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Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) — The Complete Master Guide 2026

Germany’s Capital Hub · easyJet’s Largest Continental Base

Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) — The Complete Master Guide 2026

The airport that took 14 years and €7 billion to open finally settled into rhythm. The FEX express now hits Berlin Hbf in 23 minutes, EES biometric checks went fully live on 10 April 2026, the lounges are named after the airports BER replaced — and Tegel-era taxi habits no longer apply.

✈️ IATA: BER📍 18 km SE of Berlin Mitte🚆 FEX 23 min · €5 ABC🛂 EES Live · ETIAS Q4 2026

⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance

FEX (Flughafenexpress)
23 min Berlin Hbf → BER, every 15 min
Single Ticket Berlin ABC
€5.00 covers FEX, S-Bahn, U-Bahn, regional rail to BER
S9 / S45 to BER
~50 min via Friedrichstraße / Südkreuz
Taxi to Mitte (metered)
€60–75 · 35–55 min depending on traffic
Welcome Card ABC 48h
€27 · unlimited zones A+B+C incl. FEX
BER Lounge Tegel walk-in
€36 / 3.5 h · Priority Pass eligible
BER Lounge Tempelhof walk-in
€48 / 3 h · the upscale option
Arrive Early (International)
2.5 hours (3 h with EES first registration)

🏢 1. Terminal Architecture: T1, T2 & the Five Piers

BER consolidated everything Berlin used to spread across Tegel (TXL) and Schönefeld (SXF) into one site. Tegel closed November 2020, the old Schönefeld terminal (briefly rebadged BER Terminal 5) was retired in February 2023, and as of 2026 the airport runs on a clean two-terminal layout — a single mainline T1 with five piers, plus a smaller T2 used for low-cost peak overflow.

🛫 Terminal 1 — The Workhorse

Airlines: Lufthansa Group, easyJet (the largest base at BER), Ryanair, British Airways, KLM/Air France, Turkish Airlines, Qatar Airways, Emirates, United, Delta, Singapore Airlines, all SkyTeam and Star Alliance carriers.

Layout: Five piers labelled A-E. Pier A handles non-Schengen long-haul (intercontinental + UK). Piers B, C, D are Schengen. Pier E is the eastern Schengen-external pier for Turkey, Israel, Western Balkans, North Africa.

The walk to your gate matters here. T1 is wide and open but Pier A (long-haul) sits at the north end — allow 10-15 minutes from security to gate. Mainline check-in is on Level 1 of the central concourse; departures Level 1 too.

🛬 Terminal 2 — The Sometimes Terminal

Airlines: easyJet on selected peak rotations, occasional Ryanair, Wizz Air. T2 is opened seasonally when T1’s capacity is stretched and closed when it isn’t — so the assignment varies.

Status: Connected to T1 by a covered 5-minute walkway at ground level, no shuttle needed. Same security, same airside. Boarding card prefix doesn’t change between T1 and T2.

Don’t panic if your boarding pass says T2 and you arrive at T1. Walk through the connector — it’s well-signed and indoor. Most maps still default to T1 because T2 is irregular.
🚏 The Tegel/Schönefeld Confusion — Killed Off in 2023

Older guides, Google Maps results from 2021–2022, and out-of-date taxi drivers may still mention SXF or TXL. Both are dead. Tegel closed November 2020 (the site is being redeveloped as a research campus), and Schönefeld’s old terminal was retired as BER T5 in February 2023. If a booking confirmation references SXF or TXL it’s almost certainly historical — the current IATA is BER.

🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & Schengen Border Reality 2026

2026 is the year European border procedure changed permanently. EES went fully operational on 10 April 2026; ETIAS is the next domino, expected Q4 2026. BER has full EES coverage at every Schengen-external gate, and the queues are settling down after the chaotic April rollout.

📸

EES — Fully Operational Since 10 April 2026

All non-EU passport holders are now biometrically registered on first entry: 4-finger fingerprint scan + facial photo. Subsequent entries auto-match. First-time registration adds 10–15 minutes to immigration, returning visitors much less. Self-service kiosks at Pier A and Pier E speed it up.

ETIAS — Coming Q4 2026

The €7 pre-travel authorisation for visa-exempt nationals (UK, US, Canada, Australia, etc.) launches in autumn 2026 with a phased grace period. Apply on the official EU portal a few days before travel — not required yet at writing, but check before departure. EU/EEA citizens are unaffected.

🔍

Security: Modern CT, Liquids Stay In

BER opened with 3D CT scanners on every lane from day one — laptops and liquids stay inside the bag. Enforced max 2-litre liquid container size at the lane (an EU-wide reversal of the temporary 100ml relaxation). Belts and shoes generally stay on. Allow 10–25 min depending on the wave.

🛬 Schengen Internal Arrivals Bypass Border Control

If you’re arriving from another Schengen country (Paris, Madrid, Rome, Vienna, Amsterdam, etc.), there is no passport check at all — walk straight from the gate to baggage. Only flights from outside Schengen (UK, US, Turkey, Switzerland is Schengen, the Balkans, etc.) hit the EES counters at Pier A or Pier E.

🚆 3. Transport: FEX, S-Bahn & the Mitte Taxi Math

BER sits in VBB fare zone C, so any city ride into Berlin needs an ABC ticket (€5.00 single, 2026). Six rail lines serve the airport station underneath T1; you don’t need to choose in advance — buy the ticket once and ride whichever train comes first.

⭐ FEX Flughafenexpress — The 23-Minute Default

Operated by Deutsche Bahn Regio. Runs every 15 minutes during the day from Berlin Hauptbahnhof → Gesundbrunnen → Ostkreuz → BER, taking 23 minutes from Hbf. Air-conditioned, double-deck, plenty of luggage space. The default pick for anyone travelling to/from Mitte, Hbf, or onward to other German cities by ICE.

Single ABC:
€5.00
Frequency:
Every 15 min, 04:00–00:30
Hbf → BER:
23 min
Welcome Card ABC:
Included free
Welcome Card 48h ABC at €27 covers all six BER train lines plus every Berlin S-Bahn, U-Bahn, tram and bus for two days. If you’re using transit at all in the city, it pays for itself before lunch on day one.

🚇 S-Bahn S9 / S45 — Cheap, Slow, Direct to S-Bahn Ring

For destinations not on the FEX corridor — Charlottenburg, Friedrichshain, Kreuzberg, Treptow — the S-Bahn is the better choice. Same €5 ABC ticket. S9 runs to Friedrichstraße (~45 min) and onward to Spandau. S45 runs to Südkreuz (~30 min), connecting to the S-Bahn Ring for circular access to Schöneberg, Westend, Wedding.

S9 → Friedrichstraße: ~45 min
S9 → Hauptbahnhof: ~55 min
S45 → Südkreuz: ~30 min
Frequency: Every 20 min
🛣️ Default-pick rule: Going to Mitte, Hbf, Charlottenburg-Hbf, ICE connection? Take the FEX. Going to Kreuzberg, Friedrichshain, Schöneberg, anywhere on the S-Bahn Ring? Take the S9 or S45 to Südkreuz then change. The €5 ticket is the same either way — choose by destination, not price.

🚖 Taxi to Berlin — Metered, No Flat Rate

Unlike Hamburg or Munich, BER does not have an official Pauschal flat-rate. All taxi rides are metered. The official ranks are at the T1 ground-floor exits (Sections 0 and 5). Drivers are licensed BER taxis only — don’t accept any “greeter” offers inside the terminal; those are unlicensed and overcharge.

Mitte / Hbf: €60–75
Kreuzberg / Friedrichshain: €55–70
Charlottenburg: €70–85
Prenzlauer Berg: €60–75
Cards accepted but ask first. All licensed BER taxis are required to accept card payments, but the smaller fleet operators sometimes “forget” the reader. Confirm card payment before starting the meter. Tip 5–10% if rounded up; not expected on flat-fee runs. Receipt on request (Quittung, bitte).

📱 Uber, Bolt & FreeNow — Same Cars, Different Apps

Berlin’s rideshare scene is fragmented. Uber operates only as a taxi-dispatch (drivers are real licensed taxis under federal law). Bolt works similarly, often cheaper. FreeNow is the premium European option that aggregates both private cars and taxis. Pickups happen at the dedicated rideshare zones outside T1 — follow the “Ride App Pickup” signage, not the taxi rank.

Uber to Mitte: €45–65
Bolt to Mitte: €40–60
FreeNow to Mitte: €50–70
Surge: +30–80% peak
⚠️ Verdi Strikes — Check the Day Before

Germany’s public-sector union Verdi regularly negotiates with airport security and ground-handling contractors, and BER has been hit by walkouts multiple times in 2024 and 2025. Strike days typically wipe out 70–90% of departures. Frequency dropped through 2025–2026 but it’s not zero. Check the BER website or a tracker like flightaware the day before any flight if you’re flying during a known Verdi pay round.

🛋️ 4. Lounges: Named After the Airports BER Replaced

Two of BER’s walk-in lounges are named after the historic Berlin airports BER closed — Tegel and Tempelhof. It’s a quietly cheeky bit of branding. Both accept Priority Pass; one is the upscale option.

✨ BER Lounge Tempelhof (T1 airside, premium tier)

Walk-in price:
€483-hour stay
Access:
Priority Pass · LoungeKey · DragonPass · Diners Club · paid walk-in
Hours:
05:00–22:00 daily
Wi-Fi / showers:
Yes / Yes
The upscale of the two public lounges, with proper hot food, a bar, and quiet zones with reclining seats. Best for the early-morning long-haul wave (06:00–09:00 departures) when Pier A backs up. Tarmac-facing windows.

🪶 BER Lounge Tegel (T1 airside)

€36 / 3.5-hour stay. Smaller, simpler, cheaper than Tempelhof. Cold and hot buffet, soft drinks, beer/wine self-serve. Priority Pass and LoungeKey accepted. The pragmatic choice if you don’t need food and just want a power outlet, a sofa, and quiet.

⭐ Lufthansa Senator + Business Lounges (Pier A, status-only)

Star Alliance Gold or Lufthansa Senator/HON Circle only — no walk-in, no Priority Pass. Both lounges sit in Pier A near gate A30. The Senator side is quieter and serves better wine. 05:00–20:30.

💎 VIP Lounge Zeitgeist (Separate Building)

For first-class flyers and concierge services, BER operates a standalone VIP terminal called Zeitgeist — bookable in advance, includes private security, lounge, and direct apron transfer to the gate. €450+ per pax. Most travellers will never use this; it’s for celebrities, head-of-state, and corporate concierge bookings only.

🌭 5. Food & Shopping: Currywurst, Pretzels & the KaDeWe Counter

🌭 Curry 61 — Berlin’s Defining Snack at the Airport

If you have one airport meal at BER, eat the currywurst at Curry 61. €5.50–7.50 for a sliced bratwurst doused in tomato-curry sauce, served with brötchen or fries. Berlin invented this; the airport branch is a credible rendering. The McDonald’s and Burger King are at Pier B and C — skip them. Berlin will be remembered by what you ate first.

🥨 Bäckerei Kamps & Ditsch — German Bakery, Properly

For a cheap, real German breakfast: Kamps (the national chain) sells laugenbrezel (lye pretzels) at €1.80, käsestangen (cheese sticks), and proper Vollkorn rye sandwiches. Ditsch at Pier B does the same with stronger pretzels. €4–8 for a pretzel + Berliner doughnut + filter coffee, vs €15+ at the table-service options. Pretzel + apricot Berliner = the most German breakfast you can have airside.

🛍️ KaDeWe Mini, Rituals & Carry-on Gifts That Travel

Berlin’s legendary department store KaDeWe runs a small concession at T1 airside — chocolate from Rausch, Lakrits gummies from Bonbonmacherei, mustard from Bautzner. Otherwise: Ritter Sport souvenir bars (12% cheaper than US import prices), Haribo in 1 kg party bags, German Riesling at the duty-free wine wall. Avoid the airport-priced Ampelmännchen merchandise — Mitte gift shops are 30% cheaper.

💡 6. Insider Tips: Strikes, Cash, Tap Water & Berlin Quirks

🚫 The 04:00 Sunday Curfew Doesn’t Exist Here

Unlike Frankfurt and Munich, BER operates 24/7 with no general night curfew on flights. There is a noise-restricted period 23:30–05:30 with reduced runway use, but flights still operate. Most early-morning long-hauls push out between 05:30 and 07:30; first FEX of the day leaves Hbf at 04:00, last train back arrives 00:30. Plan accordingly if you’re flying out before 06:00 — a taxi may be safer than relying on the night S-Bahn.

❄️ Winter: BER Loves to Cancel for Snow

Brandenburg winters are colder than Berlin’s urban heat island, and BER uses a single de-icing pad south of the runway. When snow hits seriously (December–February), the queue stretches and 30-90 minute apron delays are normal. For European-business connections in LHR/CDG/AMS during winter, choose a 3+ hour transfer rather than legal-minimum. The airport only cancels for genuine sustained snowfall, but delays cascade aggressively.

💧 Tap Water Is Safe — Bring a Bottle

Berlin tap water is among the cleanest in Europe — drinkable everywhere including BER washroom taps. Free water dispensers exist airside near most washroom blocks. The bottled water at WH Smith and Relay airside runs €3.20 for 500 ml — six times Berlin supermarket pricing. Refill, don’t buy.

📱 SIM Cards & EU Roaming Reality

EU/EEA visitors: your home plan covers Germany free under the Roam Like At Home regulation — do nothing. UK/US/non-EU visitors: buy at the Vodafone or Telekom kiosks in T1 arrivals. Tourist eSIM 10 GB / 28 days runs €15–25; buy on Airalo or Holafly before landing for €5–10 less. The kiosks need a passport. 5G is default across Berlin.

👩 Solo Female Travellers — Berlin Is Among Europe’s Safest

Both BER and Berlin city are widely regarded as among Europe’s safest big cities for solo female travellers. The S-Bahn and FEX run with CCTV, the platforms are well-lit, and the airport has dedicated assistance points (red-jacketed BER staff at the central hall). For a 04:30 arrival when public transport is sparse, prefer FreeNow/Bolt over flagging a random kerbside ride. Hotels universally offer SafePlace check-in if you arrive late.

💵 Germany Still Has a Cash Habit — But Not at the Airport

A surprise to first-time visitors: many Berlin restaurants, bars, and bakeries (especially in Kreuzberg, Neukölln) still prefer or require cash. BER itself is fully card/contactless — every taxi, train ticket, café, lounge, and shop accepts cards. Withdraw €100–150 at a Sparkasse or Reisebank ATM in the central concourse before heading into the city. VAT/GST refund is processed via the “Tax Free” counter near Pier A check-in for goods bought outside the EU; bring receipts and unused goods.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get from Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) to the city centre? +
Three good options: FEX (Flughafenexpress) direct to Berlin Hbf in 23 minutes for €5 (every 15 min); S-Bahn S9 to Friedrichstraße in ~45 min, same €5; Taxi to Mitte ~€60–75 metered (35–55 min). For Mitte and Hbf, FEX is faster. For Kreuzberg/Friedrichshain, take S9 or S45 to Südkreuz and change. Tickets are Berlin ABC zone because BER is in zone C.
Do my flights leave from BER Terminal 1 or Terminal 2? +
T1 handles the vast majority of flights — Lufthansa Group, easyJet (largest base at BER), Ryanair, BA, KLM, Turkish, Qatar, Emirates, all SkyTeam and Star Alliance carriers. T2 opens seasonally for low-cost peak overflow (some easyJet rotations, Wizz Air). The two are connected by a 5-minute covered indoor walkway; no shuttle. Always check the gate prefix on your boarding pass.
Is the EES Entry/Exit System now live at BER? +
Yes — EES went fully operational on 10 April 2026. Non-EU passport holders are biometrically registered on first entry (4-finger fingerprint scan + facial photo). Subsequent entries auto-match much faster. First-time registration adds 10–15 minutes to immigration. Self-service kiosks at Pier A and Pier E speed it up. ETIAS — the €7 visa-waiver authorisation — is the next domino, expected Q4 2026.
How early should I arrive at BER? +
Schengen domestic: 90 minutes. Schengen international (EU): 2 hours. Long-haul / non-Schengen: 2.5–3 hours, 3+ hours if it’s your first EES registration. Add 1 hour during the early-morning departure wave (06:00–09:00) when the FEX dumps four trains in 20 minutes. Always check the Verdi strike calendar the day before — strike days routinely add 60+ minutes.
Do I need to take laptops and liquids out of my bag at BER security? +
No — BER opened with 3D CT scanners on every lane. Laptops, tablets, liquids and electronics stay inside the bag. Liquid containers must be max 2 litres each (an EU-wide rule reversal — the temporary 100 ml relaxation ended). Belt and shoes generally stay on. Allow 10–25 minutes for security depending on the wave.
What lounges can I access at BER with Priority Pass? +
Two lounges: BER Lounge Tegel (€36 / 3.5 hours) for the practical option, and BER Lounge Tempelhof (€48 / 3 hours) for the upscale option with hot food, bar, and quiet zones. Both accept Priority Pass, LoungeKey and DragonPass. Lufthansa Senator and Business lounges at Pier A are status-only (Star Alliance Gold or HON Circle) — no Priority Pass.
Is the old SXF Schönefeld terminal still in use? +
No. The old Schönefeld terminal (briefly rebadged as BER Terminal 5 in 2020) was permanently retired in February 2023. Tegel (TXL) closed in November 2020. As of 2026 BER operates with one mainline T1 plus a smaller T2 for peak overflow. If a booking confirmation references SXF or TXL, it’s historical data — the current IATA code is BER for all flights.
Is Berlin tap water safe to drink at the airport? +
Yes — Berlin tap water is among the cleanest in Europe, drinkable everywhere including BER washroom taps. Free water dispensers exist airside near most washroom blocks. Bring a refillable bottle — bottled water airside runs €3.20 for 500 ml, six times Berlin supermarket pricing.

📊 2026 Summary Data Table

Feature Current Data (2026)
IATA Code BER
Terminals T1 (mainline, 5 piers A–E) + T2 (peak overflow, walkway-connected). Tegel and Schönefeld terminals both retired (2020 / 2023).
Primary Currency Euro (EUR / €)
FEX Flughafenexpress €5 ABC ticket; 23 min Hbf → BER; every 15 min, 04:00–00:30
S-Bahn S9 / S45 €5 ABC; S9 → Friedrichstraße ~45 min; S45 → Südkreuz ~30 min; every 20 min
Welcome Card 48h ABC €27 — unlimited zones A+B+C including FEX, S-Bahn, U-Bahn, tram, bus
Taxi to Berlin Mitte €60–75 metered (no Pauschal flat rate); 35–55 min
Uber / Bolt / FreeNow €40–70 to Mitte (Bolt cheapest); +30–80% peak surge
BER Lounge Tegel / Tempelhof €36 / 3.5h or €48 / 3h; both Priority Pass eligible (T1 airside)
Border / EES Status EES fully operational since 10 April 2026 (biometric on first entry); ETIAS Q4 2026
Tap Water Safe — drinkable across Berlin including BER washroom taps
Free WiFi “BER-Free-WiFi” — unlimited, no signup; 5G available across the airport

This guide is maintained by the aifly.one Autonomous Intelligence Team. Verified for May 2026 travellers. All prices in EUR (€) unless stated.


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