asisi Panorama - The Wall tickets & tours | Price comparison

asisi Panorama - The Wall

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THE WALL at asisi Panorama Berlin, also known as DIE MAUER, drops you into an autumn street scene in Kreuzberg, a few steps from Checkpoint Charlie. From a 4 m (13 ft) platform, the 360° panorama, witness photos, and films make 1980s divided Berlin feel unsettlingly close.

Start with a standard entry ticket if this is your first visit: it is the simplest way to see the full installation at your own pace, and it usually gives the best value for a short Wall-themed stop. Book now.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Panorama entry tickets

Best if your priority is the panorama itself: these tickets focus on the full THE WALL experience, including the rotunda, witness photos, and films right by Checkpoint Charlie.
Asisi Panorama - Die Mauer (The Wall): Skip The Line
4.4(129)
 
tiqets.com
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More Wall-themed tours

Choose these if your priority is broader Berlin Wall context beyond the rotunda: these formats can extend the story into former border routes and other Cold War landmarks in central Berlin.
Berlin: The Wall Ride Guided Trabi Tour
4.7(167)
 
getyourguide.com
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6 tips for visiting the asisi Panorama - The Wall

1
Book online and keep it mobile
If you want the easiest arrival, book before you go and keep the ticket on your phone. Mobile vouchers are accepted, and tickets are valid for the booked date, so you can walk straight in without sorting payment on the busy sidewalks around Checkpoint Charlie. That keeps the start simple and low-stress.
2
Treat it as a focused hour
If your priority is the panorama itself, give it about 60 to 90 minutes. That is enough for the rotunda, the witness photos, and the films without turning the stop into a marathon, especially if you want another Wall site later in the day. This keeps the visit sharp, so the atmosphere still lands.
3
Choose the right station for your next stop
Use Kochstraße / Checkpoint Charlie if this is your main stop and you want the shortest approach. Pick Stadtmitte if you are continuing deeper into central Berlin afterwards. One small routing choice saves backtracking and keeps your day smoother.
4
Use the special-price windows
As of March 2026, the venue runs a student day every Tuesday at €8 and an after-work ticket every Monday from 4 pm at €9. If your schedule is flexible, these are easy savings, especially for a short evening stop. That way you pay less without changing the experience.
5
Pair one nearby Wall stop
If you want a fuller Cold War route, add just one nearby follow-up: Checkpoint Charlie or Checkpoint Charlie Museum almost next door, or Topography of Terror for a deeper documentation stop. One extra anchor is usually enough after the panorama. That way you get more context without museum fatigue.
6
Know the accessibility tradeoff
If step-free access matters, the entrance and the lower panorama area are wheelchair accessible, but the 4 m (13 ft) visitor platform has no elevator. Plan to enjoy the installation from the lower level, and remember there are only 2 accessible parking spaces. This avoids an awkward surprise on arrival.

How to plan a THE WALL stop near Checkpoint Charlie

The visit works best when you treat it as a compact, emotionally dense Berlin stop. Pick the right format first, then build the rest of your day around one nearby follow-up, not five.

Choose the right ticket format first

Best for first-timers who mainly want the venue itself: the standard entry ticket gives you the rotunda, the witness-photo exhibition, and the films in one simple visit. Choose the broader Wall-themed tours only if your priority is a city experience beyond the building, for example along former border routes. Start with the clearest payoff, then book the format that matches it. Book now.

Keep the visit focused and pair one extra stop

For most visitors, THE WALL works best as a 60 to 90 minute anchor, not an all-afternoon marathon. After the panorama, add just one nearby follow-up like Checkpoint Charlie, Checkpoint Charlie Museum, or Topography of Terror. Families and repeat visitors usually enjoy the day more when the route stays short and walkable.

Use transit that matches your onward plan

If this is your main destination, Kochstraße / Checkpoint Charlie keeps the arrival simple. If you are continuing deeper into Mitte, Stadtmitte is often the cleaner next move. Visitors with limited mobility should stick to the shortest route and skip unnecessary station changes.

Save money when your timing is flexible

As of March 2026, Tuesday student tickets at €8 and Monday after-work tickets from 4 pm at €9 can make a short visit feel even better value. Great if you are in Berlin for several days or want a low-pressure evening stop. Compare dates, then lock in the slot that suits you. Book now.

What you see inside THE WALL

The venue hits hard because it stays focused. Instead of giving you a huge museum timeline, it places you inside one carefully staged moment and lets the atmosphere do much of the work.

Stand above a recreated border scene

From a 4 m (13 ft) platform, you look into a 900 m² (9,688 ft²) 360° panorama of an autumn day in 1980s Kreuzberg, with the Berlin TV Tower and the GDR border strip in view. Punks, tourists, border guards, squats, and wall artists all appear within one unsettlingly ordinary city scene. That scale is what makes the experience feel immediate rather than abstract.

See the Wall through Yadegar Asisi's memories

The installation is not a generic Cold War summary. Yadegar Asisi, who lived in divided Berlin, builds the space from personal memory, witness material, sketches, and a creative process that began long before the venue opened. That perspective gives the panorama more texture than a neutral timeline panel ever could.

Notice the layers beyond the rotunda

After the main panorama, slow down for the witness photographs, original sketches, and films. They explain why everyday details in Kreuzberg mattered so much when the Berlin Wall still cut through the city, and they keep the stop rewarding for history-focused visitors who want more than one dramatic view.

Read the place through three key dates

Three dates help anchor what you see: 1961, when the Berlin Wall went up; 1989, when the border regime collapsed; and 2012, when THE WALL opened at Checkpoint Charlie. Keeping those milestones in mind turns the panorama from a striking image into a sharper piece of city memory.

Know who gets the most from this stop

First-time visitors get a fast emotional introduction to divided Berlin; history-focused travelers get strong visual context before moving on to Topography of Terror or other memorial sites. Older children and teens usually follow the imagery better than very young kids, while visitors with limited mobility still get a meaningful visit from the accessible lower level.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is THE WALL at asisi Panorama Berlin?

It is a 360° panorama and exhibition near Checkpoint Charlie that recreates everyday life beside the Berlin Wall on an autumn day in 1980s Kreuzberg. Alongside the rotunda, you also see witness photos, original sketches, and films that deepen the Cold War context.
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How much time should I plan for the visit?

For most visitors, 60 to 90 minutes works well. The official duration is 60 minutes, but it is worth giving yourself a little extra time if you want to read the witness-photo displays carefully.
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Do I need to book in advance?

Booking ahead is the smoother option, especially if you want a fixed date or do not want to sort payment on site. Mobile vouchers are accepted, tickets are valid for the booked date, and the standard online flow is aimed at individual visitors.
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Is the venue wheelchair accessible?

Partly. The entrance and the lower panorama area are wheelchair accessible, but the 4 m (13 ft) visitor platform has no elevator. You can still have a meaningful visit from the lower level.
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Are guided tours available?

Yes. The venue offers guided formats for groups and schools, and it also runs public guided tours on selected dates. If your priority is simply seeing the panorama, the standard entry ticket is still the easiest first step.
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Is it at Checkpoint Charlie?

Yes. THE WALL sits at Checkpoint Charlie, Friedrichstraße 205, which makes it very easy to fit into a central Berlin day on foot or by U-Bahn.
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Is this the original Berlin Wall?

No. THE WALL is a panorama and exhibition that recreates life beside the border, not a preserved full Wall section. If you want surviving remains and outdoor memorial context, continue with Berlin Wall or Topography of Terror afterwards.
Read more.

Which nearby POIs pair well with THE WALL?

The easiest pairings are Checkpoint Charlie and Checkpoint Charlie Museum almost next door, plus Topography of Terror for a deeper documentation stop. If you want to continue following the Wall story across the city, add Berlin Wall later.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Open daily from 10 am to 6 pm. For most visitors, about 60 minutes is enough, but give yourself longer if you want to read the witness-photo displays carefully.

address

asisi Panorama Berlin
Checkpoint Charlie
Friedrichstraße 205
10117 Berlin
Germany

how to get there

The simplest route is Kochstraße / Checkpoint Charlie on U6 or bus M29. Stadtmitte / Leipziger Straße on bus M48, and Stadtmitte on U2 are the other practical options. There is no general parking on site.

tickets

As of March 2026:
- Adult: €14
- Reduced: €11
- Child (ages 6 to 16): €7
- Child under 6: free
- Group (10 or more): €10 per person
- School group (10 or more): €6 per person
- Parent-child ticket: €32
Online ticket purchase is for individual visitors only. Groups of 10 or more need to register in advance by phone or email. Reduced tickets apply to pupils ages 17 to 20, full-time students, apprentices, and eligible visitors with disability documentation.

accessibility

The entrance is at ground level, and wheelchair users can access the lower panorama area. The 4 m (13 ft) visitor platform has no elevator, so not every viewpoint is step-free. There are 2 accessible parking spaces, but no general parking on site.
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