🇩🇪 Berlin, Germany
Zarenhof
📍 Schönhauser Allee 140, Berlin, 10437
Photo: official website
Your stay — Zarenhof
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The Property — Zarenhof
Zarenhof in Mitte feels like a calm, elegant sanctuary carved out of a 19th-century townhouse. The lobby mixes exposed brick, polished concrete and warm wood, with a hushed, gallery-like atmosphere that suits design-conscious couples or solo travellers wanting a genuinely quiet base near Alexanderplatz. It’s not a party hotel — more a place where you notice the quality of the bedding and the espresso machine in the room.
Chronicles of Berlin
Berlin began as a 13th-century trading settlement on the Spree, later becoming the capital of Prussia and, after 1871, of a unified Germany. The city was almost levelled in World War II, then divided by the Wall from 1961 to 1989. Today its architecture is a raw, honest collage — Baroque churches next to GDR Plattenbauten and Norman Foster’s Reichstag dome. Culturally, it’s a global hub for contemporary art, electronic music and a fiercely independent, anti-authoritarian spirit.
Best Time to Visit
Full Berlin guide →Best months
May and September give long daylight, mild 18–22°C highs, and fewer tourists than midsummer. June is also excellent for street festivals and open-air swimming.
Peak / festival surge
July is the absolute peak, driven by school holidays, outdoor festivals and the Christopher Street Day parade (late July). Hotel prices jump 30–50% above May levels, with Zarenhof often fully booked three months ahead.
Budget shoulder season
Late April and early October offer hotel rates 20–30% lower than July, with cool but pleasant 12–16°C days and light crowds.
Weather & packing
Berlin weather can flip from sunny to a stiff, cold rain within an hour, even in July. Pack a waterproof jacket or a packable windbreaker — and always bring a light jumper or cardigan for evenings.
Live City Briefing — Berlin
- The U5 and U8 lines at Alexanderplatz have weekend closures from late June for track upgrades; check BVG.de for diversions when travelling to/from the hotel.
- The Humboldt Forum on Museum Island recently opened its final permanent exhibition on non-European art; book a free timed slot online to skip queues.
- Berlin’s ‘Rhine in Flames’ firework festival on the Spree (first weekend July) will close parts of the riverside path near Friedrichstrasse — plan walks accordingly.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Zarenhof, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on floors 3–5 facing the inner courtyard (southwest side) for the best balance of quiet and light. These floors sit above street-level bustle and avoid roof reflections from the café terrace below.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor or those numbered 01–05 (adjacent to the main staircase and lift shaft); you’ll hear the breakfast room scraping chairs from 7am and the lift motor. East-facing rooms on floors 2–4 catch noise from Schönhauser Allee’s late trams until about 1am.
Best views
Corner room on floor 5 facing southwest – you get a long view over the Prenzlauer Berg rooftops and the TV Tower on clear days, with minimal street noise. Ask specifically for a ‘courtyard-facing room on an upper floor’.
Quietest floors
Floors 3–6. The hotel has a lift that stops on all floors, but the 3rd and 4th floors sit above the restaurant and below the roof plant, creating a dead zone for mechanical noise.
🔊 Noise notes
Schönhauser Allee is a busy four-lane road with tram line M1 running along it; trams pass every 8–10 minutes until midnight. The hotel’s main entrance is recessed, so lobby noise is muffled, but the street-side windows on floors 1–2 let in tyre hum and tram bells. Weekend nights see late bar-goers loitering outside the U-Bahn station 30m south.
Insider tips
1) Breakfast can be chaotic between 8:30–10am; ask reception for a 7am breakfast slot on weekends to avoid queues. 2) There’s no hotel parking, but the public parkhaus at Schönhauser Allee 140b (same block) charges €12/night – book a space via their website 24h ahead.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hotel Facilities — Zarenhof
Free basic Wi-Fi (20 Mbps down/5 Mbps up) with no login; premium tier at 5.00 EUR per device per 24h (100 Mbps down, 20 Mbps up)
One lift serves all 5 floors (floors 0-4). No stairs-only sections
Complimentary digital PressReader access via lobby tablet login code. The building was originally a 19th-century brewery; original brick arches remain in the breakfast hall
Standard check-in 15:00-00:00, check-out 11:00. Early bag-drop from 10:00 (free if stored). Late check-out until 14:00 costs 30.00 EUR, after 14:00 charged 1/2 night rate
Yes, free for same-day arrival and departure. Longer storage negotiable at front desk, usually free for one extra day
Step-free entrance at side door (bell for assistance). One wheelchair-accessible room on ground floor. No lift to the basement spa area (stairs only)
No on-site parking. Closest public car park: Parkhaus Schönhauser Allee, 200m away, 12.00 EUR per night (20.00 EUR Saturday to Sunday). No EV charging on-site; public charger at the car park (11 kW, 0.35 EUR/kWh)
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: 5.00% of room rate per person per night, payable on arrival; includes Berlin city tax (201.0% deductible for business travellers with proof)
Deposit & card hold: 50.0% of total stay charged 14 days before arrival; a 100.00 EUR incidental hold on a credit card at check-in
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Church: Evangelisch-Freikirchliche Gemeinde "Zoar" (67 m · ~1 min walk)
- Church: Gethsemane-Kirche (575 m · ~7 min walk)
- Church: Kirche Heilige Familie (932 m · ~12 min walk)
- Church: St. Augustinus-Kirche (939 m · ~12 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
Gesundbrunnen-Center — 2.1 km · ~27 min walk
Friedhofspark Pappelallee — 383 m · ~5 min walk
Zimmermeister Brunzel baut ein Mietshaus — 825 m · ~10 min walk
Ballhaus Ost — 325 m · ~4 min walk
Spielplatz am Falkplatz — 812 m · ~10 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
Nearest — 126 m · ~2 min walk
Cecilien-Apotheke — 332 m · ~4 min walk
Multishop — 98 m · ~1 min walk
Eberswalder Straße — 438 m · ~5 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use ATMs from major banks (Sparkasse, Deutsche Bank, Commerzbank) for the best rates; avoid exchange bureaux at Hauptbahnhof or Tegel Airport, as they charge high fees and poor rates.
Visa and Mastercard are widely accepted in shops, restaurants, and transport ticket machines; contactless and Apple Pay/Google Pay are common; some smaller cafés and bakeries still prefer cash, so carry a small amount.
Round up in restaurants (10% is standard for good service), round up taxi fares to the nearest euro, and tip hotel cleaners a euro or two per night if you leave cash in the room.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Filter coffee (Filterkaffee) at a café or bakery usually costs around €2.50–€3.50.
A Döner kebab or falafel from a takeaway stand costs about €5–€6 and is filling.
A pizza or pasta main at an Italian restaurant or a dish at a neighbourhood Kneipe runs roughly €10–€14.
Friedrichshain and Kreuzberg have many currywurst stands and food trucks near Schlesisches Tor and Warschauer Strasse.
Lidl, Aldi, and Netto are the budget supermarket chains found throughout the area.
Second-hand shops (e.g., Humana, Picknweight) are common in Prenzlauer Berg and Mitte, with prices often under €10 for used clothing.
A single-trip ticket (Einzelfahrschein) costs €3.50, but a day pass (Tageskarte) for zones AB at €8.60 lets you ride unlimited buses, trams, and U-Bahn; from BER airport, take the RE8 or FEX regional train for €3.50 (single AB ticket with zone C extension).
Buy a Berlin Welcome Card for free museum entry discounts and free public transport; eat at a Mensa (university canteen) if you can blag a guest ticket – mains are €3–€5; fill up a bottle at public drinking fountains (there are dozens in parks) instead of buying water.
Good to know — Berlin
Type C/F · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ €0.87 · EUR
Emergency Contacts
BerlinBoth ambulance and fire services use the same number (112). Police use 110. All calls are free. English speakers are often available. For non-emergencies, use local police stations or call 030 (Berlin area code).
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
Book a table →💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Berlin, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Zarenhof
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 126 m · ~2 min walk — pharmacy · Cecilien-Apotheke — 332 m · ~4 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
Find train tickets →Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) → Sly Berlin Hotel (Friedrichshain)
💡 Most budget-friendly option; buy Berlin WelcomeCard for unlimited metro/bus/tram access for 48-72 hours; FEX arrives at Ostbahnhof station near hotel
Friedrichshain District → Sly Berlin Hotel area
💡 U5 runs directly through Friedrichshain; buy 7-day pass (€36.50) for unlimited local travel; nighttime network robust on weekends
Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) → Sly Berlin Hotel (Friedrichshain)
💡 Book in advance via hotel concierge for guaranteed rates; avoid peak hours (7-9am, 5-7pm) for faster journeys
Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) → Sly Berlin Hotel (Friedrichshain)
💡 Cheapest option; X7 connects to local tram lines; scenic route through Berlin; best for travelers without luggage
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at Zarenhof?
Request a room on floors 3–5 facing the inner courtyard (southwest side) for the best balance of quiet and light. These floors sit above street-level bustle and avoid roof reflections from the café terrace below.
Which rooms should I avoid at Zarenhof?
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor or those numbered 01–05 (adjacent to the main staircase and lift shaft); you’ll hear the breakfast room scraping chairs from 7am and the lift motor. East-facing rooms on floors 2–4 catch noise from Schönhauser Allee’s late trams until about 1am.
Is Zarenhof noisy?
Schönhauser Allee is a busy four-lane road with tram line M1 running along it; trams pass every 8–10 minutes until midnight. The hotel’s main entrance is recessed, so lobby noise is muffled, but the street-side windows on floors 1–2 let in tyre hum and tram bells. Weekend nights see late bar-goers loitering outside the U-Bahn station 30m south.
Which rooms have the best views at Zarenhof?
Corner room on floor 5 facing southwest – you get a long view over the Prenzlauer Berg rooftops and the TV Tower on clear days, with minimal street noise. Ask specifically for a ‘courtyard-facing room on an upper floor’.
What are insider tips for staying at Zarenhof?
1) Breakfast can be chaotic between 8:30–10am; ask reception for a 7am breakfast slot on weekends to avoid queues. 2) There’s no hotel parking, but the public parkhaus at Schönhauser Allee 140b (same block) charges €12/night – book a space via their website 24h ahead.
What time is check-in at Zarenhof?
Check-in at Zarenhof is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Zarenhof have Wi-Fi?
Free basic Wi-Fi (20 Mbps down/5 Mbps up) with no login; premium tier at 5.00 EUR per device per 24h (100 Mbps down, 20 Mbps up)
Is there a city or tourist tax at Zarenhof?
5.00% of room rate per person per night, payable on arrival; includes Berlin city tax (201.0% deductible for business travellers with proof)
Where can I eat cheaply near Zarenhof?
A Döner kebab or falafel from a takeaway stand costs about €5–€6 and is filling.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Zarenhof?
A single-trip ticket (Einzelfahrschein) costs €3.50, but a day pass (Tageskarte) for zones AB at €8.60 lets you ride unlimited buses, trams, and U-Bahn; from BER airport, take the RE8 or FEX regional train for €3.50 (single AB ticket with zone C extension).
When is the best time to visit Berlin?
May and September give long daylight, mild 18–22°C highs, and fewer tourists than midsummer. June is also excellent for street festivals and open-air swimming.
Top Attractions in Berlin
💡 Register online at least 2 days in advance; same-day slots are rare. The dome is closed for cleaning 3 days a year, so check the website.
💡 Visit early in the morning (before 9am) to avoid crowds and grab coffee at one of the nearby cafés along the Spree. The wall is exposed to weather, so touch gently.
💡 Go on a Sunday for free guided tours in English at 3pm, but arrive early as groups are limited to 25.
💡 Bring a picnic and rent a bike from the station at the north entrance (€5/hour). The south end is quieter for sunbathing.
💡 Entry is €12, but free on the first Sunday of every month. Aim for 10am on weekdays to skip queues; skip the audio guide and use the free app.