
Self-guided audio tours written by people who actually live there.

Beneath the calm waters of the Kiel Fjord lies a history forged in iron, fire, and revolutionary defiance. Kiel is more than just a gateway to the sea. It is a city where empires crumbled and maritime secrets were whispered into the fog. Unlock these untold stories with a self-guided audio tour designed to lead you through the city's hidden layers. Wander beyond the map to uncover the drama that ordinary tourists never find. Why did the sparks of a naval rebellion ignite a nationwide revolution right here? What ghostly evidence remains of the castle’s lost medieval grandeur? And who was the mysterious figure hiding in plain sight at the Kunsthalle during the city's darkest hour? Navigate the intersection of naval power and artistic scandal. Transform your walk into a journey of revelation. Feel the pulse of the past as you finally see the city for what it truly is. Press play to begin your descent into the shadows of Kiel.

Behind Kiel’s tranquil harbor fronts, a city of hidden power and intrigue hums beneath the surface. Explore at your own pace with this self-guided audio tour, uncovering secrets tucked in unlikely corners and stories whispered by glass and stone. Hear the echoes others rush past in the bustle. Why did a digital revolution spark a fierce political showdown at the Independent State Centre for Data Protection? What shadowy debates shaped the future inside the grand Institute for Security Policy? Who left secret symbols carved in the ironwork of the Kiel Railway, and why do they still puzzle experts? Trace your route through corridors of influence and stations of suspense. Each step pulls you deeper into tangled histories and modern dilemmas, leaving familiar streets charged with new drama. Ready to unlock Kiel’s hidden depths? Press play and begin the search for secrets that shape the city.

Kiel hides its fiercest secrets behind glass façades and painted brick. Just beyond the everyday rush of Damperhof, stories pulse through unlikely landmarks, waiting to be uncovered. With this self-guided audio tour, wind between the luminous halls of Muthesius University of Art and Design and the imposing façade of the Trade Union House. Each step uncovers whispers and revelations missed by the casual traveler. Was there really a midnight confrontation that changed a city’s fate atop Förde Sparkasse? Which artist at Muthesius built a masterpiece to escape scandal? What vanished object still has authorities puzzled near the Trade Union House? Feel each shift of Kiel’s history underfoot, as dramatic conflicts and vanished eras shape the world around you. Cross the invisible lines between rebellion and creativity, beneath the city’s polished surface. Take your first step—and let Kiel reveal what it has hidden in plain sight.

A city where Nobel laureates whisper from old lecture halls and high-tech secrets pulse beneath glass towers—Ravensberg hides more than meets the eye. Venture on a self-guided audio tour that glides from the iconic halls of Kiel University to the guarded archives of the Walther Schücking Institute for International Law and the futuristic hub that is Payone. Walk the streets locals know in a way most travelers never will. Which international scandal ignited fierce debate behind those university walls? Why did a famous jurist vanish without warning, leaving a labyrinth of theories? What peculiar object sits almost unnoticed beside the Payone building that once triggered a strange urban legend? Follow winding lanes and majestic boulevards past echoes of protests, quiet triumphs, and hidden innovations. Each step reveals a new layer of Ravensberg, blending intrigue and history into every corner. Uncover what is usually overlooked. Begin this journey and see Ravensberg in a whole new light.
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
In late October 1918, with the First World War in its final days, German naval officers ordered the fleet based at Kiel to sail out for a final battle they knew was suicidal. The sailors refused. They mutinied, took control of the city, and raised red flags over the ships. The Kiel Mutiny of November 3, 1918 sparked the German Revolution that spread to Hamburg, Munich, and Berlin within days, forced Kaiser Wilhelm II to abdicate, ended the war, and created the Weimar Republic. All of this began on the waterfront of a Baltic port city that Prussia had turned into its principal naval base in 1865. There is a memorial to those sailors near the main station. Not everyone in Kiel agrees about how to commemorate it.
Kiel was rebuilt almost entirely from scratch after the Second World War, during which Allied bombing destroyed more than eighty percent of the old town.
The result is a city that wears its postwar architecture without apology: wide streets, concrete civic buildings, a functional harbour front designed for the ferry services to Scandinavia and the Baltic states that keep the city economically relevant. The Kiel Canal, which enters the Baltic at the Holtenau locks just north of the city, is the world's busiest artificial waterway. On any given afternoon, the parade of container ships, tankers, and leisure yachts passing through it is its own kind of spectacle.

Before you walk.
Direct trains connect Kiel to Hamburg in about 1 hour and 15 minutes. From Hamburg Airport, the journey to Kiel is about 2 hours by train. Kiel is also connected to Copenhagen by ferry (19 hours overnight, or by high-speed ferry in summer). The main station is in the city centre, a short walk from the harbour.
Yes, the Kiellinie promenade along the fjord is completely flat and one of the most pleasant walking routes in northern Germany. The city centre itself is also mostly flat. The harbour area, ferry terminal, and the Holtenau Canal locks are within cycling or bus distance of the centre.
Download your tour beforehand and it will run offline. Mobile coverage in Kiel is reliable throughout the city and along the waterfront. EU roaming applies for European visitors.
Kiel sprotten, cold-smoked herring sprats, are the local speciality and have been exported from here since the nineteenth century. Fresh fish from the morning market at the harbour is a better bet for lunch: grilled plaice or a fish sandwich (Fischbrotchen) with shrimp and dill from one of the harbour kiosks is a very good Kiel afternoon. Holsten and Flensburger are the local beers, both available everywhere.
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4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.
This tour was such a great way to see the city. The stories were interesting without feeling too scripted, and I loved being able to explore at my own pace.
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.