REVIEW · MUNICH
Munich: Surf Experience In Munich Eisbach River Wave -Germany
Book on Viator →Operated by Uvita Surf Experience · Bookable on Viator
Surfing in the middle of Munich feels unreal. You go to the Eisbachwelle, a half-metre standing wave where the river pops up near the Haus der Kunst and the Englischer Garten, drawing surfers and onlookers for decades.
I love the simple, real-world appeal here: you’re not chasing a far-off resort. You’re working with a city-centre spot that’s built for consistency, so the whole experience is about learning and riding where people actually come back to day after day. One thing to plan around: swimming is required, and one low score in the feedback flagged meeting-place confusion, so arrive early and confirm the address.
In This Review
- Key Things That Make This Munich Surf Session Work
- Why the Eisbachwelle Wave Is the Main Event in Munich
- Your 3–4 Hour Game Plan: Water Time Plus Park Time
- Stop 1: Eisbach Wave Surfing at a Half-Metre Standing Wave
- What you can expect to do
- The big upside
- A possible drawback to keep in mind
- Stop 2: Englischer Garten After the Water
- What this stop is likely for
- Meeting Point at Himmelreichstraße 2: How to Avoid Wasted Time
- Price and Value: Is €145 Worth It for Eisbach + English Garden?
- Fitness, Water Comfort, and What Moderate Really Means
- Private Tour Format: Small-Group Benefits You’ll Feel
- Weather and Season Reality at a River Wave
- Should You Book This Munich Eisbach Surf Experience?
- FAQ
- How long is the Munich surf experience?
- What does the tour cost?
- Where do I meet for the experience?
- What happens at the Eisbach Wave stop?
- Do you include the English Garden stop?
- Is swimming required?
- Is this a private tour?
- Is public transportation nearby?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Key Things That Make This Munich Surf Session Work

- Eisbachwelle is a consistent city wave: a standing wave created by a stone step at the river’s outlet.
- You get paired with the Englischer Garten area: a big, central park zone for recovery and fresh air after the water time.
- Private experience with Uvita Surf Experience: your group stays together, which tends to make instruction feel more personal.
- Tickets are included: admission is covered for both stops listed in the tour.
- It’s built for real conditions: moderate fitness, and yes, you should expect to swim.
Why the Eisbachwelle Wave Is the Main Event in Munich

The Eisbach River Wave, called the Eisbachwelle, is one of those travel ideas that sounds like a stunt until you see it in context. This isn’t a wave machine fantasy. It’s a human-made surf feature tied to how the Eisbach comes up from underground right by Prinzregentenstrasse and the Haus der Kunst area in the Lehel district.
What makes it compelling is the consistency. The wave is described as the largest, best, and most consistent city-centre river surfing spot. In practice, that matters because your time is limited (3 to 4 hours), and you want the session to focus on riding and learning, not endless waiting for something to line up.
And you get the contrast built into the location. You’re surfing right beside a major art/gallery area and then, just a short reach away, you’re at the edge of one of Munich’s most famous green spaces. That blend—urban edge plus park calm—is a big part of why this feels like a Munich experience rather than a generic activity.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Munich.
Your 3–4 Hour Game Plan: Water Time Plus Park Time
This is a short, concentrated outing, not a day-long excursion. Expect about 3 hours of focused water time at the Eisbach wave, then around 1 hour in the Englischer Garten area. That timing is useful if you want to pack in something memorable without eating your whole day.
The value of this format is pacing. Water sessions can tire you fast, especially when you’re learning something new and your body is getting cold from repeated wet-and-dry cycles. The park stop gives you a place to slow down, catch your breath, and reset with calmer scenery rather than being stuck in transit straight after.
One caution: because swimming is required, you should be mentally ready for the water part to be active, not just “sit on a board and look cool.” If you’re comfortable in the water and have a steady fitness base, this tends to feel manageable. If not, you’ll want to take it seriously and ask questions early.
Stop 1: Eisbach Wave Surfing at a Half-Metre Standing Wave

Here’s what you’re actually going for: a standing wave about half a metre tall created at a stone step at the outlet where the Eisbach reappears. That detail is important because standing waves behave differently from typical moving breaks. You’re often working with a rhythm that’s closer to a fixed feature than a rolling swell.
The tour centers on this as the main attraction, and the spot’s long surf culture is part of what makes it work. People have been surfing there for about 40 years, which means the wave has an established reputation, and the area is used to both surfers and spectators.
What you can expect to do
From the tour description, you should expect active involvement during the surf portion, including water time that involves swimming. You’ll want to arrive ready for getting wet, and you should treat the surf time as physical work, not a passive viewing stop.
The big upside
The best part is that you’re learning in a place known for repetition. A consistent wave gives you more chances to work on your technique rather than waiting for a rare good moment.
A possible drawback to keep in mind
The very thing that makes Eisbach famous also means it’s a public, central location. That can create extra complexity around timing, spacing, and moving to the exact spot you need to access. The tour is private, which helps keep your group organized, but you should still give yourself time and show up alert at the meeting point.
Stop 2: Englischer Garten After the Water

After the water time, the experience shifts to the Englischer Garten, a large park in central Munich that stretches from the city centre toward the northeastern city limits. Even if you’re not planning a long park hike, this stop is a smart match for the surf session.
Why? Parks help you reset after exertion. Cold water work can leave you tense and tired; open space and a slower pace make it easier to warm back up and think clearly. Also, the Englischer Garten area is tied to the Eisbach entrance zone, so you’re staying in the same general part of the city instead of breaking your momentum with a long transfer.
What this stop is likely for
Based on how the experience is set up (about 1 hour), you’re probably using the park time to stretch, take in the surroundings, and catch a breather before the tour ends back at the meeting point. It’s the kind of add-on that makes the whole outing feel like a Munich half-day, not just a water activity with a quick commute.
Meeting Point at Himmelreichstraße 2: How to Avoid Wasted Time

You meet at Himmelreichstraße 2, 80538 München, and the activity ends back at the same meeting point. It’s also described as near public transportation, which is a plus if you’re relying on transit rather than driving.
This is where one low rating deserves a practical note. The feedback flagged very poor instructions to the meeting place, plus an issue where someone didn’t show up as expected. I can’t fix someone else’s communication, but you can protect your time.
Here’s what I’d do if you book:
- Get to the area early enough to find the exact entrance point.
- Save the meeting address in your map app before you go.
- If you have a contact number or details sent after booking, keep them accessible on your phone.
Because this is a short 3–4 hour experience, being late by even a bit can feel like a bigger problem than it would on a full-day tour.
Price and Value: Is €145 Worth It for Eisbach + English Garden?

The price is listed as $145.18 per person, with the average booking window around 32 days in advance. That’s not a budget price, so you should think in terms of what you’re paying for beyond the “cool photo.”
Here’s the value equation I see from the details you’re given:
- A world-famous city-centre wave: Eisbachwelle is a real, fixed surf feature, right where Munich traffic and scenery surround it.
- Private experience: only your group participates, which is often where the money goes in tours like this.
- Tickets included for both stops: admission is included for the Eisbach wave portion and the Englischer Garten stop.
- Real time, not just a sightseeing ride: you’re spending about 3 hours at the wave zone, not just standing around.
If you compare it to “rent a board and figure it out alone,” the main reason this price can make sense is safety and guidance—especially since swimming is required and you’ll be dealing with water conditions in a built-up public spot.
The only real “value risk” is if you’re not comfortable in the water. If swimming makes you anxious, you might feel stressed instead of excited. That stress can ruin the fun fast, so be honest with your comfort level before you book.
Fitness, Water Comfort, and What Moderate Really Means

The tour calls for moderate physical fitness. That likely means you should be able to handle active movement in and out of the water, plus some basic stamina for a short session.
Also, swimming is required. The wording is straightforward. Even if you’re not an Olympic swimmer, you should have basic water confidence. If you’re shaky in open water, you’ll want to think twice or ask for clarity before committing.
And since it’s near public transport and service animals are allowed, the setup is meant to be workable for a range of visitors. Just remember: the water part is still water, and no amount of city convenience changes that.
Private Tour Format: Small-Group Benefits You’ll Feel

This is described as a private tour/activity, meaning only your group participates. Even without a stated group size, private generally gives you two practical advantages:
- More time focused on your needs rather than waiting your turn in a crowd.
- Better organization around meeting, moving, and handling gear or water access.
When the location is as famous and public as Eisbach, crowd dynamics can become a distraction. A private format helps keep your head in the session and not on managing other people’s schedules.
Weather and Season Reality at a River Wave
You’re surfing a river wave in the city, which means the session will be affected by weather, air temperature, and how the water feels that day. Your comfort level will depend on the conditions, not just the idea.
Because you’ll be in and around water for a few hours and swimming is required, plan like this:
- Dress for getting wet and cooling down.
- Bring what you need to stay warm afterward.
- If you’re easily cold, be extra cautious.
No forecast can remove the reality of river water. The good news is you only need to manage it for the length of the session, then the park stop gives you a chance to reset.
Should You Book This Munich Eisbach Surf Experience?
I’d book this if you want a Munich activity with a real identity—something you can’t easily copy in another city. The combination of Eisbachwelle’s consistent standing wave and a park stop in the Englischer Garten makes it feel like a local story, not a generic checklist item.
I would hesitate if you’re uncomfortable swimming or you don’t like the idea of water-focused instruction in a public city spot. And if you’re booking because you hate uncertainty, take the meeting address seriously and plan for extra time at the start.
If you’re curious, athletic enough for moderate physical effort, and okay with getting wet, this is the kind of experience that sticks with you—because you’re riding a wave literally in the middle of the city.
FAQ
How long is the Munich surf experience?
It runs about 3 to 4 hours total.
What does the tour cost?
The price is listed as $145.18 per person.
Where do I meet for the experience?
You meet at Himmelreichstraße 2, 80538 München, Germany.
What happens at the Eisbach Wave stop?
You go to the Eisbachwelle, the standing wave on the Eisbach River that’s near the entrance to the Englischer Garten.
Do you include the English Garden stop?
Yes. The tour includes time at the Englischer Garten for about 1 hour.
Is swimming required?
Yes. Swimming is required as part of the experience.
Is this a private tour?
Yes. It’s a private tour/activity, and only your group participates.
Is public transportation nearby?
Yes. The meeting area is described as near public transportation.
What is the cancellation policy?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the experience’s start time. Free cancellation is available under that window.






















