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The best retreat vacations in Allgäu December 2026

Find the best vacation offers for body, mind and soul in Allgäu in December 2026. You have a choice of different areas: Yoga and detox, creative living or detoxifying activity. It's all about your well-being.

12 curated retreats 4.5 (14 reviews) from €300

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What sets the Allgäu apart as a retreat region

What sets the Allgäu apart as a retreat region

Three traits make the Allgäu a retreat region of its own within Germany. First, the foothill setting: the main ridges sit between 1,500 and 2,600 metres, while the houses themselves rest at a comfortable 700 to 1,300 metres. You get an open mountain view every day without needing high-alpine acclimatisation. Second, the altitude climate: low in pollen, clear in air, with lower atmospheric pressure than in the lowlands. Many guests report calmer sleep and easier breathing within the first two days, an effect that yoga, breath and mindfulness programmes use deliberately. Third, the hiking potential. The Allgäu is one of the densest hiking regions in the German-speaking area, with marked trails ranging from easy alpine pasture loops to multi-day hut traverses. Retreats often combine this rhythm: yoga in the morning, a mountain stage at midday, silence or breath work in the afternoon. Where the Allgäu stands apart from other German retreat regions is in the link between mountain world and spa-town tradition. Bad Wörishofen is the birthplace of the Kneipp therapy, and this water and natural healing practice still sits in many houses as a quiet undercurrent beneath yoga and meditation. You find a region here that brings movement, silence and physical recovery together, all within a single day of travel from the south German area.
Micro-regions of the Allgäu: from the High Allgäu to Bad Wörishofen

Micro-regions of the Allgäu: from the High Allgäu to Bad Wörishofen

The Allgäu can be read as four micro-regions, each carrying a different retreat character. In the south sits the Oberstdorf region as the high-Allgäu core, with Oberstdorf itself, Hindelang and the Kleinwalsertal as supporting points. Here you stay at 800 to 1,200 metres directly beneath the highest Allgäu ridges. Yoga houses use the position for high-alpine mountain yoga programmes in summer and snowshoe mindfulness in winter, with hiking starting straight from the door. The Eastern Allgäu around Pfronten, Füssen and the adjacent Tannheim Valley forms the quieter variant. The mountains here are softer, the pace slower, and many houses rest on sunny high plateaus with views of the Säuling and Aggenstein peaks. Pfronten is the central address for multi-day yoga and hiking retreats in this corner. Because of the proximity to the Austrian border, individual programmes naturally drift into the Tannheim Valley. The Lower Allgäu corridor around Memmingen and Kempten is the logistical artery and at the same time home to the spa-town tradition: Bad Wörishofen lies just north of it and has been, since Sebastian Kneipp, the main address for therapeutic fasting, water cures and natural medicine time-out. Retreats here often combine yoga or mindfulness with classic Kneipp applications: water treading, contrast affusions, herbal tea rhythm. Sonthofen and Immenstadt in the Western Allgäu round out the circle as accessible bases with S-Bahn and regional rail links, almost always less than 30 minutes from the surrounding houses.
Which retreat formats are typical in the Allgäu

Which retreat formats are typical in the Allgäu

Four formats shape the retreat picture in the Allgäu more clearly than others. Yoga retreats form the strongest element, with calm Hatha weeks, slow Yin programmes and flowing Vinyasa classes. Hatha stands for held postures, Yin for long-held passive floor positions, Vinyasa for breath-led sequences. In the mountain houses around Oberstdorf and Hindelang, yoga classes often pair with short morning meditations and evening breath work, a rhythm that fits the clear altitude air. Hiking retreats are the second distinct profile. You walk here not as an athletic duty but as a contemplative practice: slowly, in silence, with deliberate pauses at viewpoints. Houses in the high Allgäu and in the Tannheim Valley work with routes of different lengths, so you can choose between short alpine pasture loops and full-day mountain stages depending on the day. Yoga and hiking are directly combined in many programmes. Therapeutic fasting and base fasting are the third format, carried by the Bad Wörishofen Kneipp tradition. Therapeutic fasting in the Buchinger style uses broths and fresh juices for a guided fasting week, while base fasting replaces full restriction with alkaline food. Both have been practised in the Allgäu under guidance for decades. Mindfulness and silence days round out the picture, often as shorter weekend formats or as an integrated piece of a yoga or hiking week, less as pure silence retreats than you would find in the eastern low mountain ranges.
Best time to visit and seasonal know-how for the Allgäu

Best time to visit and seasonal know-how for the Allgäu

The Allgäu works year-round as a retreat region, but every season has its own character. Spring, summer and autumn together form the main season from May through October. May and June are the weeks of blooming alpine pastures with long days and mild nights, ideal for outdoor yoga and the first mountain hikes. July and August are the warmest months with clear mountain views and a fully active hiking infrastructure, while also being the weeks of the highest booking pressure. September and October are seen by experienced Allgäu travellers as the calmest and most colourful phase: stable weather, less crowding, golden larches on the slopes. Winter carries a retreat profile of its own in the Allgäu. Around Oberstdorf and Hindelang you find snowshoe retreats and mindfulness weeks with winter walks; the silence here, dampened by snow, feels a step more concentrated. Yoga and therapeutic fasting houses run continuously, since their programmes do not depend on the weather. Bad Wörishofen as a spa town stays open all year and often offers the quietest therapeutic fasting dates between November and March. Important for planning: booking lead times sit at six to eight weeks in summer high season, two to three in the off-season. The transition months April and November carry the least reliable weather and are used by many houses for internal pauses. If you are flexible, late September and early May weeks form the best mix of stable weather, open availability and a calmer pace. Prices range from €300 to €4.800, with an average of €1.240.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a retreat in the Allgäu cost?
Across all 18 retreats currently listed in the Allgäu, the average price sits at €1.240, with a range from €300 for shorter or simpler weekend formats up to €4.800 for longer deepening stays with single rooms, treatments or high-alpine locations. What drives the price is usually not the programme itself but the room category, altitude position and the scope of treatments like Kneipp applications, massages or fasting supervision. Yoga weekends in the Eastern Allgäu typically sit at the lower end, multi-day mountain yoga stays in the High Allgäu in the middle, and therapeutic fasting weeks under medical guidance in Bad Wörishofen at the top. Before booking, a short enquiry pays off about whether the arrival and departure days are billed fully or as half-days, which is often the biggest single price difference for weekend formats.
When is the best time for a retreat in the Allgäu?
The Allgäu works year-round, with May through October as the high season for mountain and outdoor programmes. May and June are the weeks of blooming alpine pastures, ideal for outdoor yoga and the first hikes. July and August bring the warmest days and the clearest mountain views, but also the highest booking pressure. September and October are seen as the quietest and most colourful phase, often with more stable weather than midsummer. In winter, snowshoe retreats and mindfulness weeks run around Oberstdorf and Hindelang; yoga and therapeutic fasting houses operate year-round anyway, and Bad Wörishofen often offers the quietest fasting dates between November and March. The transition months April and November carry the least reliable weather and are used by many houses for internal pauses. If you are flexible, late September and early May weeks form the best combination of stable weather and open availability.
What is the best way to reach the Allgäu?
By train, Kempten and Immenstadt are the two central hubs. From Munich you reach Kempten in about two hours, from Stuttgart in two and a half. From Kempten and Immenstadt, regional trains run on to Sonthofen, Oberstdorf, Hindelang and Pfronten, so most of the higher-lying houses are reachable without a car. Bad Wörishofen sits on the Augsburg to Buchloe line and is about one and a half hours from Munich with a single connection. By car, the A7 motorway forms the north-to-south spine through the Allgäu down to Füssen, and the B19 connects Kempten with Oberstdorf in the east. From the west, the A96 runs from Memmingen toward Lindau, feeding into the southwestern part of the region. Allgäu Airport near Memmingen serves domestic and a few European routes, and Munich as the larger hub sits roughly 90 driving minutes to the east. Most houses pick up guests from the nearest station, so a short enquiry before booking pays off.
Which retreat formats are offered in the Allgäu?
Four formats shape the Allgäu clearly. Yoga retreats are the strongest element, with Hatha (held postures), Yin (long-held passive floor positions) and Vinyasa (breath-led sequences). Hiking retreats are the second typical format, often as contemplative practice with silence phases and a slow pace, combined with yoga or breath work. Therapeutic and base fasting form the third format, carried by the Kneipp tradition in Bad Wörishofen: therapeutic fasting in the Buchinger style works with broths and juices, base fasting adds alkaline food. Mindfulness and silence days form the fourth element, often as weekend formats or integrated into a yoga or hiking week. What you typically find less of here than in the eastern low mountain ranges are pure multi-day silence retreats; the Allgäu lives more from movement and spa-town practice than from long inner-focus phases. In total 18 retreats are listed in the region.
Can I combine a retreat in the Allgäu with hiking?
Yes, this is one of the typical Allgäu combinations and is built directly into many programmes. The region is one of the densest hiking areas in the German-speaking world, with marked trails ranging from easy alpine pasture loops to multi-day hut traverses. Houses in the High Allgäu around Oberstdorf, Hindelang and in the Tannheim Valley often work with a fixed daily rhythm of yoga in the morning, a mountain stage at midday and breath or silence practice in the evening. Even outside such combined programmes, hiking on your own is straightforward because nearly all retreat houses sit directly on marked trails. If you want hiking as the main element, the summer months from June through September are the best time. For the quieter mindfulness and therapeutic fasting weeks in Bad Wörishofen, shorter walks in the spa park and the surrounding area suit better, which is a different daily rhythm.
Are retreats in the Allgäu suitable for families?
Part of the offer is family-friendly, part is clearly not. Yoga weekends for adults, silence retreats and therapeutic fasting weeks are explicitly adult formats; they need a protected setting that is hard to combine with children. What works well in the Allgäu are family-friendly active stays with a yoga component and hiking: single houses around Oberstdorf, Pfronten and in the Eastern Allgäu run programmes where parents take part in classes while children follow their own hiking or nature programme. The region itself is built around families anyway, with mountain railways, alpine pastures and kid-friendly trails, so a classic active holiday with single yoga or mindfulness sessions in the daily plan is realistic. If you travel with children, a direct enquiry to the chosen house is the only reliable source, because age limits and family setups vary strongly from address to address.
Which kinds of houses will you find in the Allgäu?
Four house types meet in the Allgäu. First, the high-alpine mountain yoga houses around Oberstdorf and Hindelang: smaller addresses at 900 to 1,300 metres, often with their own sauna, hiking trails from the door and a clear mountain view. Second, the quieter yoga and hiking houses in the Eastern Allgäu around Pfronten and the Tannheim Valley: frequently family-run with between 8 and 25 rooms, sunny positions and a relaxed atmosphere. Third, the spa-town and therapeutic fasting houses in Bad Wörishofen: tradition-rich addresses with Kneipp baths, medical supervision and larger programme days for water cures, massages and fasting guidance. Fourth, the multi-format houses around Sonthofen, Immenstadt and Kempten, which mix yoga, mindfulness and active programmes and are usually run as comfort addresses with a spa and restaurant. With 18 retreats currently listed in the Allgäu, you find the right size and orientation depending on the character you want.