How to Visit the Berlin Story Bunker

Between 1941 and 1945, around 12,000 Berliners sheltered in a 7-storey concrete cube on Schöneberger Strasse. The walls are 3 metres thick. The doors weigh three tons each. The ventilation system was designed to keep carbon-monoxide levels survivable during a firestorm. It worked — though barely. When Soviet troops took the building in 1945, everyone inside was still alive.

Today it’s the Berlin Story Bunker — a museum about Hitler, the Third Reich, and how an entire generation of Berliners lived under bombs. Tickets are €19. The experience is relentless. Here’s what to expect, how it fits into a Berlin history day, and why I’d pair it with a walking tour.

Berlin Anhalter Hochbunker Story Bunker exterior
The Anhalter Hochbunker from street level — 4 storeys visible, 3 more underground, windowless except for ventilation slits. It was designed to take a direct bomb hit and not collapse. It did. Via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)
Berlin Story Bunker exterior at Kreuzberg
The building sits next to the ruins of Anhalter Bahnhof — the train station where most Berlin Jews were deported from, 1941-1945. The proximity isn’t a coincidence. Via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Anhalter Bahnhof Berlin ruins
All that’s left of Anhalter Bahnhof. The portico survived the war and was left as a memorial. The rest of the station was demolished in 1959. Photo by Kadellar / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

In a Hurry? The Three Ways Into Nazi-Era Berlin

Berlin TV Tower urban context
You’ll pass the TV Tower on every Berlin history day — it’s the landmark that orients you between disparate memorial sites. About 15 minutes by U-Bahn from the Story Bunker.

What the Berlin Story Bunker Is (and Isn’t)

The Story Bunker is a private museum inside an authentic WWII-era bunker. The building was constructed in 1942 as an air-raid shelter for railway passengers at Anhalter Bahnhof. It held up to 3,500 people at a time — triple its rated capacity — during the worst Allied bombing raids. After the war it was used briefly as a refugee shelter, then abandoned, then finally converted into a museum in 2006.

The permanent exhibition is called “Hitler — How Could It Happen?” and it does exactly what the title implies. The focus is less on battlefields and more on the mechanics of how ordinary Germans came to support or tolerate the Nazi regime. There’s a reconstruction of Hitler’s bunker (the Führerbunker, where he killed himself in 1945) on the lower level — the only accessible reconstruction of that specific space anywhere.

Berlin Holocaust Memorial concrete blocks
The Holocaust Memorial — a 15-minute walk from the Story Bunker and the other essential stop on any serious Nazi-history Berlin day. Do one in the morning, the other in the afternoon. Via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0)

The Museum’s Approach

The Story Bunker is more didactic than most Berlin memorials. The Jewish Museum makes you feel; the Topography of Terror shows you documents; the Story Bunker lectures you. It’s deliberately heavy on explanatory text and heavy on personal stories of specific Nazi-era Berliners. If you want to understand how “it” happened, this is the building that most directly tries to answer the question.

The Führerbunker reconstruction is the most controversial part. It’s a meticulous life-size rebuild of the final rooms — Hitler’s office, Eva Braun’s sitting room, the corridor where the bodies were carried out. Some visitors find it uncomfortably close to spectacle. Others find it the most effective way to understand the physical smallness of the space where the Third Reich died. I fall in the second camp, but I can see the argument.

The Three Best Ways to Visit

1. Berlin Story Bunker Entry Ticket — from €21

Berlin Story Bunker entry ticket
Self-guided entry to the main exhibition. 2-hour average visit. Audio guide included in English, German, Italian, Spanish, French, Russian.

Straightforward museum entry. You go at your own pace, read the exhibits, listen to the audio guide. No time slot — open 10am to 7pm, buy the online ticket, walk in. Our full review covers the sections (ground floor start, basement Führerbunker reconstruction end), what’s suitable for children, and how it compares to the Topography of Terror.

2. Third Reich & Cold War Walking Tour — from €23

Berlin Third Reich Cold War walking tour
Small-group walking tour covering Hitler’s Bunker (site now, not the museum), Goering’s Aviation Ministry, the Holocaust Memorial, Topography of Terror, and Checkpoint Charlie. 2 hours above ground.

If you want the context around the bunker before going inside the bunker museum. This tour walks you past Hitler’s actual bunker (now a car park — by design), explains the Nazi administrative quarter, and ends at Checkpoint Charlie. Pair it with a Story Bunker visit the next day. Our review covers the guide quality and meeting points.

3. Third Reich + Cold War Combo Walking Tour (Viator) — from €24

Berlin Third Reich Cold War Viator walking tour
Different operator, same route-and-theme coverage. Slightly smaller groups on average. Book whichever is available for your dates.

Near-identical tour from a different guiding company. Same two-hour walking loop, same key stops. Booking window is usually tighter (Viator is more real-time) but the experience is equivalent. Our review compares the two.

What’s Inside the Bunker Museum

Four hours’ worth of material, on three floors plus the basement Führerbunker reconstruction. Here’s what to prioritise.

Ground Floor: Rise of the Nazi Party, 1918-1933

Berlin rooftops historic architecture context
The 1920s Berlin you see in old photos — jazz clubs, film studios, political street fights. This is where the first section of the museum starts: a city becoming more complex than its political system can handle.

The exhibition opens with the Weimar Republic — the democratic government between WWI and the Nazis. You get a quick run through the inflation crisis, political polarisation, and the rise of Nazi street violence. Short section, 20 minutes.

First Floor: Nazi Germany, 1933-1941

Stolperstein Berlin brass plaque memorial
Stolpersteine — brass “stumbling stones” outside victims’ last residences — are scattered throughout Berlin. The Story Bunker places them in context: each one is a person, each person had a last address. Photo by Dudva / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

The consolidation of Nazi power, the racial laws, Kristallnacht, the early concentration camps. This is the section most visitors find heaviest. Prepare to read a lot of personal stories of individual Berliners — half the exhibition is organised around “How was your individual decision made under these conditions?”

Second Floor: War and Holocaust, 1941-1945

Holocaust Memorial stelae pattern
The abstract form of the Holocaust Memorial a few blocks away. The Story Bunker presents specific victims; the Memorial presents the scale. Both are essential. Via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

The war itself. Bombing of Berlin, the Eastern Front, the death camps, and the detailed mechanics of the Holocaust as administered from Berlin’s government offices. Hardest section of the museum. Takes about an hour to work through properly.

Basement: The Führerbunker Reconstruction

Brandenburg Gate Berlin monument
The actual Führerbunker was under the Reich Chancellery garden, 800m from the Brandenburg Gate. Soviet troops dynamited it in 1947. What’s in the Story Bunker is a full-scale replica — not the original space.

The reconstruction is historically accurate and emotionally unusual. You walk through what would have been Hitler’s private office, Eva Braun’s sitting room, the corridor where their bodies were burned after the suicide. The Story Bunker makes clear this is not the actual location — the real Führerbunker is 800m away, under a supermarket car park, and will never be opened as a tourist site. This is the only way to see what those rooms physically were.

Roughly 45 minutes in the basement reconstruction. Some visitors do it twice.

Berlin TV Tower from the river Spree
Between the heavy sections of the museum, mental pauses like a view of the Spree help. Some visitors step out mid-visit for air; the ticket lets you back in.

Story Bunker vs Topography of Terror — Which to Pick

Berlin classical architecture
Berlin’s prewar classical buildings — the Zeughaus and others on Unter den Linden — stand as a reminder that the Nazi period was a 12-year interruption of a 500-year architectural continuity.

Both are must-see Berlin Nazi-history sites. They’re about 15 minutes walk apart. If you can only do one:

Topography of Terror is outdoors, free, and document-heavy. It’s the physical site of the Gestapo headquarters, with an open-air exhibition about the mechanics of Nazi terror. More academic, more minimal, more “here are the facts.”

Berlin Story Bunker is indoors, €21, and exhibition-heavy. More narrative, more emotional, more “here is how it happened.”

If you have half a day: Topography of Terror.

If you have a full day: both, plus the Jewish Museum for the pre-Holocaust cultural story. Start with Topography (free, 90 min), lunch, Story Bunker (2.5 hours), then walk the Holocaust Memorial before it gets dark.

Location and Getting There

Berlin U-Bahn yellow train
Easiest via U-Bahn. Anhalter Bahnhof S-Bahn station is 5 minutes’ walk from the Story Bunker. Alternatively Möckernbrücke on the U1/U3/U7.

The Berlin Story Bunker is at Schöneberger Strasse 23a, in Kreuzberg. Closest stations: Anhalter Bahnhof (S-Bahn S1/S2/S25) and Möckernbrücke (U1/U3/U7). Both about 5 minutes on foot.

From the main Berlin tourist areas:

  • From Brandenburg Gate: 20-minute walk or 2 stops on U55/U5 to Museumsinsel then transfer.
  • From Alexanderplatz: 15 minutes, U2 to Mohrenstrasse, change to U3.
  • From Checkpoint Charlie: 10-minute walk. Worth doing this as a continuation of a Checkpoint Charlie visit.
Checkpoint Charlie Berlin sign
Checkpoint Charlie — the old East-West crossing. Story Bunker is a 10-minute walk from here; most people naturally chain the two. Photo by Gzen92 / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Opening Hours

Daily, 10am to 7pm. Last entry 6pm. Closed December 24, 25, 31, and January 1. You can enter any time during opening hours with an online ticket — it’s not time-slotted like the Jewish Museum.

How Long You Need

Two hours minimum. Three to four hours if you’re going to read the text carefully. I spent four and was still speed-reading parts of the first floor. The Führerbunker reconstruction alone takes 45 minutes if you want to absorb it.

Berlin skyline overview
Central Berlin from above. The Story Bunker is south of this view, in Kreuzberg — which has always been a slightly grittier, more outsider part of the city. Historically relevant for the museum’s tone.

If You’re Emotionally Sensitive

Some visitors struggle with the intensity of the material. There are benches on every floor and an outdoor courtyard where you can take breaks. The cafe across the street does good coffee and you can step out, decompress, and come back within the ticket validity.

Planning a Full Nazi-History Day in Berlin

Berlin Wall East Side Gallery section
The East Side Gallery — the longest remaining stretch of the Berlin Wall, painted by 118 artists in 1990. If your Nazi-history day extends into Cold War, end here. Photo by Pudelek / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)

A full-on Nazi and Cold War Berlin day, from most intense in the morning to least intense in the evening:

9:30am — Topography of Terror (free, 90 min)

11:15am — Walk to Story Bunker (15 min)

11:30am — Story Bunker (3 hours with lunch break)

2:30pm — Walk to Holocaust Memorial (15 min)

3:00pm — Holocaust Memorial + underground information centre (1 hour)

4:00pm — Walk to Checkpoint Charlie (10 min)

4:30pm — Checkpoint Charlie + Berlin Wall Museum (1 hour)

5:30pm — U-Bahn to East Side Gallery, walk the Wall (45 min)

7:00pm — Dinner in Friedrichshain

That’s a 10-hour day. You’ll be emotionally exhausted. Don’t do this and the Jewish Museum in the same day. Space them out.

Other Berlin History Stops Worth Adding

Berlin Neue Wache memorial
Neue Wache on Unter den Linden — the Federal Republic’s central memorial to the victims of war and tyranny. Quiet, small, free. Appropriate decompression after the Story Bunker.

The Neue Wache is the state memorial to “the victims of war and tyranny.” Kollwitz’s ‘Mother with Her Dead Son’ sculpture sits under a skylight that drips rain onto the statue. Small, free, always open. A natural counterpoint to the busier memorials.

For Cold War history specifically, the Berlin Wall Memorial at Bernauer Strasse is the best site — more historically accurate than the East Side Gallery, quieter than Checkpoint Charlie. Free, open 24 hours.

Berlin Holocaust Memorial stelae path
Holocaust Memorial at golden hour. If you time the Story Bunker finish for around 4pm, you hit this light walking across.

For Cold War intrigue specifically, the DDR Museum (east Berlin life) and the Stasi Museum (former headquarters of the East German secret police) both add texture. Potsdam as a half-day trip gives you the Prussian side of the story.

Berlin S-Bahn train through urban landscape
S-Bahn ride out to Friedrichshain after the Story Bunker is a useful transition — urban landscape, normal people commuting, the present tense reasserting itself.

When the Story Bunker Isn’t the Right Call

Berlin street near St Marys Church
If you’re in Berlin for the architecture, the nightlife, or the weekend-long techno experience, the Story Bunker can wait for a different trip. It’s heavy material.

Not every Berlin visitor needs this experience. Skip the Story Bunker if:

  • You’re in Berlin for 2 days and already planning Topography of Terror + Holocaust Memorial — you’ll be oversaturated.
  • You’re travelling with kids under 10 — the material is too heavy.
  • You have personal family history with the Holocaust and have visited similar sites before. Sometimes one is enough for a lifetime.

Practical Questions

Is there a bookshop? Yes, the ground-floor Berlin Story Verlag bookshop has a comprehensive English-language WWII and DDR-era section. Prices are reasonable.

Are photos allowed? Yes in most sections, no in the Führerbunker reconstruction (deliberately).

Is it wheelchair accessible? Partial. The ground floor is accessible; the upper floors have lifts; the basement Führerbunker has steps that can’t be adapted.

Can I do it quickly? 90 minutes if you’re selective. Don’t bother going in if you have less than 90 min — go to Topography of Terror instead.

What to Do Afterward

Berlin Cathedral and Fernsehturm at night
After the Story Bunker, the walk back to central Berlin at dusk passes the Cathedral and TV Tower. Give yourself 30 minutes of walking to decompress before your next activity.

Walk. Don’t get straight on the U-Bahn. The material is heavy and you need the transition time. A 30-minute walk north through Kreuzberg and across the river into Mitte helps your brain catch up with what you’ve just seen.

Eat something substantial. The Story Bunker is calorie-burning in a way most museums aren’t. Kreuzberg street food (döner, curry wurst, vegan bowls) is 5 minutes from the bunker exit. A proper sit-down dinner in Friedrichshain or Prenzlauer Berg is 15 minutes by U-Bahn.

Balance It Out

Don’t end your Berlin day with the Story Bunker. End it with something light. A Spree River cruise, a meal in Mitte, a concert, a walk in the Tiergarten. Berlin has more than one mode.

Berlin winter historic street
Berlin winter. If you’re visiting November to March and doing the Story Bunker, budget extra time for hot food and hot drinks — the emotional weight hits harder when you’re cold.

Pairing With Other Berlin Sites

Story Bunker combines best with:

Same day (morning): Topography of Terror (same area, free, shorter visit).

Same day (afternoon): Holocaust Memorial (15 min walk, free).

Different day: Jewish Museum — same material but different angle. The museum is cultural; the bunker is political.

Different day: Sachsenhausen memorial — 45 minutes outside Berlin, the actual site of a concentration camp. Heaviest stop.

Brandenburg Gate Berlin street scene crowds
Brandenburg Gate crowds. The tourist path goes from here to Story Bunker to Topography of Terror to Holocaust Memorial — a natural 2-kilometer history loop.

For the Cold War angle, the Berlin Wall Memorial is the essential follow-up. The Nazi period ended in 1945; the next 44 years of Berlin history are a different kind of heavy.

The Short Version

Book online for €21, go on a weekday morning, set aside three hours, bring a snack, and pair it with the Topography of Terror either before or after. Don’t do this on your first day in Berlin and don’t do it the day you arrive — you need to have walked around the city a bit before the Story Bunker’s exhibition makes sense.

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 visit.