15 People interested All inclusive Meditations-Retreat im Stonehenge Allgäu Kaufbeuren, Germany $352 / 3 Days
11 People interested Time out for me Weekend with Daniel at Gutshaus Gottin Gottin, Germany $623 / 3 Days 5.0
9 People interested Self-care for women with qigong, singing bowls, and meditation Jüchen, Germany $423 / 4 Days 5.0
19 People interested ZEIT FÜR DICH - Yoga and meditation retreat in Hesse Schlangenbad HESSEN, Germany $350 / 3 Days 5.0
12 People interested Enjoy and relax with yoga and plenty of ocean views in Souda Bay (South Coast – Crete) Plakias, Greece $811 / 8 Days 5.0
17 People interested Spring, yoga, and warm encounters in the Mühlviertel region Altenfelden, Austria $423 / 3 Days 5.0
8 People interested 🌿 Ayurveda Retreat - Renewed energy through inner balance and regeneration Horn-Bad Meinberg, Germany $251 / 3 Days 5.0
What sets a Bavarian monastery retreat apart Bavaria has an unusually dense monastery landscape, and the current selection reflects it. The appeal sits not in a single region but in the geographic spread. In the south, Bernried Abbey lies directly on Lake Starnberg, embedded in the gentle alpine foothills southwest of Munich, with a wide garden and a view across the water. Southwest of the capital is the archabbey of St. Ottilien, an active Benedictine monastery with its own guest house and a long-standing tradition of silent retreats. In Lower Franconia near Würzburg sits Oberzell, a women's convent with a herb garden, mature trees and a clear focus on yoga, contemplation and women-only formats. A few streets away in Zell am Main stands Haus Klara, a Franciscan house running breath and yoga retreats. On the Danube, near the Bavarian Forest, Niederaltaich Abbey offers painting and drawing weeks. These five houses carry the Bavarian monastery selection. What they share are thick walls, quiet courtyards, simple food from the monastery's kitchen garden and a day not paced by smartphone or meetings. What sets them apart is the programme focus. If you want the high mountains or a wellness break, this is not the right format. If you are looking for a quiet Bavarian retreat with a clear programme and honest prices, this is where you find it.
A day inside a Bavarian monastery A day in a Bavarian monastery moves along two rhythms: the rhythm of the house and the rhythm of the booked programme. If the house itself is an active monastery, such as St. Ottilien or Niederaltaich, there are canonical hours in the church. Joining in is welcome, but not required. Early in the morning, around six or six-thirty, the first shared time begins, followed by breakfast, in many houses taken in silence or with a short reading at the table. The morning carries the main programme. At Oberzell that means yoga sessions and guided contemplation; at St. Ottilien it is often the first sitting or walking meditation of a silent retreat. A silent retreat here means framed periods without speaking, without smartphones, with eye contact reduced to the necessary, often modelled on MBSR, the mindfulness-based stress reduction programme by Jon Kabat-Zinn. At Bernried, the painting studio opens; at Niederaltaich, the drawing room. After lunch, which in many houses comes from the monastery's own kitchen garden, the day opens into a long quiet stretch: a walk through the cloister garden, reading, time in the cell, silence in the courtyard. A second session in the late afternoon follows. Dinner is simple, a soup, a stew, a warm dish. Some houses close with a sound moment or night prayer; others leave the evening explicitly open. Anyone expecting weekend bustle is in the wrong place; anyone looking for silence and a clear structure finds it reliably here.
Programmes and focus areas in the Bavarian monastery selection The Bavarian monastery selection is small but clearly ordered by programme. The strongest focus is yoga. The yoga days at Oberzell convent, led by the Om Tara yoga centre, run over three or four days and combine asana practice with outdoor morning meditation, walks across the monastery grounds and shared meals. At Haus Klara, the Franciscan monastery a few streets away in Zell am Main, a four-day breath retreat with a yoga component runs Thursday to Sunday. The second focus is silence and mindfulness. At St. Ottilien Archabbey, southwest of Munich, the three-day mindfulness silent retreat takes place in winter. The content is modelled on MBSR and includes sitting and walking meditation, mindful yoga and body scan, in small groups of around eight to twelve participants. A silent retreat here means noble silence across the entire stay, no phone, no reading outside the practice. One-on-one coaching is available on request. The third focus is creative. At Bernried Abbey on Lake Starnberg and at Niederaltaich Abbey on the Danube, painting and drawing courses run over four to five days in dedicated studio rooms, hosted in the spirit of monastic hospitality. Level mix: beginners and returners are explicitly invited. What the Bavarian monastery selection does not currently carry are alpine mountain yoga formats or sound bowl retreats; those run in Bavaria through other categories. The monastery here is consistently treated as a quiet, religiously shaped place.
Regions, travel and booking For a monastery stay, Bavaria splits into three clearly distinguishable zones. The southern Upper Bavarian zone covers Bernried Abbey on Lake Starnberg and St. Ottilien Archabbey. Bernried sits directly on the water in the alpine foothills, meaning the gentle hill and lake zone north of the Bavarian Alps, around 50 kilometres southwest of Munich; trains run via Tutzing, by car you take the A95. St. Ottilien lies about 40 kilometres west of Munich and is easily reached via Geltendorf station. The Lower Franconian zone is made up of Oberzell convent and Haus Klara, both in Zell am Main a few minutes west of Würzburg. Travel is by ICE to Würzburg main station, then a short bus or taxi ride. The Danube edge of the Bavarian Forest forms the third zone with Niederaltaich Abbey, about ten kilometres from Deggendorf. The typical length of stay across the selection sits between three and five days, with the three-day weekend as the most common shape and the four-day long weekend as the second variant. Prices in the selection run from €260 for simple programmes in shared rooms up to €1.700 for a single room with full board; the average sits around €646. Recommended booking lead time: six to eight weeks in summer and autumn high season, two to four weeks in winter. The monastery guesthouses work with small groups and fill up early accordingly.