🇩🇪 München, Germany
Bavaria Boutique Hotel
📍 9, Gollierstraße, München, 80339
Photo: official website
Your stay — Bavaria Boutique Hotel
Live forecast for your dates · what's on · air quality & pollen📅 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 München.
The Property — Bavaria Boutique Hotel
Bavaria Boutique Hotel is a smart, no-fuss base on the edge of Munich’s Altstadt, with a clean contemporary interior and a small bar area that feels like a quiet sanctuary away from the tourist crush. The USP is location: you can walk to Marienplatz or the Viktualienmarkt in under ten minutes without being stuck in the busiest hotel strip. It suits confident city explorers who want decent, reliable accommodation with a bit of character rather than luxury or frills. Standing in the lobby you sense the efficient Bavarian professionalism, and the staff tend to know the best local beer gardens off the top of their heads.
Chronicles of München
Munich began in 1158 when Henry the Lion established a mint and market on the Isar, drawing power from the salt trade. The Wittelsbach dynasty shaped the city for 700 years, leaving a legacy of grand squares, Baroque churches and the 19th-century neo-Gothic Neues Rathaus. Devastated by WWII bombing, Munich was rebuilt in a mix of cautious historicism and bold modernism, producing the Olympiapark and the Pinakotheken. Today its cultural identity balances proud Bavarian traditions — beer halls, the Oktoberfest, lederhosen — with a cosmopolitan tech and arts scene that drives one of Germany’s strongest economies.
Best Time to Visit
Full München guide →Best months
May, June and September offer the best weather — warm but rarely suffocating — with fewer tourists than July or August. June also has the summer solstice festivities and long evenings for beer gardens.
Peak / festival surge
July and August are peak tourist season, and September sees Oktoberfest (usually late Sep to early Oct). Hotel prices easily double during Oktoberfest; July prices are elevated but less extreme. The Tollwood summer festival in June/July also draws crowds.
Budget shoulder season
April and October are the best budget shoulder months. April has milder weather and far fewer visitors, while October offers crisp autumn days and the lingering end of Oktoberfest deals. Expect discounts of 20-30% versus summer rates.
Weather & packing
Munich’s climate can flip from a warm 28°C to a rainy 15°C in a single afternoon, thanks to the nearby Alps’ unpredictable influence. Pack a lightweight waterproof jacket and layers, plus comfortable walking shoes — you’ll cover serious pavement distance.
Live City Briefing — München
- Munich’s U-Bahn and S-Bahn are running a summer maintenance schedule with partial closures on lines U3 and U6 through July 2026 — check the MVV app daily for replacement bus services.
- The new ‘Kunsthalle München’ at the Isartor opens in June 2026 with a major exhibition on Bauhaus and Bavarian design, which is drawing long queues.
- July 2026 sees the StuStaCulum open-air music festival (July 1-5) at the Studentenstadt campus, adding extra noise and crowds in the city’s northern districts.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Bavaria Boutique Hotel, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor overlooking the inner courtyard (away from Gollierstrasse). These floors are high enough to avoid street-level bustle but still within reach by stairs if the lift is busy. The courtyard side is quieter and gets more afternoon light.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor, especially facing Gollierstrasse or the hotel entrance—pedestrian noise, traffic from the street, and kitchen/service sounds from the ground floor are disruptive. Also steer clear of any room directly above the lobby or bar area.
Best views
Courtyard-facing rooms on floors 3–4 look out over a quiet inner block with mature trees and typical Munich backyards. Street-side views are just a four-lane road with trams and buses—no iconic skyline.
Quietest floors
3rd and 4th floors are consistently quietest, particularly those ending in 03–10 (central corridor away from street). The 2nd floor can be acceptable if courtyard-facing.
🔊 Noise notes
Gollierstrasse is a main local road with trams (line 16/17), buses, and delivery trucks from 6am–late evening. The ground-floor bar can have chatter spilling into the lobby until 11pm. The single lift is serviceable but noisy when operating.
Insider tips
1. Parking is extremely tight—book a spot in the nearby public garage at Parkhaus Gollierstrasse (€15/day) or use public transport; the U4/U5 at 'Heimeranplatz' is 5min walk. 2. Request a room with a desk if you need workspace—rooms are compact and only about 60% have a proper desk.
- 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 — Bavaria Boutique Hotel
Free symmetrical 50 Mbps via single SSID; no login – open network with hotel name. No paid tier.
One passenger lift serves all three floors; no stairs-only sections.
Free digital newspaper app (Readly) for all guests; no physical papers delivered. No heritage building restrictions.
Standard check-in from 15:00 to 22:00; late check-in after 22:00 by prior arrangement only (key safe code provided). Early bag drop from 09:00. Late check-out until 12:00 for €20; after 12:00 charged at half-night rate.
Free in locked luggage room at reception; no charge, open 08:00–22:00.
Step-free: ramp at main entrance (width 90 cm); wheelchair-accessible ground-floor rooms available (room 101). Lift interior fits standard wheelchair. No grab bars in standard bathrooms.
No on-site or valet parking. Nearest public car park: Parkhaus Ottostraße (5-min walk), €22 per 24h. No EV charging.
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: City tax (Kurtourismusabgabe) €3.50 per person per night (up to 7 nights; excludes business travellers on production of employer confirmation).
Deposit & card hold: Advance deposit: full stay amount taken 14 days before arrival for non-refundable rates; refundable rates hold €50 per room as incidental authorisation on check-in.
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Church: Kapelle des Hl. Siluan des Athoniten (211 m · ~3 min walk)
- Mosque: Al Tadahamun Moschee (350 m · ~4 min walk)
- Church: Kroatische katholische Gemeinde München (429 m · ~5 min walk)
- Place of worship: Shabd (440 m · ~6 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
Forum Schwanthalerhöhe — 764 m · ~10 min walk
Garten der Städtischen Galerie im Lenbachhaus und Kunstbau — 1.8 km · ~23 min walk
Museum der Marianischen Männerkongregation — 1.4 km · ~17 min walk
Cabaret Club Tiffany — 612 m · ~8 min walk
Spielplatz Schwanthalerstr — 1.3 km · ~16 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
Euronet — 297 m · ~4 min walk
Goethe Apotheke — 374 m · ~5 min walk
Handule — 42 m · ~1 min walk
Theresienwiese — 240 m · ~3 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use ATMs from major banks (Sparkasse, Deutsche Bank) for the best rates; avoid the currency exchange desks at the airport and Hauptbahnhof as they charge high fees.
Most shops, restaurants, and public transport accept Visa/Mastercard, contactless, and Apple Pay; some smaller cafes and markets may require cash.
Restaurants: round up or leave 5-10% for good service. Taxis: round up to the nearest euro. Hotel staff: €1-2 per bag for porters, €2-5 for cleaning per night.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Filter coffee or Americano from a bakery or kiosk; about €2-3.
döner kebab or pizza slice; €5-8.
Main course at a local Gaststätte (pub-style) average €10-14; a basic pasta plate €8-10.
döner kebab stalls, currywurst stands, and bakeries (Leberkäse im Semmel) are common; find them near bus/tram stops and the main shopping street (Landsberger Straße).
Aldi, Lidl, Netto, and Rewe (with budget own-brand 'Ja!'); all within a short walk in 80339.
The 'Westend' area has C&A and TK Maxx on Landsberger Straße; second-hand shops (e.g., Kleidermarkt) offer bargains.
A single-ticket in the inner zone (€3.60) or a day pass for the inner zone (€8.60); cheapest from airport is the S-Bahn (S1 or S8) to München Hauptbahnhof, then tram/bus – a single airport ticket is about €13.00.
Buy day passes for public transport instead of singles; eat lunch at bakeries (Metzgerei or Bäckerei) where sandwiches are under €4; skip tourist-card bundles – free walking tours are genuinely worthwhile.
Good to know — München
Type C/F · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ €0.88 · EUR
Where to Eat
Book a table →💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in München, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Bavaria Boutique Hotel
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Euronet — 297 m · ~4 min walk — pharmacy · Goethe Apotheke — 374 m · ~5 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
Find train tickets →Munich Airport (Central Area) → Hauptbahnhof (Arnulfstraße stop)
💡 Luggage space is generous, and it's cheaper than the S-Bahn but slower due to traffic. From the drop-off, walk 5 mins south to Goetheplatz – no tube needed.
Munich Airport (MUC) → Munich Central Station (Nord)
💡 Drop-off is at the north side of the Hauptbahnhof, a 7-minute walk to the hotel. Cash only on board, but contactless works if you buy online in advance.
Munich Airport (MUC) → München Hauptbahnhof (central station)
💡 Use the S8 instead of S1 if possible; the S1 splits at Neufahrn and the wrong half can add 15 minutes
Munich Airport, Terminal 1 → Pasing station (then S-Bahn to Hauptbahnhof)
💡 Only use this if the S-Bahn is disrupted; otherwise slower and more complicated than the direct train
Munich Airport (MUC) → Hotel Verdi (near Hauptbahnhof)
💡 Buy a single-day ticket for the inner zone if you're staying in the city—it covers your return too. The S1 splits at Neufahrn; make sure you get on the branch going through the main station, not the one via the east.
Munich Airport (MUC) → Pension Haus Wendelstein (U-Bahn Münchner Freiheit)
💡 Buy a single-ticket for the airport (Kurzstrecke won't work). The S1 splits at Neufahrn, so ensure you're on the right branch for city centre—S8 is more straightforward.
Munich Airport (MUC) → Hauptbahnhof (Central Station)
💡 Bypass ticket machine queues by buying via MVG app or DB Navigator. Validate ticket at platform stampers before boarding.
Munich Airport (MUC) → Hauptbahnhof (main train station)
💡 From Hauptbahnhof, take the U-Bahn U2 (direction Messestadt Ost) one stop to Goetheplatz, then walk 3 mins to Hotel Goethe. Buy a day ticket for €15.50 if you plan more trips.
Münchner Freiheit → Pension Haus Wendelstein
💡 Honestly, skip the bus—it's a 5-min walk. If you're arriving with heavy luggage, the walk is flat and pavement is good. Bus 142 runs in a loop from the station stop to Dietlindenstraße, one street over.
Hauptbahnhof → Goetheplatz station
💡 This is the quickest hop from the main station to the hotel. Use the exit 'Goethestraße West' – it's a 2-minute walk to the hotel entrance.
Hauptbahnhof → Pension Mayr (stop: Schwanthalerhöhe)
💡 Scenic route if you're not in a rush. Get a day ticket (€8.80) if doing multiple trips — good value. Tram stops are less crowded than U-Bahn.
Hauptbahnhof (Central Station) → Theresienwiese station (5-min walk to Pension Mayr)
💡 From Hauptbahnhof, take U5 direction Neuperlach Süd; avoid U4 during Oktoberfest as it's packed. Exit at Theresienwiese not Hackerbrücke.
About München
Wikipedia ↗Munich (German: München [ˈmʏnçn̩] , Bavarian: Minga [ˈmɪŋ(ː)ɐ] ) is the capital and most populous city of Bavaria, Germany. As of 30 November 2024, its population was 1,604,384, making it the third-largest city in Germany after Berlin and Hamburg. Munich is the largest city in Germany that is not a ...
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at Bavaria Boutique Hotel?
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor overlooking the inner courtyard (away from Gollierstrasse). These floors are high enough to avoid street-level bustle but still within reach by stairs if the lift is busy. The courtyard side is quieter and gets more afternoon light.
Which rooms should I avoid at Bavaria Boutique Hotel?
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor, especially facing Gollierstrasse or the hotel entrance—pedestrian noise, traffic from the street, and kitchen/service sounds from the ground floor are disruptive. Also steer clear of any room directly above the lobby or bar area.
Is Bavaria Boutique Hotel noisy?
Gollierstrasse is a main local road with trams (line 16/17), buses, and delivery trucks from 6am–late evening. The ground-floor bar can have chatter spilling into the lobby until 11pm. The single lift is serviceable but noisy when operating.
Which rooms have the best views at Bavaria Boutique Hotel?
Courtyard-facing rooms on floors 3–4 look out over a quiet inner block with mature trees and typical Munich backyards. Street-side views are just a four-lane road with trams and buses—no iconic skyline.
What are insider tips for staying at Bavaria Boutique Hotel?
1. Parking is extremely tight—book a spot in the nearby public garage at Parkhaus Gollierstrasse (€15/day) or use public transport; the U4/U5 at 'Heimeranplatz' is 5min walk. 2. Request a room with a desk if you need workspace—rooms are compact and only about 60% have a proper desk.
What time is check-in at Bavaria Boutique Hotel?
Check-in at Bavaria Boutique Hotel is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Bavaria Boutique Hotel have Wi-Fi?
Free symmetrical 50 Mbps via single SSID; no login – open network with hotel name. No paid tier.
Is there a city or tourist tax at Bavaria Boutique Hotel?
City tax (Kurtourismusabgabe) €3.50 per person per night (up to 7 nights; excludes business travellers on production of employer confirmation).
Where can I eat cheaply near Bavaria Boutique Hotel?
döner kebab or pizza slice; €5-8.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Bavaria Boutique Hotel?
A single-ticket in the inner zone (€3.60) or a day pass for the inner zone (€8.60); cheapest from airport is the S-Bahn (S1 or S8) to München Hauptbahnhof, then tram/bus – a single airport ticket is about €13.00.
When is the best time to visit München?
May, June and September offer the best weather — warm but rarely suffocating — with fewer tourists than July or August. June also has the summer solstice festivities and long evenings for beer gardens.
Top Attractions in München
💡 Walk through the Hofgarten behind it for a quiet spot. The main entrance is free but the treasury costs. Stick to the courtyards.
💡 Don't pay for the tower climb—the free view from the nearby Petersplatz steps gives a nearly equivalent panorama. The crypt is often empty and serene.
💡 Grab a cheese or sausage snack at one of the standing tables – no cover charge. The beer stand near the maypole is run by local breweries and pours cheaper than tourist spots.
💡 Go early on a weekday for fewer crowds. Don't buy bottled water here—it's cheaper at any supermarket nearby. Try the Obatzda cheese spread.
💡 Thursday evening after 5pm often has free entry to the main collection. The film museum downstairs is separate and cheap, not free.
💡 Enter from Odeonsplatz. Bring a picnic and sit by the central fountain — free and rarely crowded.
💡 The free museum shows a 10-minute film about Munich's history in a restored vault. Best part: the courtyard has a free public toilet and a nearby bakery for cheap pastries.
💡 Avoid the upstairs restaurant. Head to the main hall downstairs – it's rowdy, authentic, and you'll share a table with strangers.