Glide upriver from Regensburg's old town to Walhalla, King Ludwig I's blinding-white Doric temple modeled on the Parthenon, then climb the monumental staircase to a hall of marble busts honoring the great figures of German history. Arriving by water — the way it was meant to be seen — is the bucket-list version: the temple appears on the bluff exactly as Ludwig staged it, and the colonnade frames a sweeping bend of the Danube. It is one of the most theatrical neoclassical monuments in Europe and the single must-do beyond the old town itself.
What to expect
Boats depart from the Steinerne Brücke (Stone Bridge) quay at set times — typically 10:30, 12:30 and 14:30 in season (roughly late March to mid-October). The cruise runs about 45 minutes each way to Donaustauf with a layover ashore to walk up to the temple; total outing is around 3 hours. The climb from the landing to the colonnade is steep but short, and the interior hall of busts is hushed and cool. The Danube views from the temple terrace are the payoff.
River lines (Avalon, Viking, AmaWaterways) sell a guided Walhalla coach or bike excursion in the roughly EUR/USD 50-75 range per person. Booking the official riverboat direct (EUR 21 + a few euros entry) is dramatically better value AND a better experience — the water approach beats a bus. Only take the ship tour if you specifically want a guide's narration or your call is too short for the ~3-hour round-trip boat.
Good to know
The boat dock is a 5-10 minute walk from most river-cruise berths in Regensburg. Confirm the day's departure times against your all-aboard before committing — the full round trip needs a 3-hour window. Buy boat tickets at the quay kiosk; monument entry is cash/card at Walhalla's counter, no advance booking. Wear stable shoes for the staircase.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Regensburg — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.