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Monastery Retreat in Baden-Württemberg

Baden-Württemberg holds one of the densest monastery landscapes in Central Europe. The Black Forest, the Neckar valley and Upper Swabia carry houses that have been offering silence, simple food and a clearly structured day for centuries. On this page you find a compact selection of monastery retreats, from shorter mindfulness weekends in the Black Forest foreland to multi-day silent weeks in the Black Forest, plus creative weeks in Upper Swabian monastery houses.

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What Baden-Württemberg Brings as a Monastery Region

What Baden-Württemberg Brings as a Monastery Region

Baden-Württemberg is historically and culturally a monastery land. Beuron Archabbey in the Danube valley, the UNESCO World Heritage site of Maulbronn, the former Cistercian abbey of Bebenhausen near Tübingen and the Imperial Abbey of Salem on Lake Constance count among the houses that have shaped the region over centuries. Some are still active monasteries, others now museums, and together they make the atmosphere understandable in which the current retreat offers sit. The actual selection for Baden-Württemberg is compact and spread across three regions. In the Black Forest, especially in the Rench valley, multi-day silent retreats run with a calm breathing practice in the morning, alongside yoga, group meditation and several days of consistent silence. On the edge of the Black Forest along the upper Neckar, shorter mindfulness weekends combine stress coaching, evening yoga and forest bathing, and some are certified as health seminars. In Upper Swabia, monastery houses open their studio and guest rooms for multi-day creative weeks. The profile is honest. Monasteries in Baden-Württemberg today are often used as the place where a clearly profiled programme runs. The walls, the courtyards and the house rules carry the frame, while the programme is supplied by an external team or by the education house itself. If you are looking for closer liturgical involvement, you can add that in larger houses such as Beuron, whose guest wing operates outside this selection.
Three Regions, Three Very Different Stays

Three Regions, Three Very Different Stays

The Black Forest, the edge of the Black Forest along the Neckar and Upper Swabia stand for three very different moods, and the selection mirrors that range well. The Black Forest delivers the classic German cloister landscape. Spruce woods, narrow valleys, cool mornings, acoustic stillness in the Rench valley. Multi-day silent weeks run here with a calm breathing practice in the morning, gentle stretching, group meditation, simple vegetarian full board and a break from phones and screens. Travel via Offenburg or Strasbourg, then by train or car into the Rench valley, at the edge of the Black Forest National Park. The Black Forest foreland on the upper Neckar offers the most open format. In the Neckar area, mindfulness weekends run with coaching and evening yoga, complemented by forest bathing in the surrounding woods. Some of these formats are certified as health seminars, in which case most German statutory health insurances reimburse part of the fee. Travel via the Gäubahn line from Stuttgart to Singen. Upper Swabia, the rolling country between the Danube and Lake Constance, carries multi-day creative weeks in monastery houses, often as painting and drawing courses or as education weeks. The former convents now operate as education and meeting houses with proper studio rooms. Work happens partly inside the studio and partly out in the Upper Swabian landscape. Travel via Biberach an der Riß, then onward by car or local bus.
What a Typical Day Looks Like in the BaWü Houses

What a Typical Day Looks Like in the BaWü Houses

The stays follow different daily structures, each shaped by its format. The Black Forest silent retreat starts early, often between 6:30 and 7:00, with a first sitting meditation followed by a guided breathing practice in which breath and rhythmic phases calm the body. Then breakfast in silence. The morning brings a longer block with stretching, yoga and meditation. The afternoon alternates between guided meditation, a teaching talk and free walking time in the spruce woods. Tea, lunch and dinner are vegetarian and taken in silence. Phones stay off for the full length of the stay. In the Neckar-area mindfulness weekends the structure is softer and built around a weekend. The start is on Friday evening with an opening round, then the next two days begin with a morning sitting, followed by exercises from the MBSR line, that is Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction by Jon Kabat-Zinn. Afternoons bring group stress coaching, forest bathing in the surrounding nature park and an evening yoga session. Meals are shared, conversation is allowed, and the format is designed to translate into everyday life. In the Upper Swabian monastery houses, the day follows the studio or education rhythm. The morning opens with a briefing in the studio, then three to four hours of work on your own sheet with guidance from the course leader, followed by a shared lunch in the monastery dining hall with a small grace at table. The afternoon brings a second block, often outdoors along paths, in inner courtyards or near the monastery pond. The community's canonical hours, the short liturgical prayers spread across the day, are open to guests but not part of the course programme.
Costs, Arrival and Best Time to Travel

Costs, Arrival and Best Time to Travel

On price the Baden-Württemberg selection sits between €297 and €900 per stay, averaging €612. Compared to a yoga or wellness format on Lake Constance or in the Alps, monastery retreats here are clearly more affordable. Shorter mindfulness weekends sit at the lower end of the range, multi-day creative weeks in the middle, multi-day silent weeks at the upper end. Where a format is certified as a health seminar, a health-insurance reimbursement noticeably lowers the effective net cost. Arrival is workable by train in all cases. The Neckar programmes sit directly on the Gäubahn line from Stuttgart to Singen. The Upper Swabian houses are reached via Biberach an der Riß, then by regional bus or the house's holiday taxi. The Black Forest programmes in the Rench valley are connected via Offenburg on the Frankfurt to Basel high-speed line, then onwards with the Renchtalbahn. If you drive, you find on-site parking at most houses. Seasonally the houses run on different rhythms. The Upper Swabian monastery houses work mainly from spring to late autumn, with the most intensive weeks between May and October, when painting outside in the Upper Swabian landscape is possible. The Black Forest silent retreats run across several dates per year, clearly clustered in spring and autumn when the stillness in the spruce forest is at its deepest. Mindfulness weekends in the Neckar area are offered multiple times a year, with a focus on the shoulder months of May, September and October.

Frequently asked questions

Which monasteries in Baden-Württemberg offer concrete retreat programmes?
On this page you currently find 4 concrete monastery retreats in Baden-Württemberg, spread across three regions. In the Black Forest, especially in the Rench valley, multi-day silent retreats run. On the edge of the Black Forest along the upper Neckar, mindfulness weekends are offered in monastery settings. In Upper Swabia, former monastery houses, today education and meeting houses, open their studio and guest rooms for multi-day creative weeks. Other well-known houses in the state, such as Beuron Archabbey, Maulbronn, Bebenhausen and Salem, shape the Baden-Württemberg monastery landscape historically and culturally, but they are not listed here as booking options. They form the backdrop in which the actual selection sits.
How much does a monastery retreat in Baden-Württemberg cost?
Prices for the 4 currently listed monastery retreats in Baden-Württemberg sit between €297 and €900, averaging €612. Shorter mindfulness weekends in the Neckar area sit at the lower end of the range, multi-day creative weeks in Upper Swabian monastery houses in the middle, multi-day silent weeks in the Black Forest at the upper end. Full board is typically included in all formats, as is the programme and guidance. Where a format is certified as a health seminar under section 20 SGB V, most German statutory health insurances reimburse part of the course fee after participation, which markedly lowers the effective cost. The monastery format is overall noticeably more affordable than a comparable yoga or wellness retreat on Lake Constance or in the Alps.
Do German health insurances cover part of the cost?
For individual stays in Baden-Württemberg, a health-insurance reimbursement is explicitly built in. Mindfulness formats in the Neckar area are partly certified as health seminars under section 20 SGB V. Most German statutory health insurances reimburse part of the course fee after participation, depending on the fund and tariff. You pay the full price up front and submit the proof of attendance after the retreat. Silent and creative weeks are usually not certified health seminars and are not reimbursed. If the insurance reimbursement matters to you, check briefly with your fund before booking whether the specific format is recognised and what documentation they require.
Do you need to be religious or a believer to take part?
No. The stays currently listed in Baden-Württemberg are aimed at a secular audience. Silent retreats in the Black Forest work with a calm breathing practice combined with yoga and meditation; no Christian or denominational background is required. Mindfulness weekends in the Neckar area often follow the MBSR line by Jon Kabat-Zinn, that is Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, an established health-oriented format with no religious claim. Creative weeks in Upper Swabian monastery houses are art and education courses in a monastery, not faith courses. The community's canonical hours, the short liturgical prayers spread across the day, are open to guests in most houses but voluntary and not part of the programme. So religious background is not needed, but respect for the house's rhythm is.
What is the best way to reach a monastery retreat in Baden-Württemberg?
All three regions are well reachable by train. The Neckar programmes sit on the Gäubahn line from Stuttgart to Singen, with the local stations within walking distance of the venues. The Upper Swabian monastery houses are reached via Biberach an der Riß, a station on the line from Ulm to Friedrichshafen, then onward by regional bus or the house's holiday taxi. The Black Forest programmes in the Rench valley connect via Offenburg on the Frankfurt to Basel high-speed line, with the Renchtalbahn running further into the valley. Driving works too, with on-site parking at most houses. From the north, Stuttgart and Karlsruhe offer good connections; from Switzerland the route runs via Singen or Basel.
How long does a monastery retreat in Baden-Württemberg last?
The lengths of the 4 currently listed programmes run from three to seven days, averaging around five. Mindfulness weekends in the Neckar area are the shortest format, a good fit for your first taste or a short break from everyday life. Multi-day creative weeks in Upper Swabian monastery houses sit in the middle and give you enough time to settle into your own work. Silent weeks in the Black Forest are the longest format, with several days of consistent silence plus arrival and departure. If you are looking for a first impression, you are well served by the weekend format; if you really want to switch off and arrive, you choose the multi-day stays. Longer stays over two weeks are not part of the current selection.
What kind of silence can you expect in the Black Forest silent retreat?
In the Black Forest silent retreats, the silence is held consistently but guided, not left to fend for itself. In concrete terms: you do not speak for several days, neither with other participants nor at meals, which are taken in silence. Phones and screens stay off, with this part explicitly framed as a digital detox. Daily structure and practice are led by experienced teachers. The day begins early with sitting meditation, followed by a guided breathing practice in the morning. Stretching, yoga and guided group meditation fill the morning and afternoon. No prior experience in silent practice is required; the format is designed as a holistic silence programme combining breath, body work and meditation. The experience is intense, but the clear daily structure makes it well bearable.