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Mulhouse sits in a prime position in the Upper Rhine region, close to the French borders with both Germany and Switzerland. Basel is approximately 38 km (24 miles) away, making it one of the most convenient starting points. Colmar is around 40 km (25 miles) to the north, while Strasbourg is roughly 110 km (68 miles) away. The city's location also puts Freiburg and the wider Black Forest within easy reach for travelers looking to combine destinations.
A well-paced day is ideal. Plan around two hours to explore the historic center on foot, starting at Place de la Réunion where the neo-Gothic Temple Saint-Etienne, the ornate 16th-century Town Hall, and a pharmacy that has been operating since the 17th century all stand within a short walk of each other. If you visit the Cité de l'Automobile or the Cité du Train, add at least two hours per museum. Car enthusiasts and train aficionados regularly spend the better part of a full day at either collection alone.
Mulhouse punches well above its size. In a single day, you can walk a beautifully preserved Renaissance historic center, visit one of the world's great car collections at the Cité de l'Automobile, and explore streets lined with half-timbered Alsatian architecture and vivid street murals. The city's layered identity — textile boomtown, border crossroads, open-air museum — means there is always something unexpected around the corner. For travelers based in Basel, Colmar, or Strasbourg, it is one of the most rewarding and underrated day trips in the region.
Place de la Réunion is the natural starting point — it anchors the historic center and gives you an immediate sense of the city's architectural character. From there, the Cité de l'Automobile is unmissable: it houses nearly 500 vehicles including the world's largest collection of Bugatti automobiles, and is widely considered the finest car museum in the world. The Musée de l'Impression sur Étoffes tells the story of Mulhouse's textile heritage through over 50,000 printed fabric documents. Rounding out a full day, the city's thriving street art scene — including a rotating mural wall that features a new artist every month — adds a contemporary layer to an already rich destination.
Mulhouse's location in southern Alsace makes it a natural anchor for a broader itinerary. Colmar, with its pastel-colored canal district, is close enough to visit on the same day without feeling rushed. The Alsace Wine Route passes through the region, offering easy detours into villages like Eguisheim or Ribeauvillé. Across the Rhine, the German city of Freiburg is accessible for travelers interested in extending their day into the Black Forest. A Daytrip driver can help you sequence stops sensibly so you see more without the stress of planning the logistics yourself.
Getting to Mulhouse by public transport typically means navigating regional train connections and then relying on local transit or taxis once you arrive. A private transfer drops you directly at your starting point in the city, without timetables or transfers dictating your pace. More importantly, the drive through Alsace is genuinely scenic, passing through vineyard corridors and historic market towns. With a Daytrip driver, you can request a stop along the route — whether that is a vineyard village, a Rhine viewpoint, or the Ecomusée d'Alsace — turning the journey itself into part of the experience rather than just a means to an end.