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Cologne Cathedral (Kölner Dom), Germany
Cologne Cathedral (Kölner Dom)

North Rhine-Westphalia

Cologne Cathedral (Kölner Dom)

The Gothic giant beside the station and Cologne's unmissable sight — free to enter, with a 533-step south-tower climb to the Rhine panorama as the worthwhile extra.

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

Where

Cologne, Germany

Opening hours

The cathedral is generally open daily from early morning into the evening, but the nave closes to sightseeing during Mass and services, so visiting hours are narrower than the building's open hours. The tower and treasury keep separate, shorter hours. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

Free — no ticket needed to enter the cathedral itself. The south-tower climb costs about €8 (with combined tower-and-treasury tickets available), and the treasury has its own small charge. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Time needed

Allow about 1 to 1.5 hours for the cathedral interior; add 45 minutes to an hour if you climb the tower, plus any queue at busy times.

In short

Visiting Cologne Cathedral (Kölner Dom)

The Gothic giant beside Cologne's main station is the one sight you cannot miss — and entry to the soaring nave is free. The worthwhile paid extra is the 533-step climb up the south tower for a Rhine panorama; there is no lift. Time your visit around services, and come early or late to dodge the worst of the crowds.

The cathedral itself

You will not have to look for the Kölner Dom — step out of Cologne’s main station and it is right there, a blackened Gothic mountain of stone that took over six hundred years to finish. It is the one sight in the city you genuinely cannot skip, and the best part is that walking into the nave is completely free. Inside, the scale does the work: the vaults soar away above you, light filters through medieval and modern stained glass, and behind the high altar sits the gilded Shrine of the Three Kings, one of the great treasures of the medieval world.

The catch on timing is that it is a working cathedral, so the nave closes to sightseers during Mass and services. Check the day’s schedule on the official site, and aim for early morning or the evening when the crowds thin and the light is at its best — the station next door means it can get busy the moment a train arrives. Allow an hour or so to take the interior in properly; a small donation towards the never-ending restoration is welcome but not expected.

The tower, and what to expect outside

The worthwhile paid extra is the south-tower climb: 533 steps, no lift, up a tight spiral staircase to a viewing level near the bells. It costs around €8 (with a combined treasury ticket available), and it pays out with a sweeping panorama over the Rhine and the rooftops. Be honest with yourself about the stairs — it is a proper effort, narrow and two-way, so give it a miss if your knees or lungs would rather not, and don’t feel you’ve missed the cathedral by doing so. The free nave is the masterpiece; the tower is a bonus view.

Outside, the wide square (the Domplatte) is a fine spot to take in the twin spires, and the cathedral glows when it’s floodlit after dark. Pair it with a wander down to the river and the old town, both a few minutes’ walk away, and you have an easy half-day built around Cologne’s defining landmark.

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

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Cologne Cathedral (Kölner Dom) FAQs

Is the Cologne Cathedral tower climb worth it?
If you have the legs for it, yes. The south tower is 533 steps with no lift, climbed in a tight spiral staircase, and it rewards you with a close-up of the bells and a wide panorama over the Rhine and the old town. It costs around €8. Skip it if stairs are hard for you or you are short on time — the free nave is the real masterpiece either way.
Do I have to pay to go inside?
No. Entering the cathedral to see the nave, the stained glass and the shrine is free, as it is a working place of worship. You only pay for the optional extras: the tower climb and the treasury museum. A small donation towards the building's endless restoration is appreciated but not required.
When is the best time to visit?
Early morning or later in the evening, outside the main service times, when the building is calmest and the light through the windows is best. The cathedral closes to sightseeing during Mass, so check the day's service schedule on the official site, and expect crowds whenever a train disgorges day-trippers from the station next door.