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dachau tour

Dachau Memorial Day Trip from Munich

Approach the Nazi era with clarity and care

The Finer Details
Disclaimer: The Dachau staff is very strict on their regulations; no child below the age of 13 can tour the Dachau site. Context does not offer a family program to this site; however, families with teenagers ages 13 and up can book the tour.

It is crucial to understand the events of our shared history to prevent them from happening again. That's why, while Munich has no shortage of engaging and historical places, we believe in the importance of visiting sites like the Dachau Memorial Site. A short train and bus ride out of the city brings us to the former concentration camp, now a memorial site that commemorates the victims who died there between 1933 to 1945. In the company of a trained historical expert, this Dachau excursion takes us to the grounds of the camp and provides a sensitive framework for visiting this site and learning about the sobering events that took place here.

We also offer a combination of our Dachau excursion with our WW2 Nazi Third Reich tour for a full-day experience with one of our history experts. If you are interested in this, please take a look at our Full Day WWII History Tour and Dachau Excursion.

Dachau Excursion

A local train and bus ride brings us through the peaceful countryside surrounding Munich to Dachau Memorial Site, a former concentration camp located a mere ten miles from the city and the site of our Dachau Excursion. On March 22, 1933, weeks after Adolf Hitler had been nominated as Reich Chancellor, "the first concentration camp for political prisoners" (officially described by Heinrich Himmler) was set up. It served as a model for all later concentration camps under the Nazis from both a prisoner and SS concentration camp guard perspective, as it acted as a training ground. We will spend about 3 hours on the grounds, which were transformed in 1965 into a memorial and museum thanks to the initiative of survivors. As we walk through the site, we'll discuss the twelve years that the camp was in operation, the context of the broader Nazi regime, and the sensitive theme of history and memorialization.

Political Prisoners Purpose

Dachau concentration camp began as a prison primarily for German Communists, Social Democrats, trade unionists, and other political opponents of the Nazi regime before opening up further to intern Jehovah’s Witnesses, Roma and Sinti, homosexuals, and “asocials.” The camp’s initial purpose was for political prisoners, not Jews as such (although Jewish individuals were singled out for detention as political prisoners from the beginning). As the persecution of Jews increased after November 1938, the number of Jewish prisoners at Dachau rose. As we navigate the site on our Dachau Excursion, our expert will explain the complex (and often misunderstood) variety of different camps within the overall system, from work camp to extermination camp.

Among the Ruins

Walking through what remains of the camp’s buildings and barracks, we will discuss the development of the site as the long years went by, including the construction of a new crematorium in 1942 along with a gas chamber. We will also explore the layout of the memorial site, including the barracks, the rooms for medical experiments, the prison block (which housed Georg Elser), watchtowers, execution sites, gas chamber, crematorium, and religious memorial sites today. We will spend some time on our Dachau Excursion in the exhibition section of the site, discussing everyday ‘life’ as a victim in the camp and possibly watching footage of the camp’s liberation by US troops in April 1945.

Take Aways

Our time at the Dachau Memorial site will leave us with insight into a particularly difficult and shockingly recent period of our human history. We’ll emerge with a deeper understanding of the political mechanisms that gave rise to such camps and the turbulent history the camp witnessed. We will also address the narrative of the victim/survivor and the role that it still plays today at the memorial site.

FAQ

Where do we meet? Where does it end?
The Dachau tour meets in Munich, near the train station. Your confirmation will have the exact meeting point. Your expert will purchase the train tickets on your behalf, and then you will take the train together. After you visit the former camp, you will return to Munich together. The ride is about 45 minutes each way and is part of the overall 5-hour duration of the tour.

Is the train ticket included in the cost?
Yes, it is included in the price of the tour.

Can children participate in this tour? 
No, not below the age of 13. There is no special exhibition for children at the Dachau Memorial Site, and the Dachau Memorial Site restricts participation in any on-site tours to ages 13 and up. Context does not offer a family program to this site; however, families with teenagers ages 13 and up can book our tours. 
Book a Tour
Meet the Experts
Where You’ll Go

From iconic landmarks to tucked-away local favorites, these are the places you’ll explore and experience firsthand with your Expert.

  • Dachau Memorial Site
What’s Included As Standard
Here’s a look at what your tour covers, plus anything you’ll want to consider arranging separately, so you can plan with confidence.
Included
  • English-speaking expert guide
    Tours led in English, offering you unbroken understanding throughout.
  • Intentionally sized groups
    A smaller group means more time for conversations and questions.
  • Tickets and entrance fees
    All entry tickets included (unless clearly stated otherwise).
  • Headsets
    Headsets are included on tours that need them, so every word can be heard.
Not Included
  • Gratuities
    We encourage tipping as a way to thank your guide after your experience.
  • Food and drink
    Refreshments are only included during a tour when clearly noted.
  • Transportation to and from the meeting point
    Unless noted, pre- and post-tour transport isn’t included - this service can be added by request.
  • Hotel pickup or drop-off
    Unless noted, travel to or from accommodation isn’t included - this service can be added by request.
Where You'll Explore
Map of Dachau Memorial Day Trip from Munich general meeting point area

Make the Most of Your Tour

Some helpful advice for getting the most from your experience, from practical prep to small on-the-day tips.

Dos:
  • Wear comfortable footwear
  • Check the weather and dress appropriately
  • Bring a bottle of water (no glass)
  • Feel free to ask your Expert anything
Don'ts:
  • Bring firearms or weapons
  • Bring sharp objects (e.g. knives, swiss army knives, switchblades, hiking sticks)
  • Dress inappropriately to enter religious sites or sacred monuments
Any questions? You can always contact us.

Don’t just take our word for it

99 Reviews

Mat was great. Not only for his encyclopedic knowledge of Dachau itself (dates! And more dates and specific facts that seemed almost impossible for one person to know!) but his understanding of Dachau within the history of the 3rd Reich in Bavaria and Germany, and then the wider circle of the unification of Germany and the impact of World War I, all gave a nuanced, and complicated, view of a place that can so easily be viewed for just its symbolism of atrocity. It was a great half day and we would recommend Mat highly!

Our family toured Dachau with Mat during July 2026.This was an informative and educational excursion. Mat answered questions related to our tour, Munich, and where to eat. His wealth of knowledge of the area is impressive.

Photo Shared by Sean with their review

Our tour was spectacular. Brendan, our guide was excellent and put the memorial in n context. He knew his stuff. I would recommend context tours for any tour you could come up with. It was the highlight of the trip.

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Visiting the Dachau Concentration Camp Memorial Site from Munich

The Dachau Concentration Camp Memorial Site stands on the grounds of the former prisoner camp established by the Nazi regime in March 1933. Dachau became a model for later concentration camps and a training center for the SS personnel who administered them. More than 200,000 people were imprisoned in Dachau and its subcamps, and at least 41,500 died as a result of murder, hunger, illness, torture and the conditions of imprisonment. 

A Dachau concentration camp tour from Munich provides the historical preparation and on-site interpretation needed to approach this complex place responsibly. Rather than treating the memorial as another attraction, the experience considers what happened here, how the camp system developed and how survivors shaped the site’s later role as a place of remembrance.

Why Visit Dachau with a Historical Expert?

The memorial contains reconstructed barracks, original structures, exhibitions, religious memorials and areas connected to imprisonment and death. Individually, these spaces cannot communicate the full history of the camp.

Your Context Expert establishes the chronology, explains the functions of different areas and places the surviving and reconstructed structures within the broader Nazi concentration camp system. The discussion also considers who was imprisoned, how persecution expanded and how conditions changed throughout the camp’s twelve-year existence.

The memorial itself describes the grounds as a cemetery and a place of sorrow and remembrance. A guided visit should therefore provide more than historical facts: it should help visitors engage with the evidence thoughtfully and behave with respect toward those who suffered and died here. 

What Will You See at the Dachau Memorial Site?

The exact route can depend on site conditions, but the visit may include the former maintenance building and permanent exhibition, the camp prison, reconstructed barracks, watchtowers, memorial spaces and the crematorium area.

Your Expert explains what remains original, what has been reconstructed and how the presentation of the site has changed since 1945. This distinction matters: today’s memorial occupies only part of the much larger historical camp complex, and its design reflects decisions about preservation, education and commemoration. 

Why Was Dachau Historically Significant?

Dachau was established shortly after Adolf Hitler became Reich Chancellor, initially to imprison political opponents. It later held people persecuted for a wide range of political, racial, religious and social reasons.

Its influence extended far beyond the grounds outside Munich. The camp served as a model for later concentration camps and as what the memorial describes as a “school of violence” for SS personnel. Understanding Dachau therefore helps explain not only one camp, but the institutions, methods and personnel that supported the wider system of Nazi persecution. 

From Concentration Camp to Memorial Site

American troops liberated Dachau on April 29, 1945. The grounds did not immediately become the memorial visitors encounter today. Their postwar uses and the long campaign to preserve the site form an important part of its history.

Survivors organized through the Comité International de Dachau played a central role in establishing the memorial, which opened in 1965. Their involvement shaped decisions about which structures would be retained, reconstructed or removed, as well as how the experiences of former prisoners would be represented. 

Is a Guided Dachau Tour Worth It?

Visitors can enter the memorial independently, but the site presents a difficult combination of historical evidence, reconstructed spaces, survivor testimony and later memorial architecture.

A guided Dachau tour is particularly valuable for travelers who want to:
  •  distinguish the concentration camp system from extermination camps; 
  •  understand changes in the prisoner population over time; 
  •  identify what is original and what was reconstructed; 
  •  discuss the political conditions that enabled the camp system; 
  •  consider how Dachau has been remembered since 1945. 
The purpose is not to make the visit easier. It is to make it more historically grounded, responsible and meaningful.

FAQs

Is Dachau a day trip from Munich?
Yes. The memorial is outside central Munich and can be reached using regional public transportation. This experience begins in Munich and includes the journey to and from the site, allowing the historical discussion to begin before arrival.

Is admission to the Dachau Memorial Site included?
Entry to the memorial itself is free. The tour price covers private expert guidance and the transportation arrangements specified on the product page.

Is this a private Dachau tour?
Yes. The experience is private to your party, allowing the conversation to respond to your existing knowledge, interests and questions.

Is the tour appropriate for children?
The memorial recommends that children under 13 not visit because of the nature of the exhibitions and grounds. Your page should provide a clear age recommendation and encourage families to review the material before booking.

What should visitors wear?
The experience includes extensive walking and time outdoors. Comfortable footwear and clothing appropriate for the weather are recommended. Clothing and behavior should also reflect the memorial’s character as a place of mourning and remembrance.

Can visitors take photographs?
Photography for private, noncommercial purposes is generally permitted in many areas, but visitors should follow posted restrictions and consider whether taking a photograph is appropriate. The memorial’s rules and the dignity of the site should take precedence.