Self-Guided Walking Tour in Lindau

8 Stops 2.5 km ~1.7 hours
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Walking tour route map of Lindau
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Why Walk Lindau? A Self-Guided Tour

Lindau is a town built on an island in Lake Constance, tucked into the corner where Germany, Austria and Switzerland almost touch. The old town sits on roughly 70 hectares of car-light cobblestone, which means you can walk the entire historic core in an afternoon without ever waiting at a traffic light. On a clear day the Alps line up across the water behind the harbor. That single view is why most people come, and it is the reason this walk is a loop: you start and finish at the harbor, so you get the postcard twice, once in morning light and once on the way back.

This route is a tight 2.5 km circle through the eight things actually worth your time. It runs from the famous harbor mouth, past Germany's southernmost lighthouse, up into the medieval lanes around the Diebsturm and Peterskirche, along the baroque main street, then back down to the lion and the old harbor tower. No filler, no detours to half-interesting plaques. Doing it on foot in this order matters because the island is small and easy to crisscross badly, doubling back on yourself and missing the quiet upper lanes entirely.

Why walk it instead of just wandering? Because the good stuff is layered. The harbor is obvious, but the oldest church on the whole lake hides one street back, and the finest patrician house is two minutes from a tower that was once the town jail. Wander randomly and you will spend your whole visit on the waterfront promenade with the other day-trippers. Follow this loop and you see the working town behind the postcard.

The Route: 8 Stops

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1. Lindauer Hafen
2. Neuer Leuchtturm
3. Diebsturm
4. Peterskirche
5. Stadtmuseum (Haus zum Cavazzen)
6. Maximilianstraße
7. Bayerischer Löwe
8. Mangturm

Route Map

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Your Lindau Walking Tour, Stop by Stop

  1. 1

    Lindauer Hafen

    Lindauer Hafen, stop 1 on the self-guided walking tour

    This is the image on every Lindau postcard, and walking out onto the pier you understand why. The harbor mouth opens straight onto Lake Constance, with a stone lion on one side and a lighthouse on the other framing the water and, on a clear day, the snow line of the Alps behind it. Ferries to Bregenz and Konstanz come and go all day, so there is always movement. It is open around the clock and free, which makes it the natural start and finish of the loop. Come back here at the end for sunset light on the water. Walk out to the very tip of the pier on the right for the head-on shot of the harbor gate. Then double back toward land and aim for the white tower at the far end of the breakwater, the Neuer Leuchtturm.

    Hours
    Open 24/7
    Price
    Free

    2 min walk to next stop

  2. 2

    Neuer Leuchtturm

    Neuer Leuchtturm in Lindau, stop 2 on the self-guided walking tour

    The white tower at the end of the breakwater is Germany's southernmost lighthouse, and unlike most lighthouses you can actually climb this one. From the top you get the harbor, the lake and the Austrian and Swiss shores spread out in one sweep. Entry is €4.50, and the climb is short, so if the weather is clear it is genuinely worth the small fee for the view you cannot get from ground level. Hours shift through the week: it opens at 10:00 most days and closes around 18:00, later on Friday and Saturday when it stays open until 19:00. Skip it if it is hazy, since the whole point is the distance view. The lion statue across the water is your seventh stop, but you reach it last on the loop. For now head back along the promenade toward the old town and the pointed turrets of the Diebsturm rising above the rooftops.

    Hours
    Mon: 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM | Tue: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM | Wed: 10:30 AM – 6:00 PM | Thu: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM | Fri-Sat: 10:00 AM – 7:00 PM | Sun: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
    Price
    €4.50

    5 min walk to next stop

  3. 3

    Diebsturm

    Diebsturm in Lindau, stop 3 on the self-guided walking tour

    Leaving the waterfront behind, the streets narrow and climb slightly, and the Diebsturm appears with its four little pointed turrets, looking more like a fairytale gatehouse than what it actually was: the town's old watchtower and jail. The name means thieves' tower. It sits on the Schrannenplatz, a small square that is one of the quietest corners of the island once the harbor crowds thin out. The square and tower are open daily from 8:30 to 18:00 and cost nothing, though the inside is not the draw, the shape and setting are. This is the prettiest five minutes on the walk for photos, and most day-trippers never make it up here. Right beside it stands a plain, ancient-looking church with a low tower. That is the Peterskirche, your next stop, and it is older than it looks.

    Hours
    Daily: 8:30 AM – 6:00 PM
    Price
    Free

    1 min walk to next stop

  4. 4

    Peterskirche

    Peterskirche in Lindau, stop 4 on the self-guided walking tour

    Step inside the modest church next to the tower and the reason to come is on the walls. The Peterskirche is the oldest church on all of Lake Constance, and it holds the only frescoes by Hans Holbein the Elder still in their original setting. After the bright harbor light the dim, cool interior takes a moment to adjust to, and then the medieval painting emerges. The church now serves as a war memorial, so it is hushed and you have it mostly to yourself. Entry is free. Hours are a bit fiddly: roughly 9:00 to 12:00 every morning, with afternoon opening 14:00 to 17:00 on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, but Wednesday and Sunday mornings only. Time your loop to land here before noon to be safe. From here cut east through the old lanes toward the market square and the grand cream-colored house that dominates it.

    Hours
    Mon-Tue: 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM, 2:00 – 5:00 PM | Wed: 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM | Thu-Sat: 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM, 2:00 – 5:00 PM | Sun: 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM
    Price
    Free

    3 min walk to next stop

  5. 5

    Stadtmuseum (Haus zum Cavazzen)

    Stadtmuseum (Haus zum Cavazzen) in Lindau, stop 5 on the self-guided walking tour

    The lanes open onto the market square and the finest house on the island, the baroque Haus zum Cavazzen, a patrician townhouse with a painted facade that now holds the town museum. It reopened in May 2025 after a long renovation that started in 2018, so the displays of Lindau's history are freshly redone rather than dusty and dated. Entry is €8.00, and it is closed Mondays, open Tuesday through Sunday from 10:00 to 18:00. Worth it if the weather has turned or you want an hour out of the sun and a proper sense of how this island town worked. If it is a perfect blue-sky day, you can admire the facade from the square for free and save the interior for next time. The baroque rebuild here followed the great town fire of 1728. From the square head back south toward the water along the main street, the Maximilianstraße.

    Hours
    Mon: Closed | Tue-Sun: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
    Price
    €8.00

    2 min walk to next stop

  6. 6

    Maximilianstraße

    Maximilianstraße in Lindau, stop 6 on the self-guided walking tour

    This is the main street and the spine of the old town, a 230-meter run of arcaded houses, gabled facades and ground-floor shops and cafes. It is wide for a medieval street, about 15 meters and up to 20 at its broadest, which gives it the feel of a closed promenade rather than a through-road. Many of these buildings survived the 1728 fire, so the medieval proportions are still intact even where the upper floors were rebuilt. The old town hall sits on the central square along here, its painted facade facing the harbor, with a market hall below and the council chamber above. This is the place to slow down, grab a coffee or an ice cream, and watch the town go about its day. It is always open and free to walk. Continue south and the street delivers you back to the waterfront, where the giant stone lion guards the harbor mouth.

    Hours
    Always open
    Price
    Free

    4 min walk to next stop

  7. 7

    Bayerischer Löwe

    Bayerischer Löwe in Lindau, stop 7 on the self-guided walking tour

    Back at the water, the Bavarian Lion sits on its plinth at the harbor mouth, a six-meter block of Kelheim marble facing out across the lake. It is the counterpart to the lighthouse, the two of them forming the harbor gate you photographed at the start, and it marks Lindau as Bavarian territory rather than Austrian or Swiss. You cannot climb it or go inside, this is a two-minute stop: walk up to the base for scale, then turn around for the classic shot of the lion in the foreground with the lighthouse across the gap and the Alps behind. It is free and always accessible. The promenade here is the busiest stretch of the whole walk, so if you want the lion without crowds, early morning is your window. From here it is a short walk along the waterfront to the squat tower with the colorful tiled roof, the Mangturm.

    Hours
    Open 24/7
    Price
    Free

    2 min walk to next stop

  8. 8

    Mangturm

    Mangturm in Lindau, stop 8 on the self-guided walking tour

    The last stop is the oldest harbor tower, the Mangturm, easy to spot by its roof of glazed colored tiles. Before the lighthouse existed, this is where the harbor light burned, so it is effectively the medieval ancestor of the white tower you climbed earlier. The squat shape and the patterned roof make it one of the most distinctive buildings on the waterfront. You can go inside for €3.50, with hours of 10:00 to 18:00 on weekdays and 10:00 to 19:00 on weekends. The interior is small, so this is more about the curiosity and the rooftop angle than a long visit. Standing here you have closed the loop: the harbor, the lion and the lighthouse are all in view again, and you have seen the whole island in one circle. Linger on the promenade for the lake view, or head back to the harbor pier for a final photo as the light shifts.

    Hours
    Mon-Fri: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM | Sat-Sun: 10:00 AM – 7:00 PM
    Price
    €3.50
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Self-Guided Tour vs. Group Tour in Lindau

Lindau is small enough that a self-guided walk is the honest recommendation here. The whole loop is 2.5 km on flat, mostly car-free ground, and the eight stops are close together with the harbor gate impossible to miss. You will not get lost, and the individual entry costs are tiny: €4.50 for the lighthouse, €3.50 for the Mangturm, €8.00 for the museum, with the harbor, lion, Diebsturm, Peterskirche and main street all free. Doing it yourself with this route in hand costs you almost nothing beyond those entries.

Guided walking tours of the old town do exist, usually run through the town's tourist office, and they tend to run roughly 90 minutes for around €8 to €12 per person, often only on fixed days in the summer season. They are good if you want the deeper history of the imperial-city era and the 1728 fire narrated as you walk. Check the lindau.de tourist information page for current dates and prices, since they change by season.

For most visitors, especially day-trippers from Bregenz or Konstanz, the self-guided version wins. The town is too compact to need a guide to find your way, and the research-based facts in these stop descriptions cover the headline history. Spend the money you would have spent on a tour on the lighthouse climb and a long coffee on the Maximilianstraße instead.

Group Tour AI Self-Guided
Price €25–€50 per person €5/hour or €20 all-inclusive
Flexibility Fixed schedule Start anytime, skip stops
Languages 1–2 languages 11 languages
Pace Group pace Your own pace

How Long Does This Lindau Tour Take?

Our route covers 2.5 km with 8 stops and takes approximately 1.7 hours at a relaxed pace.

Walking time around the loop is well under an hour, so the real question is how long you linger. Budget two to three hours for a relaxed version with stops. The Stadtmuseum is the biggest time commitment if you go in, easily 45 to 60 minutes, so decide on that one based on weather. The Peterskirche frescoes deserve ten quiet minutes, and the lighthouse climb plus the view from the top is another 20 to 30 minutes.

The natural break point is the Maximilianstraße, roughly the midpoint of the loop and the densest run of cafes and ice cream parlors. Grab a table there and watch the street. If you want the break at the water instead, the benches along the harbor promenade near the Mangturm look straight out at the lake and the Alps, and that is the spot to sit with an ice cream before closing the circle back at the harbor pier.

Tips for Walking in Lindau

  • Lindau Hauptbahnhof sits right on the island, a 3-minute walk from the harbor, so arrive by train and you are at the start of the loop instantly. Day-trippers should aim to arrive before 11:00 to beat the ferry crowds on the promenade.
  • The old town is cobblestone and old pavement throughout, including the Maximilianstraße, which keeps its historic stone surface. Flat shoes with some grip beat thin-soled sandals, especially if it has rained.
  • Public restrooms are easiest to find around the harbor and the train station at the start of the loop. Use them there, since the upper lanes around the Diebsturm and Peterskirche have none.
  • Stop for an ice cream or coffee on the Maximilianstraße at the midpoint. For something local, the harbor-front terraces serve Bodensee fish like Felchen (whitefish), the regional catch from the lake.
  • For the classic postcard shot, walk to the tip of the harbor pier and face back toward land at the harbor mouth, lining up the Bavarian Lion, the lighthouse and the Alps. Early morning or just before sunset gives the cleanest light on the water.
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AI Audio Guide for This Tour

Standing at the harbor with the lion and the lighthouse in front of you? That is the start of the loop. Open the app and let it walk you through all eight stops in order, with the timing, prices and the quiet upper lanes most day-trippers miss, all from your phone.

AI Audio Guide Stories, history and fun facts narrated as you walk. No earpiece rental needed.
GPS Navigation Turn-by-turn directions so you never get lost between stops.
Ask Anything Curious about a building you pass? Ask your AI guide on the spot.
11 Languages Switch language anytime. No separate tour needed.
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Common Questions

Is Lindau safe to walk around?

Yes, very. Lindau is a small, calm island town with low crime and no rough areas to avoid. The main hazards are mundane: cobblestones underfoot and the edge of the harbor pier with no railing in places, so watch children near the water. There are no notable tourist scams here.

What if it rains during my Lindau tour?

The Stadtmuseum (Haus zum Cavazzen) is your indoor anchor, open Tuesday to Sunday 10:00 to 18:00 for €8.00, good for an hour out of the rain. The Peterskirche is also indoors and free. The arcaded fronts along the Maximilianstraße give some cover, and the cafes there let you wait out a shower with a coffee.

What's the best time of day for this walking tour?

Start around 9:00 to 10:00. You get the harbor and lighthouse in soft morning light before the day-trip ferries arrive, the Peterskirche is open in its reliable morning window, and you finish before the midday promenade crowds peak. Late afternoon also works for sunset over the lake, but the church afternoon hours are patchy, so check before relying on them.

Do I need to book the walking tour in advance?

No booking needed. This self-guided tour is available anytime. Open the route on your phone and start walking. The AI audio guide works instantly, no reservation required.

What languages is the audio guide available in?

The AI audio guide is available in 11 languages: English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Japanese, Chinese, Portuguese, Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish.

Can I skip stops or change the route?

Yes. Skip any stop, spend extra time at places you like, or start the route from any point. You can also ask the AI to suggest a shorter route.
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Curated by AI Tourguide GPS-verified routes, reviewed and updated regularly.
Last verified June 2026
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