The red-sandstone Gothic-Romanesque Minster is Basel's defining landmark. Climb the 250 steps up St. George's or St. Martin's tower for a sweeping panorama over the Old Town rooftops, the curving Rhine, and across into both Germany and France. Below, the free Pfalz terrace behind the cathedral is the city's postcard viewpoint, and cathedral entry itself is free.
What to expect
You'll start with your ship's included city walk, which typically stops at the cathedral threshold to set the scene—red sandstone Gothic-Romanesque beauty, centuries of history—then splits off. From there, you climb either St. George's or St. Martin's tower: 250 steps up a narrow spiral staircase, each step bringing the views larger until you emerge onto a high terrace overlooking Basel's Old Town rooftops, the Rhine's lazy curve below, and the rolling landscape of Germany and France spreading across the horizon. After catching your breath and taking in the panorama, you can descend and linger on the free Pfalz terrace behind the cathedral—the city's famous postcard viewpoint—before a flat, easy walk of roughly a mile back to the dock.
Most lines fold the Minster into their INCLUDED city walk, but the guided walk usually stops at the cathedral door and skips the paid tower climb. Going up yourself is $7 and 10 minutes -- so do the included ship walk for context, then climb the tower on your own afterward. Don't pay a line $75-95 for an a-la-carte 'city walk' just to reach this; it's a flat, walkable mile from the dock.
Good to know
The tower climb takes about 10 minutes and costs ~$7 (CHF 6 adult), but tower entry closes roughly 30 minutes before the cathedral itself, so plan your ascent for mid-day to avoid a last-minute squeeze. The dock to Minster is a flat, walkable mile—no shuttle needed unless you prefer one—giving you flexibility to do the ship's included walk first, climb independently after, and still have comfortable breathing room before all-aboard. Bring comfortable walking shoes and small change (CHF preferred for tower admission, though some vendors take cards). The climb requires a minimum of two people, so pair up with another passenger or your travel companion before you start.