
Rosewood Munich
Exceptional·666 reviews
From
€270/ night

Munich is a city where dogs are welcomed in beer gardens, on public transport, and throughout the English Garden: Europe's largest urban park. Top spots for pets include the Englischer Garten, Olympiapark, and the Isar river banks, especially around Schwabing, Maxvorstadt, and Haidhausen.
Why Munich with your pet?
Munich is a city where dogs are welcomed in beer gardens, on public transport, and throughout the English Garden: Europe's largest urban park.
📍 Top spot
the Englischer Garten, Olympiapark, and the Isar river banks.
🏘️ Best area
Schwabing, Maxvorstadt, and Haidhausen.

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Munich (München), capital of Bavaria since 1506, grew from a 12th-century monks' settlement — its name comes from 'Mönche' — into a baroque royal residence and the world's beer capital. The Wittelsbach dynasty laid out its grand axes and founded the English Garden in 1789, one of Europe's largest urban parks. Bavarian culture adores dogs: biergartens traditionally welcome well-behaved Hunde under the chestnut trees, and you will spot Dackel and Münsterländer napping beside steins of Helles. Bavaria's Landeshundegesetz requires a Hundesteuer (100 euros per year in Munich for 2026) and liability insurance. Listed breeds face a temperament test. Yet daily life is relaxed: MVG public transport accepts leashed dogs, off-leash zones dot the Isar gravel banks, and the famous Surfer's Wave on the Eisbach draws crowds of pets and humans alike.
At 375 hectares, the English Garden is bigger than New York's Central Park. Dogs must be leashed on main paths, but four marked Freilaufflächen — notably near Schwabinger Bach and the Hirschau — allow off-leash running from sunrise to sunset.
The city's medieval heart hosts the neo-Gothic Neues Rathaus and its 43-bell Glockenspiel, which performs at 11:00 and 12:00 daily. The pedestrian zone allows leashed dogs, though the crowds at showtime are best avoided with sensitive pets.
The renaturalised Isar winds 14 kilometres through the city with gravel banks, shallow side channels and the Flaucher area south of Wittelsbacher Brücke designated as an official off-leash zone. Swimming is permitted for dogs outside the central Museumsinsel stretch.
The 140-stall daily food market has a central biergarten seating 600 under maypoles and chestnuts. Bavarian tradition explicitly welcomes dogs at biergarten tables; water bowls are standard and a Leberkäs-Semmel ends most canine visits happily.
The summer Wittelsbach residence sits in a 180-hectare baroque park with canals and woodland. Dogs on leash are welcome on every main path, though they are banned from the formal parterre near the palace façade and from the four garden pavilions.
Built for the 1972 Games, the 85-hectare park has hills recycled from war rubble and a central lake. A large fenced Hundewiese west of the Olympiaturm lets dogs sprint off-leash while owners enjoy skyline views toward the Alps on clear Föhn days.
Restaurants, parks, transport, beaches, vets. Everything you need to know for Munich with your pet.
Terrace cafés & dog-welcoming spots
Off-leash zones, trails & green spaces
Metros, trains & pet travel rules
Dog-friendly beaches & coastal walks
Sights, museums & things to do
Trusted sitters & day care services
Emergency vets & animal clinics
Local rules, habits & insider tips
Average temperatures. Ideal for planning your pet trip
🐾 Best months to travel with a pet in Munich: May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep