How to Book a Berlin Hidden Backyards Tour

Berlin’s old Mitte district has around 400 surviving 19th-century courtyards behind its street-front buildings. Most of them are locked, private, invisible from the street. A small number are open to the public — covered in street art, home to theatres, cafes, quirky little shops. The Hackesche Höfe complex is the most famous. The smaller courtyards around Oranienburger Strasse are where the Hidden Backyards tour goes.

Here’s what these tours actually cover, why the €23 guided option beats wandering solo, and which version to book if you’re short on time.

Hackesche Höfe Berlin interior courtyard
The Hackesche Höfe — the most famous of the Berlin courtyards. Eight interconnected Art Nouveau courts, finished 1907, the main tourist entry point to this hidden-courtyard world. Via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Hackesche Höfe courtyard Berlin
One of the eight Hackesche courts. What used to be workshop space is now cafes, boutiques, and theatres. August Endell designed the Art Nouveau tile patterns you see here in 1906. Via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Hackesche Höfe 2023 visitor view
Today’s visitor view. In high season the main Hackesche court fills up with tour groups — the Hidden Backyards tour deliberately skips it and goes to the quieter, grittier alternative courtyards nearby. Via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

In a Hurry? The Three Backyards Tours

Berlin Baroque street architecture
You approach the courtyard district past elegant Mitte frontages like this one. The trick is knowing that half the interesting stuff is behind the street-fronts rather than along them.

Why Berlin Has These Courtyards

Hackesche Höfe Berlin alternate angle
The courtyards are connected by short tunnels between buildings. You go through what looks like a normal apartment entrance and find yourself in what’s effectively a small plaza.

19th-century Berlin built up fast. Population tripled between 1850 and 1900. The city imposed rules about minimum internal space in new buildings, which led architects to invent the “Hinterhof” — a back courtyard that would fit on a thin urban plot. Most have a narrow front building facing the street, then an arched passage leading back to a courtyard with deeper buildings around it. Behind those, sometimes, another courtyard. Repeat.

In their working heyday, these courtyards were factories, workshops, housing for poorer workers — the messy industrial guts of a fast-industrialising city. Jewish Berlin lived heavily in this district (it’s called the “Scheunenviertel” — barn quarter). After WWII the neighbourhood was bombed heavily but the courtyard structures survived better than the front buildings. After reunification in 1989 most were abandoned, squatted, painted with street art, and eventually renovated into mixed-use spaces.

What Makes Them Interesting Now

Three things: the architecture (Art Nouveau, 19th-century utilitarian, 1990s-era anarchist overwrites), the contemporary street-art they host, and the fact that almost no Berlin-first-timer knows they exist.

Berlin historic street in winter
Mitte streets in winter. The covered courtyards are a godsend when the wind is biting — most interior Höfe are 5-10°C warmer than the open streets.

The Best Hidden Backyards Tours

1. Berlin Hidden Backyards Guided Walking Tour — from €23

Berlin Hidden Backyards guided walking tour
The most-booked option. 2 hours, starts near Hackescher Markt, visits 5-7 courtyards that aren’t easily findable solo.

Standard market-leading option. Guides are usually Mitte-based locals with architecture or art-history backgrounds. Group size capped at 20. You get the Hackesche Höfe (briefly) plus several of the less-touristed courtyards like the Haus Schwarzenberg (street art focus) and Sophie-Gips-Höfe (contemporary art). Our full review has the meeting point and the typical route.

2. Backyards of Berlin 2-Hour Tour — from €21

Berlin Backyards 2-hour tour
Alternative operator with smaller groups. Cheaper, maximum 12 people, same 2-hour length, slightly different itinerary.

If the main tour is full or you prefer a smaller group. Different guide network — these tours are run by the Berlin Walks cooperative. Covers some different courtyards, including the former artist squat Tacheles, even though the original space has been redeveloped. Our review compares the two main tours directly.

3. Berlin Hidden Gems Bike Tour — from €199 per 2 people

Berlin guided bike tour hidden gems
Cycling version — covers more ground (including Kreuzberg and Friedrichshain courtyards), but at €99 per person for a pair, it’s a significant upgrade in price.

Bike version for couples or small pairs. 3 hours, maximum 2 people, semi-private experience. Covers courtyards further out than the walking tours can reach — including some in Prenzlauer Berg and Friedrichshain. Pricier per person but includes bike rental. Our review has the route.

What You’ll See on the Tour

Berlin street art urban wall
Street art in one of the back courtyards. Some of it’s permanent (commissioned murals), most is ever-changing. What you see on your tour won’t be the same as what tour groups see next month.

The 2-hour Hidden Backyards tour hits about 6-8 courtyards. Here’s what’s typically on the route:

Hackesche Höfe (The Famous One)

Most tours start or finish here. Eight interconnected courtyards built 1906-1907, the largest surviving complex of its type in Europe. The first courtyard has the signature Art Nouveau tile work by August Endell. The guides usually spend 10 minutes here before moving on — the Hackesche is too touristy to linger.

Haus Schwarzenberg (The Street Art One)

Berlin colorful painted wall pattern
The Haus Schwarzenberg courtyard is a constantly-repainted outdoor gallery. Street artists get permission to paint; the surface cycles every few months.

Next door to the Hackesche but radically different in feel. An art association squatted this former courtyard in the 1990s and has held it ever since. Walls are covered in ever-changing street art. The Anne Frank Centre and a small Holocaust memorial are in the same building. Gallery space on the ground floor. The contrast with the gentrified Hackesche is the whole point.

Sophie-Gips-Höfe (The Art Gallery One)

Between Sophienstrasse and Gipsstrasse. Redeveloped 1997 as a mixed gallery and residential space. Hosts the Erika Hoffmann Collection — one of Berlin’s best private contemporary art collections, open for booked guided tours only. You won’t get inside on a Hidden Backyards tour but the courtyard itself is worth the 10-minute stop.

Berlin elephant mural basketball court
Not in the courtyards exactly but near the route — a massive elephant mural on a basketball court in the Scheunenviertel. Tours loop past it on the way between sites.

Alte Schönhauser Höfe (The Quiet One)

Off Alte Schönhauser Strasse in deeper Mitte. Less touristed, mostly residential, a smaller courtyard with interesting architecture. Some of the shops here have been running since the 1990s occupation era — tour guides often know the individual tenants and stop for brief chats.

Heckmann-Höfe (The Commercial One)

An 1879 courtyard complex that housed the Heckmann copper works. Now mostly upscale shops and restaurants. Less gritty, but the architecture is notable — you can see industrial infrastructure overlapping with contemporary retail.

Kunsthof (The Smaller-Gallery One)

Near Oranienburger Strasse. Smaller and easier to miss. Houses several small art galleries and workshops. Where the Hidden Backyards tour guides often stop for a coffee break.

Brandenburg Gate Berlin street scene
Your start point is a 10-minute walk from Brandenburg Gate — but the tour takes you well away from the tourist route almost immediately.

Street Art in the Courtyards

Berlin Wall style street art colorful
Street art on interior courtyard walls. Unlike the East Side Gallery (which is protected), courtyard walls are painted over regularly. What you see this trip won’t be what the next visitor sees.

Berlin has one of the most active street-art scenes in Europe, and many of the longest-running murals live in private courtyards rather than on public walls. The courtyards are safer (no official graffiti cleanup), semi-private (less chance of being tagged over), and have the right building-owner buy-in.

The Haus Schwarzenberg is the densest site. The Hackesche has a few commissioned pieces. Others vary. Good guides know the individual artist backstories — who painted what, when, why, whether they’re local or visiting.

Notable Artists to Look Out For

El Bocho — Berlin-based, known for the “Little Lucy” character, appears in multiple courtyards.

Mein Lieber Prost — the smiling face you’ll see pasted-up on walls across Berlin. In the courtyards, often in stencil form.

Alias — political stencil artist, Banksy-adjacent style, work in Haus Schwarzenberg.

Guido van Helten — Australian street artist, occasional Berlin residencies, large-scale portrait work.

Berlin manhole cover with city landmarks
Berlin detail — even the manhole covers are patterned with city landmarks. The courtyard tours are an exercise in this kind of detail-noticing.
Berlin Cathedral and Fernsehturm at night
End the tour around dusk and the walk back toward central Berlin hits the cathedrals and TV Tower at golden hour. A quiet add-on to an already quiet tour.

When to Visit

Berlin historic architecture rooftops
Berlin rooftops over the Mitte district. The courtyards are invisible from up here — they live behind the street-fronts you can see.

Weekday mornings are quietest. Saturday afternoons get crowded at the Hackesche but the lesser-known courtyards stay calm. Sunday afternoons have shortened gallery hours — some of the interior art spaces close by 4pm.

Seasonally: spring and autumn are ideal. Summer can get hot in the enclosed courtyards (which act as heat traps). Winter works fine — the narrower covered spaces actually feel warmer than the open streets.

Peak Crowd Hours

The Hackesche Höfe specifically gets crammed between 11am and 4pm on weekends. Avoid or plan your 10 minutes there carefully. The deeper courtyards are always calmer.

Doing It Solo vs Booking a Tour

Brandenburg Gate Berlin monument daytime
For reference: tourists at Brandenburg Gate. Most first-time Berlin visitors stop here, at the Reichstag, at the TV Tower — and never discover the courtyards 15 minutes away.

You can do this self-guided. Google Maps knows where the courtyards are. The Hackesche Höfe is publicly accessible during daytime. Haus Schwarzenberg is open. Most others have visible arched entrances from the street.

But you’ll miss the history without a guide. The courtyards are physically interesting but the layered stories (the Jewish community pre-1938, the squatter era 1989-2000, the gentrification war of the 2000s, the current tension between commercialisation and artistic authenticity) aren’t self-explanatory. The guides spend most of their time on this layered history.

If you have a tight schedule or a strong architecture background, go solo with a good map. Otherwise book the tour. €23 for 2 hours is one of the best-value guided experiences in Berlin.

What You Can Do Afterwards

The tour ends near Hackescher Markt S-Bahn — a 5-minute walk from Alexanderplatz. Natural follow-ups:

Lunch in Mitte — the neighbourhood is packed with cafes. Try Katz Orange for upmarket modern German, or Zula for Middle Eastern.

Berlin TV Tower and river view
TV Tower is a 10-minute walk from the tour endpoint — pair it with the courtyards for a single afternoon if you have time.

TV Tower (Fernsehturm) — 8-minute walk away. Observation deck if you haven’t done it yet.

Museum Island — 10 minutes away, and you can use the WelcomeCard if you’re going to hit multiple museums.

Neue Synagoge — 5-minute walk. Complementary Jewish-Berlin history.

Berlin TV Tower with urban buildings
Post-tour view. TV Tower is ~10 minutes on foot from Hackescher Markt — a natural first stop if you’re continuing sightseeing rather than heading to lunch.

Food and Shopping in the Courtyards

Berlin street near St Marys Church Mitte
Street-level view of Mitte. The courtyards are one level down from this — you enter through those arched passages you see on the left.

The Hackesche has upmarket food and design shops. Honest, the quality’s fine but the prices reflect that it’s a tourism-driven location. Better bets:

Sophie-Gips-Höfe coffee shops — small and local.

Heckmann-Höfe has a good organic bakery.

Scheunenviertel side streets — cross to Auguststrasse, Linienstrasse, or Rosenthaler Strasse for cafes, bookshops, galleries. The tour guides often recommend specific spots at the end.

Historical Context — The Scheunenviertel

Stolperstein Berlin brass plaque
Stolpersteine are especially dense in the Scheunenviertel streets around these courtyards. Each one marks the last voluntary address of a deported person. The Hidden Backyards tour usually pauses to read a few.

The district where most of these courtyards are (“Scheunenviertel,” literally “barn quarter”) was historically Berlin’s main Jewish quarter. In 1933 about one-third of the residents were Jewish. Over 55,000 people were deported from Mitte alone between 1941 and 1945. You see the stolpersteine (“stumbling stones” — brass plaques in the pavement) outside almost every building.

Good guides weave this into the courtyards tour. It’s not the main theme but it’s the background — who lived here, what happened, what the buildings meant before they became tourist attractions.

Berlin Neue Wache memorial
On the return walk you pass Unter den Linden monuments like the Neue Wache — the quiet counterweight to the noisy alternative-Berlin courtyards.

How It Compares to Other Berlin Walking Tours

The Hidden Backyards tour sits between the pure-history walking tours (general city tours) and the specialised ones (Nazi-era, Cold War). It’s the aesthetic-and-cultural angle that the pure-history tours don’t cover.

If you only have time for one walking tour in Berlin, pick the general highlights tour. If you have time for two, add the Hidden Backyards — it shows you a Berlin most tourists never see.

Practical Questions

Is it kid-friendly? Mostly yes. Material is less heavy than the Nazi-era tours. Pace is gentle. Courtyard street art is colourful and interesting for kids.

Wheelchair accessible? Mostly yes — the courtyards are flat and paved. Some have cobbles. Check with the tour operator if mobility is an issue.

Is the Hackesche free to enter without a tour? Yes, all day. You only need a tour for the context and the lesser-known courtyards.

Can I just walk through? Yes. But the narrow passages between buildings get blocked during tour-group transitions. Plan around the big groups.

Pairing With a Bigger Berlin Day

Berlin skyline domes
Mitte from above. A good one-day Mitte itinerary: Backyards walking tour in morning, lunch in Scheunenviertel, Museum Island in the afternoon, river dinner-cruise in the evening.

Half-day Mitte: Hidden Backyards walking tour (morning) + Neue Synagoge (afternoon) + dinner in Scheunenviertel.

Full Mitte day: Hidden Backyards + lunch + Museum Island + dinner + theatre or music event.

Weekend Mitte: Backyards Saturday morning, Spree River cruise Saturday afternoon, Sunday brunch in Auguststrasse.

Combining With Alternative Berlin

The Hidden Backyards tour is a natural lead-in to the broader Berlin alternative scene. After it, consider a Kreuzberg street-art walk, a Friedrichshain alternative bar evening, or a RAW-Gelände weekend visit (former industrial yard, now graffiti-covered clubs).

Berlin Holocaust Memorial path
If you pair the Hidden Backyards tour with a visit to the Holocaust Memorial, you get both the celebratory and the painful sides of Mitte’s Jewish history in one day.

Courtyards Not on the Tour Worth Finding Yourself

The guided tour hits the big-hit courtyards. If you want to keep exploring afterward, three that aren’t usually on the standard route:

Pfefferberg — in Prenzlauer Berg, a former brewery complex turned cultural centre. More contemporary-gallery than Mitte’s Art Nouveau. 15 minutes on the U2 line.

Aufbauhaus — a 1960s-era publishing-house complex in Kreuzberg with a bookshop, a small cinema, and occasional gallery shows. Gritty DDR-era architecture rather than Mitte’s pre-war Art Nouveau.

Immanuelkirchhof Höfe — residential, rarely seen by tourists, in Prenzlauer Berg. You can walk through during daytime but respect the fact that people actually live here.

How the Tour Started

Someone in the 1990s realised the newly-public courtyards were a tourism asset. The first commercial backyards tours ran around 2001-2002. By the late 2000s a handful of Berlin operators were running them; today four or five companies do the main Mitte route, each with minor variations. The operators share a semi-formal agreement with residents of the non-touristy courtyards: the groups stay small, the noise stays down, and the courtyards stay open. Break that agreement by bringing 40-person coach groups through and the residents complain — and sometimes the courtyard owners close off access.

This is why group sizes are typically capped at 20 on the walking tours and why some guides ask you to be quiet in certain courtyards. It’s a negotiated permission rather than a public right-of-way.

The Short Version

Book the €23 Hidden Backyards Guided Walking Tour for a weekday morning slot, wear comfortable shoes, bring a camera. 2 hours, 6-8 courtyards, a side of Berlin most tourists never see. Follow it with lunch in Scheunenviertel and whatever else you have planned in Mitte.

Affiliate disclosure: Some links in this article are affiliate links. If you book through them we may earn a small commission at no cost to you. All recommendations are based on my own experience.