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Festival of Lights turns Berlin's landmarks into a free autumn spectacle

Each October, projections and illuminations transform buildings including the Brandenburg Gate for a citywide light festival.

By Berlin Culture Desk · Published 16 July 2026

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Festival of Lights turns Berlin's landmarks into a free autumn spectacle
Photo by ISOfee / Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0)

For a stretch of evenings each October, Berlin becomes a canvas. The Festival of Lights illuminates the city's landmarks with projections, installations and artful lighting, turning familiar buildings into changing works of art after dark. It has grown into one of the capital's signature autumn events and, importantly for visitors, watching it costs nothing.

The festival typically centres on the historic core, where landmarks such as the Brandenburg Gate, the Berlin Cathedral and buildings along Unter den Linden are lit with large-scale projections. Other sites across the city join in, and the programme changes year to year, with artists from Berlin and abroad creating designs that are mapped precisely onto the architecture. The result is a route rather than a single venue: visitors walk between illuminated points, often over several evenings, to see as much as possible.

Part of the appeal is how it reframes the city. Places that people pass every day take on a different character under coloured light and moving imagery, and the festival draws large evening crowds into the centre at a time of year when the days are shortening. Guided walks, boat trips and other organised ways of seeing the displays are commonly offered alongside the free self-guided option.

Because the event runs after sunset and covers a wide area, a little planning helps. The organisers publish a map of illuminated locations and the nightly schedule, and public transport is the easiest way to move between sites, as the central area sees heavy foot traffic during the festival. Evenings can be cold, so warm clothing is advisable.

For anyone in Berlin in October, the Festival of Lights is one of the simplest and most atmospheric ways to experience the city. Exact dates, the list of illuminated landmarks and the programme of associated events are published on the festival's official website.

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