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Görlitz sits approximately 89 km (55 miles) east of Dresden, making it one of the most natural day-trip pairings in Saxony. A private transfer typically takes around 1 to 1.5 hours depending on traffic and your exact pickup and drop-off points. From Berlin, the journey is roughly 187 km (116 miles) and takes approximately 2 to 2.5 hours. A Daytrip transfer collects you directly from your accommodation and delivers you to exactly where you want to start in Görlitz — no station transfers, no timetable stress.
A full day is well-suited to Görlitz's walkable Old Town. A comfortable itinerary can include the Untermarkt and Obermarkt squares, the Peterskirche, the Görlitzer Warenhaus department store, a walk across the bridge to Zgorzelec, and the main stops on the Görliwood film location route. The compact size of the historic centre — where most highlights sit within 15 to 20 minutes of each other on foot — means the day rarely feels rushed. Arriving by private transfer rather than navigating train connections from Dresden or Berlin preserves that time for exploration rather than logistics.
The Walk of Görliwood is a self-guided film location route through Görlitz's Old Town, marked with stops that highlight exactly where famous scenes were shot, some with original props still in place. A guided English-language version runs approximately 90 minutes, while the self-guided route takes around two hours at a comfortable pace. It pairs naturally with a broader Old Town walk — the Untermarkt, Obermarkt, and Peterskirche are all within easy walking distance of the main film sites. Arriving by private transfer rather than public transport means you gain the time to do the route properly without rushing back to catch a train.
Görlitz is one of the best-preserved medieval and Renaissance old towns in Central Europe, with over 4,000 historic buildings that survived the Second World War almost entirely intact. That physical completeness is rare — and it explains why the city has become one of Europe's most sought-after film locations, doubling as Paris, Prague, and fictional Alpine towns for productions including The Grand Budapest Hotel, Inglourious Basterds, and The Monuments Men. A single day is enough to take in the Gothic Peterskirche with its remarkable sun organ, the magnificent Untermarkt square, and the 1913 Art Nouveau department store that became the Grand Budapest Hotel's lobby.