~2 h each way | Rental + fuel + ~€6–12 parking | Groups of 3–4 splitting a car; flexible itineraries |
| Guided coach tour | ~10–10.5 h full day | ~€80–90 (premium €200+) | First-timers, no car, want tickets & logistics handled |
Whichever you pick, remember the ticket is the other half of the puzzle: the interior is timed-entry and sells out in summer. Our companion guide to Neuschwanstein tickets, prices and booking covers why entry itself can be the hardest part of the day.
Other experiences you might enjoy
However you reach it, Neuschwanstein Castle is only part of a great Bavarian day. From Munich, popular pairings add King Ludwig II's Linderhof Palace, his childhood home Hohenschwangau Castle, and the woodcarving village of Oberammergau. Some day trips fold in the Alpine Coaster or the emerald lake Königssee near Berchtesgaden, and the free Marienbrücke viewpoint over the Pöllat Gorge is the classic photo stop. Independent travellers heading via Füssen can also grab a skip-the-line castle ticket to guarantee entry.
Train + bus: the cheapest do-it-yourself route
This is the cheapest way to do it yourself, but it's a four-leg journey, not a straight shot.
Leg 1 — Munich Hauptbahnhof to Füssen
Regional trains (RE/RB, sometimes with one change) run roughly hourly and take about 2 hours. They're covered by Bavaria-wide regional day tickets — the Bayern-Ticket or the current Deutschland-Ticket regional variants — usually the cheapest fare when travelling with companions, since one ticket covers several people at a flat rate. Regional trains don't require seat reservations.
Leg 2 — Füssen station to Hohenschwangau village
RVO/OVG bus lines 73 and 78 connect Füssen station to Hohenschwangau in about 10 minutes, running frequently in season. Regional day tickets typically cover this short bus hop too, so if you bought a Bayern-Ticket for the train you generally don't pay again for the bus.
Leg 3 — Village to castle
From Hohenschwangau you still have to get up the hill: a 30–45 minute uphill walk on a paved but steep road, a shuttle bus partway up (small fee, doesn't reach the entrance), or a horse-drawn carriage (also stops short, and doesn't run in bad weather). Whichever you choose, budget a final 5–15 minute walk regardless.
Realistic total: door-to-door each way is closer to 3.5–4.5 hours once you add the village-to-castle leg and connection waits — so a same-day return really is a full day, not a half-day errand.
Prefer the train but not the coordination? Go small-group by rail
$162 · Small-group · Rail-based day trip from Munich · Free 24-hour cancellation
If the scenery of the rail route appeals but juggling the train, the bus connection and the timed castle slot doesn't, a small-group tour by train is the middle path. A guide handles the Munich–Füssen rail leg, the bus transfer to Hohenschwangau, and the castle timing — so you keep the relaxed train experience without owning every connection yourself.
- Round-trip regional rail from Munich, guided throughout
- Bus transfer from Füssen to Hohenschwangau handled for you
- Small-group format rather than a full coach
- Free cancellation up to 24 hours before
A good fit for travellers who want the rail journey but none of the missed-connection risk.
Driving from Munich
The route is straightforward: A95 motorway south, then B17 into Schwangau. Driving time is about 2 hours each way in normal traffic, making this the fastest door-to-door option.
Parking is in the village lots (P1–P4) near Hohenschwangau, priced per day rather than per hour — plan for a single flat daily fee of roughly €6–12. From any lot you're in the same position as train travellers: a walk, shuttle, or carriage up to the castle.
Driving makes most sense if you're already renting a car for a wider Bavaria/Alps trip, or if there are three or four of you splitting the cost — split four ways, a rental usually beats four round-trip train tickets. It's a poor fit for solo travellers or short city-break visitors who'd otherwise have no reason to rent.
The all-in-one full-day coach from Munich
$88 · ★ 4.6 (15,000+ reviews) · ~10.5 hours · Free 24-hour cancellation
Several operators run full-day coaches from central Munich (a common pickup is Karlsplatz), handling the whole chain — transport, timing, and often the castle ticket — in one booking. These run about 10–10.5 hours door-to-door and usually add a second stop such as Linderhof Palace, since the round-trip drive alone eats several hours and operators use that time productively rather than running a Neuschwanstein-only shuttle.
You give up the flexibility of your own schedule and pay more than the DIY train fare, but you remove every failure point in the chain — missed connections, sold-out tickets, and the uphill-walk logistics become someone else's problem to manage.
- Round-trip coach from Karlsplatz 21, Munich
- Neuschwanstein + Linderhof in one day
- Optional on-board castle-ticket purchase (~€42 adult / €10 child)
- Free cancellation up to 24 hours before
Which option fits which traveller
- Solo budget travellers comfortable with public transit: train + bus. Cheapest option, and the connections are well-signed even without German.
- Families with young children or limited mobility: a guided tour removes the multi-leg coordination and the risk of a missed connection turning into a stressful day; the uphill walk is unavoidable either way, though shuttle/carriage options exist from the village.
- Groups of 3–4 travelling together: driving usually wins on total cost and flexibility, provided someone's happy navigating and you don't mind paying for parking.
- First-time visitors without a car who want zero logistics: a bundled coach — especially one that also includes castle entry — is the lowest-stress way to guarantee you actually get inside. A small-group van is a comfortable step up if you'd rather not be on a big coach.
- Anyone travelling in winter: shuttle buses, horse carriages, and the Marienbrücke viewpoint can be suspended for ice or snow regardless of how you reach the village — check current conditions before you commit to a plan built around them.
Practical tips, whatever method you pick
- The final village-to-castle leg (walk, shuttle, or carriage) is common to every option — budget the same 30–45 minutes for it either way.
- Comfortable, sturdy shoes matter more than which transport method you pick; the paved road up is steep and can be slippery in rain.
- If your day includes a timed castle-entry ticket, work backward from that time rather than forward from your departure — arriving at the village 1.5–2 hours before your slot gives enough buffer for the uphill leg and any queueing.
- Regional train and bus schedules, fares, and the exact regional-day-ticket coverage rules change periodically — check Deutsche Bahn (bahn.de) and the RVO/OVG operator directly before travel.
Munich-to-Neuschwanstein transport FAQ
Is there a direct train from Munich to Neuschwanstein Castle?
No. There is no direct train and no train station in the village below the castle. The DIY route is a regional train from Munich Hauptbahnhof to Füssen (about 2 hours), then RVO/OVG bus #73 or #78 to Hohenschwangau (about 10 minutes), then a 30–45 minute uphill walk, shuttle, or horse carriage up to the castle.
How long does it take to get from Munich to Neuschwanstein?
Driving is about 2 hours each way. The DIY train-and-bus route is roughly 3.5–4.5 hours door-to-door once you add the village-to-castle leg and connection waits, so a same-day return is a full day. A guided coach tour runs about 10–10.5 hours door-to-door but usually adds a second stop such as Linderhof Palace.
What is the cheapest way to get to Neuschwanstein from Munich?
The train-and-bus route is the cheapest, around €30–45 round trip if you use a Bavaria-wide regional day ticket (Bayern-Ticket or the regional Deutschland-Ticket variant), which covers several travellers at a flat rate and usually includes the short bus hop from Füssen to Hohenschwangau. Splitting a rental car three or four ways can be competitive too.
Should I take a guided tour or travel to Neuschwanstein independently?
Independent train-and-bus travel is cheapest and best for confident, budget-minded travellers. A guided coach tour costs more but removes every failure point — missed connections, sold-out timed tickets, and the uphill logistics become the operator's problem — which suits first-time visitors, families, and anyone without a car who wants zero coordination.