Visitar Potsdam a partir de Berlim: Guia de Excursão de Um Dia ao New Palace
Como chegar ao New Palace e ao Parque Sanssouci a partir de Berlim de comboio, quanto custa, como planear o dia e como encaixar o palácio num itinerário mais amplo por Potsdam.
Potsdam fica a sudoeste de Berlim, e o New Palace é uma excelente excursão de um dia a partir da capital – uma viagem de comboio fácil até um parque Património Mundial da UNESCO coroado pelo palácio mais grandioso de Frederico, o Grande. Este guia de concierge explica exatamente como lá chegar de comboio, quanto custa a viagem, quanto tempo deve reservar e como integrar o palácio num dia descontraído em Potsdam. Como serviço independente de bilhetes com hora marcada, garantimos a sua entrada no New Palace com antecedência para que chegue, entre no seu horário e passe o dia entre palácios e parques, sem filas de bilheteira.
Getting from Berlin to the New Palace by train
The simplest way to reach the New Palace is by rail. From central Berlin, take a regional train on the RE1 line or the S-Bahn toward Potsdam, then continue to Potsdam Park Sanssouci station, which is the closest stop to the palace and only a short walk away. Regional trains run from major Berlin stations such as Berlin Hauptbahnhof, Zoo and Alexanderplatz, and the whole journey from the heart of Berlin typically takes somewhere between forty minutes and an hour depending on your connection. There are no seat reservations on these services; you simply board.
Ticketing is straightforward and inexpensive. A regional day ticket covering the Berlin and Potsdam zones costs only a few euros more than a single and lets you hop on and off all day, which suits a day trip that includes the journey out, local hops around Potsdam, and the ride back. Buy your transport ticket from station machines or the relevant transport app before you board. These are third-party transport fares and are entirely separate from your palace admission, which we arrange for you.
Timing your day and the seasonal rule
The single most important thing to check before you set a date is the season. Individual, self-paced visits to the New Palace run from April to October, Wednesday to Sunday, and the palace is closed on Tuesdays - so never plan your day trip for a Tuesday in summer. From November to March the palace can be seen on a guided tour only, which means a fixed tour length rather than an open-ended wander, so build your day around the tour time. We'll make sure your ticket matches the season and tell you what to expect.
Within the open season, aim to arrive for an earlier timed slot if you want a calmer visit and a full afternoon in the park. Allow around two hours for the palace interiors, plus however long you want for Sanssouci Park, which surrounds it and stretches over a mile east to Sanssouci Palace. A leisurely day trip from Berlin comfortably fits the New Palace, a walk through the park, and one more Potsdam sight, with time for lunch.
Building a wider Potsdam itinerary
Potsdam rewards more than a single palace. A classic full day pairs the New Palace with Sanssouci Palace at the park's eastern end, linked by the lovely walk along the main avenue; the Potsdam Pass, a one-day ticket for all the open Potsdam palaces, is the most economical way to do both. Beyond the park, Potsdam's old town, the charming Dutch Quarter and the lakeside New Garden with Cecilienhof Palace - where the 1945 Potsdam Conference was held - are all within easy reach and round out a varied day.
If you only have time for the park, the New Palace and Sanssouci Palace plus the walk between them is the essential core. Keep an eye on return train times, especially outside high summer when services thin out earlier in the evening. Because the New Palace runs on capped, timed admission, the one fixed point to lock in is your entry slot - we secure it for you, so you can plan the rest of your Potsdam day around it with confidence.
Perguntas frequentes
How do I get from Berlin to the New Palace?
Pegue um trem regional (linha RE1) ou o S-Bahn do centro de Berlim em direção a Potsdam e continue até a estação Potsdam Park Sanssouci, que fica a uma curta caminhada do palácio. Toda a viagem do centro de Berlim normalmente leva de 40 a 60 minutos, dependendo das conexões.
Quanto custa o trem de Berlim?
Um bilhete regional diário que cobre as zonas de Berlim e Potsdam custa apenas alguns euros e permite viajar o dia todo, o que é ideal para um passeio de um dia com várias paragens. Compre-o nas máquinas da estação ou no aplicativo de transporte antes de embarcar. Estas tarifas de transporte são separadas da sua entrada no palácio.
Posso visitar o Palácio Novo em qualquer dia da semana?
Não. As visitas individuais decorrem de abril a outubro, de quarta a domingo, e o palácio está fechado às terças-feiras – por isso, evite planear um passeio de verão para uma terça-feira. De novembro a março, o palácio só pode ser visitado com visita guiada.
Quanto tempo devo reservar para um passeio de um dia a Potsdam?
Reserve um dia inteiro se puder. Cerca de duas horas cobrem os interiores do Palácio Novo, e o Parque Sanssouci absorve facilmente mais tempo. Combinar o Palácio Novo com o Palácio Sanssouci e a caminhada entre eles, mais o centro histórico ou o Bairro Holandês, faz um dia completo e confortável a partir de Berlim.