9 People interested Monastery retreat: Soul & Relax Yin Yoga, Meditation - Mind Detox - available as a preventive course Kall, Germany $282 / 3 Days
10 People interested 🌺 Yoga Retreat for Beginners - Yoga & Meditation for Greater Balance Horn-Bad Meinberg, Germany $194 / 3 Days 4.4
6 People interested Individual retreat with your dog-your time out for inner clarification Eltmann, Germany $391 / 3 Days 5.0
7 People interested Your Personal Retreat – Yoga: Your Path to Inner Peace Horn-Bad Meinberg, Germany $334 / 7 Days 4.9
9 People interested "Your Personal Retreat - Experience Yoga at the Ashram" Horn-Bad Meinberg, Germany $108 / 3 Days 5.0
12 People interested Consciousness development in the monastery Siedelsbrunn, Germany $408 / 3 Days 5.0
14 People interested "Your Personal Retreat – Finding Your Inner Balance Through Meditation" Horn - Bad Meinberg, Germany $216 / 5 Days 4.8
3 People interested Self-determined living in harmony with your soul - coaching and time out in nature Krakow am See, Germany $1,693 / 3 Days 5.0
12 People interested Self-determined living in harmony with your soul - coaching & time out in nature Krakow am See, Germany $2,081 / 7 Days 5.0
4 People interested Kundalini yoga vacation "The five prana vayus" - self-discovery with a wellness factor Bad Wörishofen, Germany $857 / 5 Days 4.9
6 People interested Individual retreat in the hermitage under the cherry tree Damshagen-Stellshagen, Germany $505 / 5 Days 5.0
14 People interested (R)TIME OUT WITH HORSES - self-awareness and "being conscious" Wiesenburg/Mark, Germany $1,046 / 3 Days 5.0
12 People interested Time out on Middle-earth in the Westerwald / Peace in nature Dreikirchen, Germany $234 / 3 Days 5.0
7 People interested Live in harmony with your soul - 10 days of intensive individual coaching & nature Krakow am See, Germany $2,587 / 10 Days
10 People interested Change through awareness - your individual one-to-one retreat at SEINsART Feucht, Germany $693 / 3 Days 5.0
10 People interested Separation - and now? - Acute support (individual coaching on site, plus online support or online) Krakow am See, Germany $1,434 / 3 Days
14 People interested RETREAT: TIME OUT WITH HORSES JUST FOR YOU Wiesenburg/Mark, Germany $1,046 / 3 Days 5.0
15 People interested Vipassana Island I Insight into the nature of all things I Meditation weekend near Cologne Leverkusen, Germany $329 / 3 Days
14 People interested The art of meeting in presence / Tantra taster day with Radha Leverkusen, Germany $129 / 2 Days
9 People interested GET OUT OF THE THOUGHT CAROUSEL: How to leave stressful thoughts behind you Wiesenburg/Mark, Germany $811 / 3 Days 5.0
Meditation traditions that are strong in Germany The German meditation offering did not grow from a single source but from several parallel lines. Three of them are especially dense here. The Christian contemplative line stretches from the Benedictine monasteries in North Rhine-Westphalia and Bavaria to the retreat houses of the Jesuits and Franciscans; it stresses inner silence, prayer with the breath or with short formulas, and silence as a shared group discipline. These houses have often been in place for centuries and offer a setting rarely found in the Zen or Vipassana worlds. The second line is Zen, mainly from the Soto school plus a handful of individual Rinzai centres. Practice happens in sesshin form, meaning five to ten days of intensive sitting in silence, with walking meditation and short work periods, led by a teacher in the lineage. The third line is Vipassana and MBSR, both originating in the Theravada Buddhist stream, although MBSR is a secular mindfulness method developed by Jon Kabat-Zinn at the University of Massachusetts in the 1980s. Vipassana works with observing breath, sensations and movements of mind; MBSR works with the body scan and applied everyday exercises. The density of teachers is high in Germany, because many lines built their own schools here from the 1970s onwards. What you choose depends less on the method than on the question of whether you want to practise in a religious framework, whether you are looking for silence and sesshin discipline, or whether you need a secular, methodically structured mindfulness week.
A day in a meditation retreat The day in a meditation retreat follows a clear rhythm that is similarly structured across most lines. Wake-up at five-thirty or six, often with a bell; a short sitting period before breakfast, sometimes a guided round of sun salutations or Qi Gong for circulation. Breakfast at seven or seven-thirty, in many houses already in silence or with reduced speaking. The morning brings two to three sitting blocks of thirty to forty-five minutes each, with walking meditation in between, where you walk slowly in the courtyard or through the garden, attention on each step. Lunch at twelve, then a longer midday break for a nap or a one-on-one with the teacher. The afternoon brings one to two more sitting blocks and, in many programs, a short talk or teaching that deepens an aspect of the practice, in the Christian tradition often a scriptural reading. Dinner is light and early, then a final sitting block, sometimes by candlelight; by nine or ten at the latest the house is quiet. The daily sitting time totals between three and five hours; in Zen sesshins it can be considerably more. Silence is part of the setting in many programs, often for the entire stay except during the teaching or the individual interview. Anyone who has never been silent should expect the first and second day to be the hardest. From day three onwards, for most guests a quietness arrives that is rarely accessible in normal everyday life.
Regions and the character of the houses Meditation houses are distributed differently in Germany than yoga or detox houses. Bavaria is by far the densest, especially around the Chiemgau and in the Allgäu, with additional houses on the Danube and in the Würzburg area. Zen and Vipassana houses dominate here, often in old farmsteads or adapted manor houses. The second focus lies in North Rhine-Westphalia: the Eifel, Sauerland and Niederrhein have a high density of monastic houses, mainly Benedictine and Franciscan, with a contemplative Christian tradition. Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Brandenburg form the eastern line. The Müritz region and the Schorfheide offer quiet farms and seminar houses, often with Vipassana, MBSR or a secular mindfulness profile; proximity to Berlin makes these houses attractive for weekend retreats. On the Baltic coast in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Schleswig-Holstein, you find yoga-mindfulness blends and individual Zen houses, often with sea views. Houses tend to be small, twelve to thirty places are typical, in Zen lines sometimes fewer. The monastic houses in NRW can be larger, twenty to forty places, with their own chapel and refectory. What all houses share is a strict daily structure and a deliberately reduced comfort: simple double or shared rooms, often shared bathrooms, plain vegetarian food. Anyone looking for hotel standards may find expectations too high here; anyone seeking a reduction to the essentials finds in this plainness the frame that carries the practice.
What to know before you book Anyone going to a meditation retreat for the first time often underestimates how physically demanding sitting is. Three to five hours on a cushion or bench hold hips, knees and back in a way that everyday life does not train. Pain in the first two days is normal; most houses provide chairs, benches, blankets and bolsters as free options, and nobody expects the lotus position. More important than the seat is staying — the point of the practice is not perfect sitting but the returning of attention. The second hurdle is silence. Anyone who says nothing for three or five days notices early how much the inner commentary keeps speaking even without sound. Silence is not an end in itself but is meant to draw attention out of the usual language tracks. Houses usually offer daily individual interviews where you can ask, complain or simply put into words what is showing up. Returning from a retreat, many people only notice a week later how much the unfamiliar mode shifted their view of everyday life. Prices in the German meditation offering are moderate. Weekend retreats of two to three days start from €92; a seven-day sesshin typically sits between 350 and 800 euro including full board and guidance; longer sesshin weeks or monastery stays can reach €4.800. Across all 186 programs, the average is €752. Many houses work with donation or self-assessment models, especially in the Buddhist and contemplative Christian traditions; it is worth checking carefully before booking what is included and whether a Dana offering to the teacher on top is customary.