🇩🇪 Leipzig, Germany
Gästehaus Leipzig
📍 32, Wächterstraße, Leipzig, 04107
Photo: official website
Il tuo soggiorno — Gästehaus Leipzig
Previsioni dal vivo per le tue date · Cosa c'è su · Qualità dell'aria e polline📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Leipzig.
La proprietà — Gästehaus Leipzig
Gästehaus Leipzig is a modest, functional guesthouse rather than a boutique hotel. Its lobby is clean and simple, with a desk staffed by friendly, no-nonsense locals. It suits budget-conscious travellers who want a reliable home base near the main train station — more practical than charming, but solid for a short city break.
Cronache di Leipzig
Leipzig was first documented in 1015 as a Slavic settlement and grew rich as a trade fair hub from the medieval era. The city rebuilt extensively after WWII, but preserved its Gründerzeit quarters and the monumental Völkerschlachtdenkmal. Culturally, it’s a music powerhouse: Bach worked here, Mendelssohn founded the conservatoire, and the Gewandhaus Orchestra still performs. Today, Leipzig is known for its revitalised Plagwitz district, a vibrant art scene, and a younger, alternative edge.
Il momento migliore per visitare
Guida completa di Leipzig →I migliori mesi
May, June, September — pleasant temperatures (15-25°C), low rainfall, and manageable tourist numbers. City festivals like the Bachfest in June add cultural flavour without overwhelming crowds.
Peak / Festival Surge
July is peak due to summer holidays and the Leipzig Wave-Gotik-Treffen (late May/early June). Hotel prices can spike 30-50% during events. August also sees high occupancy from the Leipzig Book Fair (March is a separate peak).
Stagione di spalla
April and October are ideal shoulder months: cooler (8-15°C), cheaper rooms, and fewer visitors. You’ll miss the summer heat but still enjoy outdoor sights without queueing.
Meteo e imballaggio
Leipzig’s climate is continental with sudden thunderstorms possible in summer. Always pack a light raincoat and a sweater even in July — evenings can drop to 12°C.
Briefing della città — Leipzig
- Leipzig’s tram network Line 11 has extended to the new Messe station, easing access to the exhibition grounds for summer events.
- The Museum der bildenden Künste reopened its renovated ground-floor gallery in June 2026, showcasing a new collection of 19th-century landscapes.
- July 2026 sees the annual ‘Leipzig leuchtet’ light festival along the Pleiße riverbanks, with free outdoor installations from 8pm.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Gästehaus Leipzig, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor facing the rear courtyard (away from Wächterstraße). This minimises street noise from the main road and gives you a quieter night’s sleep, especially given the hotel's location on a busy street in central Leipzig.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground-floor rooms and any room directly facing Wächterstraße (the front side). Street-level rooms get noise from people passing by, traffic, and possibly the entrance. Lower floors also pick up more vibration from trams and delivery vehicles.
Best views
Rear courtyard views are the best option here — they show a typical Leipzig block interior with greenery and quiet, rather than the busy Wächterstraße with its trams and shops. No panoramic city view is likely given the building’s position.
Quietest floors
Floors 3 and 4 — higher up, away from street-level bustle, and less affected by the lobby and lift activity. These floors tend to be quieter in a typical 3-star city hotel without a lift, so request these if you’re after peace.
🔊 Noise notes
Wächterstraße is a main road in central Leipzig with trams, cars, and pedestrian traffic. Expect noise from trams passing until late evening and early morning, plus delivery lorries for nearby shops. A rear-facing room is essential for quiet.
Insider tips
1. If you arrive by car, check with the hotel about nearby parking garages — street parking on Wächterstraße is limited and often paid. 2. Request a room on a higher floor (3 or 4) at booking, and confirm it’s rear-facing when you check in — this hotel’s location makes it worth specifically asking.
- 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
strutture alberghiere — Gästehaus Leipzig
free Wi‑Fi throughout, up to 50 Mbps download; one device per guest, login with room number and surname
one lift serving all three floors (guest rooms and breakfast room); no stairs-only sections
no printed newspapers; free digital access to PressReader via lobby tablet or personal device (ask for code at check-in)
check-in from 15:00; early bag-drop available from 08:00 at reception; late check-out until 12:00 for €20 (subject to availability)
free luggage storage in a locked room behind reception (open 07:00–22:00); after-hours storage by prior arrangement
step-free front entrance (ramp); lift to all floors; one adapted room on ground floor with roll‑in shower and grab rails; doors 85 cm wide
no on‑site parking; public car park 'Parkhaus am Brühl' (5 min walk, entrance on Brühl) costs €18/night (no reservation); nearest EV charger (Type 2, 22 kW) at Leipzig Hauptbahnhof, 10 min walk, €0.35/kWh
Tasse, imposte e depositi
City / tourist tax: €5.00 per person per night (city tax, payable at check-in; includes a free Leipzig Card for public transport and discounts)
Deposit & card hold: no advance deposit required; a €100 incidental hold placed on credit card at check-in
Faith & Dietary vicino
- Church: Katholische Studentengemeinde St. Thomas Morus (331 m · ~4 min walk)
- Church: Kreuzkirche (373 m · ~5 min walk)
- Church: EFG Leipzig (400 m · ~5 min walk)
- Church: Alois-Andritzki-Kapelle (445 m · ~6 min walk)
Stile di vita e ricreazione locale
Petersbogen — 1.2 km · ~15 min walk
Floßplatz — 211 m · ~3 min walk
Zentrale Hinrichtungsstätte der DDR — 891 m · ~11 min walk
Schauspiel Leipzig Probebühne — 275 m · ~3 min walk
Neue Ufer — 304 m · ~4 min walk
5 minuti di radio essenziali
Nearest — 50 m · ~1 min walk
Mozart-Apotheke — 189 m · ~2 min walk
Amazigh — 177 m · ~2 min walk
Leipzig Bayerischer Bahnhof — 763 m · ~10 min walk
Moneta e moneta
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use bank ATMs in the city centre for the best rates; avoid exchange bureaux at Leipzig/Halle Airport or Hauptbahnhof, which charge poor rates and fees.
Visa and Mastercard are widely accepted in supermarkets, restaurants, and shops; contactless and Apple Pay/Google Pay are common. Smaller cafes or markets may prefer cash.
Round up the bill or leave 5-10% in restaurants; tip taxi drivers 5-10% or round up to the nearest euro; hotel staff appreciate €1-2 per bag or per night for housekeeping.
Mangiare, fare shopping e viaggiare su un budget
Cheap car hire →Filter coffee from a bakery or kiosk costs around €2-3.
A Döner kebab or currywurst with chips from a Imbiss stand runs about €5-7.
A main course at a no-frills Italian or Greek restaurant is typically €10-14.
Area 04107 has several Imbiss kiosks and market stalls around Karl-Liebknecht-Straße offering sausages, falafel, and pizza slices for quick, cheap eats.
Netto, Aldi, and Lidl are the main budget supermarket chains in this area.
H&M and C&A on the city's main shopping streets (reachable by tram) offer affordable high-street fashion; the Drallewatsch flea market occasionally has second-hand clothes.
A single tram ticket costs €3.30, but a day pass for Leipzig (€8.50 valid on trams and buses from 9am) is better value. From Leipzig/Halle Airport, take the S-Bahn S5X to the city centre (€5.90 single, 15 min ride).
Buy a Leipzig City Tour Card for unlimited public transport and museum discounts; eat at student-friendly spots near Südvorstadt (like Döner stands or Imbiss); fill a water bottle at public fountains or tap water (safe to drink).
Buono da sapere — Leipzig
Type C/F · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ €0.88 · EUR
Emergency Contacts
LeipzigDial 112 for ambulance and fire, 110 for police. In Leipzig, European emergency number 112 works for all three from a mobile. For non-urgent medical help call 116117.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
Book a table →💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Leipzig, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Gästehaus Leipzig
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 50 m · ~1 min walk — pharmacy · Mozart-Apotheke — 189 m · ~2 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Girare intorno
Find train tickets →Leipzig Hauptbahnhof (Goethestrasse stop) → Ranstädter Steinweg (Voyage Pension)
💡 Alight at Ranstädter Steinweg; the pension is a 2-minute walk west. Use the Leipzig mobil app for contactless ticketing.
Leipzig Hauptbahnhof (Hauptbahnhof/Rosa-Luxemburg-Strasse) → Voyage Pension area (Ranstädter Steinweg)
💡 Less frequent than the tram but useful late evening; check real-time departures on the Leipzig mobil app.
Leipzig Hauptbahnhof → Hotel Zur Sonne (Wildstraße stop)
💡 Alight at Wildstraße, not 'Zur Sonne' stop. The hotel is a 2-minute walk east. Buy a day pass if planning multiple trips.
Leipzig Hauptbahnhof → Hotel Zur Sonne (Eitingstraße stop)
💡 Use this after the tram stops. Get off at Eitingstraße, then walk 300m south. Cash only on night buses – expect €3.00 exact.
Leipzig Hauptbahnhof (main station) → Hotel Don Giovanni (Sachsenseite stop)
💡 Buy a single ticket from machines at the station — validate it on board. At Sachsenseite, exit towards Kurt-Eisner-Strasse and walk 200m; the hotel is on your right.
Leipzig Hauptbahnhof (main station) → Hotel Don Giovanni (Kurt-Eisner-Strasse stop)
💡 Only useful after trams stop. The stop at 'Kurt-Eisner-Strasse' is directly opposite the hotel. Validate your ticket on the bus — machines don't sell tickets onboard.
Leipzig Hauptbahnhof (central) → Auenwald stop
💡 Get a 1-day Leipzig pass (€8) if you'll use trams more than twice. The Auenwald stop is a short walk through the park to the hotel—wear shoes for grass paths.
Leipzig Hauptbahnhof → Auenwald (Kleinzschocher)
💡 This bus runs less frequently at weekends—check the LVB app. It drops you closer to the hotel entrance than the tram, but the walk through the woods is nicer.
Leipzig Hauptbahnhof (main station) → Pension Großmann (stop: Reudnitz/Kölnischer Platz)
💡 Get a day ticket (€8.50) if planning multiple trips. Alight at 'Reudnitz/Kölnischer Platz' – the pension is a 3-minute walk east on Prager Strasse.
Leipzig/Halle Airport (LEJ) → Hotel Don Giovanni (Leipzig city centre)
💡 Book through a local firm like Taxi Leipzig for a fixed fare of €28–35, avoiding airport surcharges. Metered rides often cost more in traffic.
Leipzig/Halle Airport (LEJ) → Voyage Pension, Leipzig
💡 Book through a local app like FreeNow for a fixed price around €25-30; avoid touts in the arrivals hall.
Leipzig/Halle Airport (LEJ) → Pension Großmann, Leipzig
💡 Book with Funk Taxi (+49 341 4884) for fixed airport rates. Avoid unlicensed drivers at arrivals – they charge double.
Domande frequenti
What are the best rooms at Gästehaus Leipzig?
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor facing the rear courtyard (away from Wächterstraße). This minimises street noise from the main road and gives you a quieter night’s sleep, especially given the hotel's location on a busy street in central Leipzig.
Which rooms should I avoid at Gästehaus Leipzig?
Avoid ground-floor rooms and any room directly facing Wächterstraße (the front side). Street-level rooms get noise from people passing by, traffic, and possibly the entrance. Lower floors also pick up more vibration from trams and delivery vehicles.
Is Gästehaus Leipzig noisy?
Wächterstraße is a main road in central Leipzig with trams, cars, and pedestrian traffic. Expect noise from trams passing until late evening and early morning, plus delivery lorries for nearby shops. A rear-facing room is essential for quiet.
Which rooms have the best views at Gästehaus Leipzig?
Rear courtyard views are the best option here — they show a typical Leipzig block interior with greenery and quiet, rather than the busy Wächterstraße with its trams and shops. No panoramic city view is likely given the building’s position.
What are insider tips for staying at Gästehaus Leipzig?
1. If you arrive by car, check with the hotel about nearby parking garages — street parking on Wächterstraße is limited and often paid. 2. Request a room on a higher floor (3 or 4) at booking, and confirm it’s rear-facing when you check in — this hotel’s location makes it worth specifically asking.
What time is check-in at Gästehaus Leipzig?
Check-in at Gästehaus Leipzig is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Gästehaus Leipzig have Wi-Fi?
free Wi‑Fi throughout, up to 50 Mbps download; one device per guest, login with room number and surname
Is there a city or tourist tax at Gästehaus Leipzig?
€5.00 per person per night (city tax, payable at check-in; includes a free Leipzig Card for public transport and discounts)
Where can I eat cheaply near Gästehaus Leipzig?
A Döner kebab or currywurst with chips from a Imbiss stand runs about €5-7.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Gästehaus Leipzig?
A single tram ticket costs €3.30, but a day pass for Leipzig (€8.50 valid on trams and buses from 9am) is better value. From Leipzig/Halle Airport, take the S-Bahn S5X to the city centre (€5.90 single, 15 min ride).
When is the best time to visit Leipzig?
May, June, September — pleasant temperatures (15-25°C), low rainfall, and manageable tourist numbers. City festivals like the Bachfest in June add cultural flavour without overwhelming crowds.
Principali attrazioni a Leipzig
💡 Attend a Friday Eveningsong service at 18:00 – the choir (founded by Bach) sings motets for free, and the acoustics are superb. No booking needed, but arrive 20 minutes early for a good pew.
💡 Come for the 18:00 Friday or Saturday motet (free) and hear the boys' choir sing where Bach did; arrive 20 mins early for a pew.
💡 Head to the sound lab on the top floor—you can 'conduct' the orchestra in a short Bach movement. Free day gets busy; go right at open.
💡 Free organ recitals most Saturdays at noon. Check the noticeboard by the entrance for the schedule.
💡 Attend a Friday or Saturday evening motet by the St. Thomas Choir – free to listen. Arrive 20 minutes early for a seat. The church acoustics are excellent.
💡 Visits are free on the first Wednesday of each month. Check the website for current temporary exhibitions.
💡 Bring your own snacks. The park café is overpriced. Great spot for a cheap afternoon away from the city bustle.
💡 Wednesday free entry is popular – go just after opening at 10:00 for quieter galleries. The rooftop café has decent coffee for €3 and a view over the city rooftops.