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TRAVEL NEWS

Germany braces for the worst traffic weekend of the summer season

If you plan to leave for holiday in Germany by car this weekend, you should plan a little more time and be prepared to practice patience. Here are the main places traffic jams can be expected.

cars make traffic
Cars are stuck in traffic jams as they approach the seaside resorts and the beach on a popular German island. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Stefan Sauer

As summer holidays kick off in Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg, Germany’s motorways are bound to be quite crowded today.

According to the the German automobile club ADAC, major traffic jams can be expected to pick up on Friday afternoon and continue through much of the weekend. 

ADAC warns that this will be one of the worst traffic jam weekends of the season: “Sunday is likely to be just as congested as Saturday,” said a spokeswoman.

According to the ADAC, the motorways with the greatest risk of congestion are those coming and going from Berlin, Hamburg and Munich – especially at motorway construction sites where the lanes are reduced.

The ADAC also listed the A1 between Hamburg and Flensburg and the A6 between Mannheim and Nuremberg as a couple of the worst spots for traffic jams, and often in both directions.

In North Rhine-Westphalia, a closure affects the A1 near Leverkusen. From Friday evening until Monday morning on the 29th, an important connection between the Leverkusen and Leverkusen-West junctions will be closed in both directions.

READ ALSO: EU countries to extend range of offences foreign drivers can be fined for

Traffic there will be diverted into the surroundings. Depending on drivers’ destinations they may take the A59 or A3 instead.

Here are all of Germany’s worst traffic zones according to ADAC:

  • Motorway networks in the greater Hamburg and Munich areas

  • Highways to and from the North Sea and Baltic Sea

  • A1 Cologne – Dortmund – Bremen – Lübeck

  • A3 Frankfurt – Nuremberg – Passau

  • A4 Kirchheimer Dreieck – Bad Hersfeld – Erfurt – Dresden

  • A5 Frankfurt – Karlsruhe – Basel

  • A6 Mannheim – Heilbronn – Nuremberg

  • A7 Hamburg – Flensburg

  • A7 Hamburg – Hanover and Würzburg – Ulm – Füssen/Reutte

  • A8 Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg

  • A9 Berlin – Nuremberg – Munich

  • A10 Berliner Ring

  • A11 Berlin – Junction Uckermark

  • A19 Wittstock – Rostock junction

  • A24 Berlin – Hamburg

  • A81 Stuttgart – Singen

  • A93 Inntaldreieck – Kufstein

  • A96 Munich – Lindau

  • A95/B2 Munich – Garmisch-Partenkirchen

  • A99 Munich bypass

Can it be avoided?

The best way to avoid traffic is stay off the roads – or at least driving them during the busiest days.

To avoid the biggest traffic jams this week, holidaymakers should not leave on Friday, Saturday or Sunday if possible.

But if you must drive this weekend, you can avoid the worst of it by hitting the roads from the late afternoon, according to the ADAC.

Also, plan significantly more time for your route just in case.

You can also avoid adding to waiting times at the toll stations by purchasing the needed toll road passes in advance.

If you plan to travel by train, you should also be prepared for full trains. Most rail journeys take place at the beginning of the holidays, according to a spokeswoman, whereas the return traffic tends to be more scattered.

READ ALSO: How Germany’s high-traffic ‘Riedbahn’ train route closure will hit travellers

The occupancy of your train can be checked online or on the DB app. The spokeswoman advises flexible travellers to use connections in the early morning and later evening. 

Patience may also be required at the airports. According to its own figures, Munich Airport expects more than six million passengers in the coming holiday weeks, 400,000 guests on the first weekend alone. If you plan to travel on a particularly busy day, like this weekend, you should give yourself a bit more time to check-in and pass security.

Why is the end of July peak traffic season?

The last weekend in July was also the most congested in the 2023 travel season.

As schools in Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg break for summer, all of Germany’s federal states are now on vacation.

Additionally, the ADAC spokesperson warned that a “second wave of travellers are hitting the roads from Berlin, Brandenburg, Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.”

On the other hand, in Bremen, Lower Saxony, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia, classes will soon start again. So some residents there are beginning to make their ways home.

This year traffic is also affected by a large number of construction sites spread across the country. According to the ADAC, there are currently 1,230 construction sites on the motorways, slightly fewer than a year ago.

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TRAVEL NEWS

Germany begins expanded border checks to limit migrant arrivals

Germany from Monday is expanding border controls to the frontiers with all nine of its neighbours to stop irregular migrants in a move that has sparked protests from other EU members.

Germany begins expanded border checks to limit migrant arrivals

The government announced the sweeping measure following a string of deadly extremist attacks that have stoked public fears and boosted support for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser on Sunday said that the step aimed to limit irregular migration and “put a stop to criminals and identify and stop Islamists at an early stage”.

The border controls will be in place for an initial six months and are expected to include temporary structures at land crossings and spot checks by federal police.

Poland and Austria have voiced concern and the European Commission has warned that members of the 27-nation bloc must only impose such steps in exceptional circumstances.

Germany lies at the heart of Europe and borders nine countries that are part of the visa-free Schengen zone, designed to allow the free movement of people and goods.

Border controls with Poland, the Czech Republic, Austria and Switzerland were already in place before the crackdown was announced.

These will now be expanded to Germany’s borders with France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Belgium and Denmark.

Faeser said the government hoped to minimise the impact on people living and working in border regions, promising “coordination with our neighbouring countries”. She also pointed out that there should be “targeted controls, not blanket controls”.

The interior ministry however noted that travellers should carry identification when crossing the border.

READ ALSO: How Germany’s increased border checks will affect travel from neighbouring countries

‘Islamist attacks’

In recent weeks, a string of extremist attacks have shocked Germany, fuelling rising public anger.

Last month, a man on a knife rampage killed three people and wounded eight more at a festival in the western city of Solingen.

The Syrian suspect, who has alleged links to the Islamic State group, had been intended for deportation but managed to evade authorities.

The enforcement failure set off a bitter debate which marked the run-up to two regional polls in the formerly communist east, where the anti-immigration AfD scored unprecedented results.

With national elections looming next year, Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government has been under intense political pressure to toughen its stance on migrants and asylum seekers.

READ ALSO: Debt, migration and the far-right – the big challenges facing Germany this autumn 

Scholz was in Uzbekistan on Sunday to sign a migration deal for workers to come to Germany, while simplifying deportation procedures in the opposite direction so that “those that must go back do go back”, the chancellor said.

Closer to home, the German government has presented plans to speed up deportations to European partners.

Under EU rules, asylum requests are meant to be handled by the country of arrival. The system has placed a huge strain on countries on the European periphery, where leaders have demanded more burden-sharing.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said that Germany tightening its borders means that it would “essentially pass the buck to countries located on the outer borders of Europe”.

Austria’s Interior Minister Gerhard Karner said his country “will not accept people who are rejected from Germany”, while Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk condemned Germany’s move as “unacceptable”.

‘Welcome to the club’

Warsaw has also struggled with migration and accused Moscow of smuggling people from Africa and the Middle East into Europe by sending them through Belarus to the Polish border.

Berlin on Friday said that Tusk and Scholz had discussed the issue and agreed to strengthen EU external borders, “especially in view of the cynical instrumentalisation of migrants by Belarus”.

Hungary’s nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban, meanwhile, mocked the German chancellor on social media site X, writing: “Bundeskanzler Scholz, welcome to the club! #StopMigration.”

Germany took in more than a million asylum seekers in 2015-16, many of them Syrians, and has hosted over a million Ukrainians since the start of the Russian invasion in 2022.

The extra burden on municipal authorities and integration services in Germany needed to be “taken into account” when talking about new border controls, Berlin’s interior ministry said.

In the Netherlands, Prime Minister Dick Schoof on Friday unveiled the country’s strictest migration policy yet, saying it will request an opt-out from EU common policy on asylum next week.

A four-party coalition dominated by far-right firebrand Geert Wilders’s Freedom Party wants to declare an “asylum crisis” to curb the influx of migrants through a tough set of rules including border controls.

By Raphaelle LOGEROT with Celine LE PRIOUX in Berlin

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