Hitler's Bunker Berlin Location: The Ultimate Guide for History Buffs on How to Find It

Written By Matthew Menneke

Emergency Exit of Hitler’s Bunker, July 1947

Location of the Bunker courtayrd today, 2020

For World War II history enthusiasts, few sites are as intriguing as the location of Adolf Hitler’s final days in the Führerbunker, where he spent his last moments before his suicide.

Inside Hitler’s bunker in the spring of 1945, the scene was eerie and surreal, with abandoned furniture and debris, bloodstains on the sofa, papers, an SS officer’s cap, a looted safe, and the shallow trench where the bodies of Hitler and Eva Braun were burned after their suicides. While the bunker no longer exists, you can visit where this concrete fortress once stood.

In this post, we’ll guide you to the exact location and share some fascinating facts about Hitler’s last hideout.


Where is the site of Adolf Hitler's Bunker?

The remains of the Führerbunker lie beneath a rather nondescript parking lot in central Berlin's government district. Here are the key details:

 

Address in Central Berlin

  • Gertrud-Kolmar-Straße, 10117 Berlin, Germany

Coordinates

  • 52°30′45″N 13°22′53″E

Nearby Landmarks

  • Just south of the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe

  • 120 meters north of the former site of the New Reich Chancellery building on Voßstraße

  • A short walk from the Brandenburg Gate and the Reichstag building

The bunker's emergency exit once led to the garden of the Old Reich Chancellery, but today, that spot is occupied by the parking lot and some residential apartment buildings constructed by the East German government in the 1980s.


Guided Tours and Educational Programs

To gain a deeper understanding of the Führerbunker's historical significance, consider joining a guided tour or educational program:

  • The Topography of Terror Documentation Center, located on the site of the former Gestapo and SS headquarters, provides exhibits and resources that shed light on the Nazi regime and its crimes. Their tours and programs often discuss the role of the Führerbunker in the war's final chapter.

Visiting the site with an expert guide can significantly enrich your understanding of this pivotal moment in history and the complex legacy it leaves behind.


A Brief History of the Führerbunker

The Führerbunker was part of a large subterranean bunker complex constructed in two phases - a Vorbunker in 1936 and the Führerbunker proper in 1944. Some quick facts:

  • Located 8.5 meters (28 ft) beneath the garden of the Old Reich Chancellery

  • Consisted of about 30 small rooms

  • It had a roof up to 3 meters thick made of reinforced concrete

  • It included an emergency exit to the Chancellery Gardens and a connection to the Vorbunker

Stages of Soviet demolition in 1947.

Adolf Hitler spent the last months of his life in the Führerbunker, moving in on January 16, 1945, as the Red Army closed in on Berlin. It was here that Hitler married Eva Braun on April 29, just one day before the couple committed suicide on April 30 as the Soviet troops reached the nearby Reichstag.

According to Hitler’s instructions, the bodies were burned in a shell crater in the Chancellery garden near the bunker’s emergency exit. Today, a small information panel marks this location for visitors. Hitler’s death marked the end of the Thousand-Year Reich as Russian troops approached Berlin amidst constant bombing raids.


Finding the Führerbunker Today near the Reich Chancellery

After the war, the Soviet forces made some attempts to demolish the bunker with explosives, but much of the underground complex remained intact. The bunker was partially burned and stripped of valuables by the retreating German troops.

Guided tour my Matthew, discussing the history of the bunker

Guided tour my Matthew, showing the bunker location

However, the East German government undertook several initiatives to destroy or fill the underground rooms in the following years. The hinge of the door to Hitler's bunker was burned off by advancing Russian combat engineers.

When the area was redeveloped in the late 1980s, some sections of the old bunker complex were uncovered, but for the most part, these were destroyed. The site was intentionally left unmarked for many years.

It wasn't until 2006 that a small plaque with a schematic of the bunker was installed at the corner of In den Ministergärten and Gertrud-Kolmar-Straße. The panel provides some historical details in both German and English.

Tips for Visiting

  • The site is outdoors and publicly accessible 24/7, free of charge.

  • Closest public transport is the Mohrenstrasse U-Bahn station (U2 line) or the Brandenburger Tor station (S1, S2, S25, S26)

  • Combine your visit with other nearby WWII sites like the Topography of Terror museum, the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, and the Soviet War Memorial in Tiergarten.

  • For more context, consider joining a guided walking tour that covers Hitler's bunker and other Third Reich sites.


Layout and Interior of the Führerbunker

The Führerbunker was divided into the upper Vorbunker and the lower Führerbunker. The Vorbunker contained Hitler’s private suite, offices for his secretaries, and a guard room.

The lower level housed Hitler’s personal study, bedrooms for Hitler and Eva Braun, a conference/map room, a medical room, and quarters for high-ranking officers and staff. Hitler’s sitting room was also located on this level, where he spent much of his time during the final days.

Other key features of the bunker included:

  • A machine gun nest covering the main entrance

  • An emergency exit stairway to the Chancellery Gardens

  • Air raid doors that were gas-tight and had a thickness of 1.6 meters

  • Its own diesel power plant and air-conditioning system

  • A communications centre with a switchboard connecting to the outside

The diagram above provides a detailed layout of the Führerbunker complex, including the upper Vorbunker and lower Führerbunker levels.

Critical areas like Hitler’s study, the conference room, and living quarters for Hitler, Eva Braun, and other high-ranking Nazi officials are marked. The map helps visualise the claustrophobic, maze-like nature of the underground bunker where Hitler spent his final days as the war came to an end above ground.


Hitler's Final Days in the Führerbunker

As the war turned decisively against Germany in early 1945, Hitler retreated to the relative safety of the Führerbunker, where he could continue to direct the final defence of Berlin. Despite pleas from his generals to leave the doomed city, Hitler stubbornly refused, insisting that he would lead the fight to the end.

Destruction and chaos is the only description of the bunker after Hitler’s suicide

A crushed globe and a bust of Hitler amid rubble outside the ruined Reich Chancellery.

Picturing Hitler’s bunker, photographs taken inside reveal eerie scenes of ruins, abandoned furniture, bloodstains, and other haunting artifacts, providing a detailed glimpse into the last days of the Third Reich.

In the claustrophobic confines of the bunker, Hitler grew increasingly isolated and paranoid, raging against his fate and those he believed had betrayed him. Even as the end drew near, he clung to fantasies of a miraculous reversal, at one point exclaiming, “I will not leave Berlin, I will defend it! I can still win this war!”

Sifting through the debris trench where it was believed Hitler and Eva’s body’s were found

Discarded fuel cans located near the bunker

But as the Soviet troops drew ever closer and all hope of victory evaporated, Hitler finally accepted the inevitable. On April 30, 1945, with the enemy blocks away, he bid farewell to his staff and, together with Eva Braun, whom he had married just hours before, retired to his private quarters.

There, the man responsible for the most destructive war in human history took his own life, shooting himself in the head as Braun swallowed a cyanide capsule. Their bodies were hastily cremated in the shell-cratered garden above.


Myths and Conspiracy Theories Surrounding Hitler's Bunker

In the decades since Hitler's death, the Führerbunker has become a magnet for urban legends and conspiracy theories. Some claim that Hitler did not actually die in the bunker but instead escaped to South America or Antarctica. Others suggest that the bunker held occult artifacts or secret Nazi technology.

A Russian soldier stood in Adolf Hitler’s bunker, Berlin, 1945.

War correspondents examined a couch stained with blood located inside Hitler’s bunker.

Another popular conspiracy theory asserts that Hitler's bunker was connected via underground tunnels to the Berlin subway system, allowing high-ranking Nazis to flee the city undetected. While the bunker did have an emergency exit to the subway, there is no evidence it was used for escape or that such tunnels existed.

Despite the lack of credible evidence, these myths and conspiracies continue to capture the public imagination, a testament to the enduring fascination and revulsion surrounding one of history's most notorious figures. As long as the mysteries of Hitler's final days persist, so too will the legends and theories that swirl around his last refuge.


The Significance of the Führerbunker

For many, the site of Hitler's bunker is a sobering reminder of the evil and destruction wrought by Nazi Germany. It was here that Hitler spent his final days, increasingly detached from reality, as German and Soviet troops fought fiercely in the streets above, marking the downfall of the Third Reich.

An SS officer’s cap, with the infamous death’s-head skull emblem.

The fact that the bunker is now little more than an anonymous parking lot is, perhaps, a fitting end for a man responsible for the deaths of millions. As Berlin historian Sven Felix Kellerhoff puts it, "The National Socialists wanted to build a glorious new metropolis here, but they were only able to build an underground concrete block."

Yet even without visible ruins, the bunker's legacy looms large in the German historical consciousness. It has been the subject of numerous books, films, and documentaries, including the acclaimed 2004 film "Downfall" (Der Untergang).


The Führerbunker in Popular Culture

The Führerbunker has captured the imagination of filmmakers, writers, and game developers, featuring in numerous works of popular culture:

  • The 2004 German film "Downfall" (Der Untergang) offers a chilling portrayal of Hitler's final days in the bunker. The film's claustrophobic atmosphere and Bruno Ganz's haunting performance as Hitler have left an indelible mark on the public consciousness.

  • Other notable film appearances include "The Bunker" (1981), "The Death of Adolf Hitler" (1973), and "Speer und Er" (2005).

  • The Führerbunker has been a setting in video games such as Sniper Elite V2 and Call of Duty: World at War.

Der Untergang film poster

These depictions, while often dramatised for entertainment purposes, have played a significant role in shaping public perceptions of Hitler's final days and the end of World War II in Europe.

They serve as a reminder of the enduring fascination with this dark chapter in history and the ongoing efforts to understand and come to terms with the legacy of the Third Reich.


Germany's Complex Relationship with Its Nazi Past

The Führerbunker's fate also reflects Germany's complex relationship with its Nazi past. For decades after the war, many Germans preferred to ignore or downplay the country's complicity in Hitler's crimes. The bunker, like other Nazi sites, was left to decay - an unpleasant reminder best forgotten.

Nazi Party eagle that once loomed over a doorway of the Reich Chancellery, Berlin, 1945.

But as a new generation has come of age, attitudes have shifted. Many now believe that Germany must confront its history head-on, however painful that may be. The decision to leave the bunker site unmarked has come under particular scrutiny, with some arguing that it allows visitors to overlook or even deny what happened there.

Others, however, believe that the absence of any monument speaks more eloquently than a plaque or statue ever could. By refusing to glorify the bunker, they argue, Germany denies Hitler the immortality he craved and forces us to grapple with the banality of evil.

As the debate continues, the Führerbunker remains a flashpoint - a symbol of Germany's ongoing struggle to come to terms with its darkest chapter. How the country remembers this site in the years to come will say much about its relationship with the past and its vision for the future.


The Führerbunker's Enduring Legacy: From Neo-Nazi Rallies to Dark Tourism Satire

In the years since the war, the site of the Führerbunker has attracted a range of visitors, from curious tourists to neo-Nazi pilgrims. One of the most notable incidents occurred in 1987 when a group of far-right extremists attempted to stage a rally at the site on the anniversary of Hitler’s death. Police swiftly broke up the gathering, but it highlighted the enduring allure of the bunker for those who still harbour fascist sympathies.

The site has recently become a popular destination for historians and documentarians seeking to shed light on the war’s final days. In 2004, a team of researchers used ground-penetrating radar to map out the bunker’s subterranean remains, revealing the extent of the complex and the location of important rooms like Hitler’s study.

Neo-Nazi demonstration in Leipzig, Germany, in October 2009

Other visitors have included survivors of the Nazi regime, some of whom have made emotional pilgrimages to the site to confront their past. In 2013, a group of Holocaust survivors from Israel visited the bunker as part of a trip to Berlin, laying a wreath at the site in memory of those who perished under Hitler’s rule.

In the aftermath of World War II, an American soldier was photographed offering a mocking Nazi salute inside the bombed-out ruins of the Berliner Sportspalast, a site often used for Third Reich political rallies. This gesture was a disrespectful act within the historical context of the war's end.

Despite its dark history, the Führerbunker has been the scene of more lighthearted moments. In 2015, a British artist staged a tongue-in-cheek “holiday” at the site, complete with beach chairs, umbrellas, and a sign proclaiming it “Hitler’s Beach Bunker.” The installation was intended as a satirical comment on the commercialisation of dark tourism.

As the years pass and the living memory of the war fades, the Führerbunker is likely to remain a magnet for those seeking to understand one of history’s darkest chapters. While the site may be unassuming, its legacy continues to loom large in the world’s imagination.


The Contrasting Fates of Notorious Führer Sites

The Führerbunker's understated fate stands in stark contrast to other notorious Nazi sites like the Wolf's Lair and the Eagle's Nest.

Hitler's Eastern Front military headquarters, the Wolf's Lair:

  • Heavily damaged by retreating German forces

  • It still attracts thousands of visitors each year

  • Features extensive ruins and a museum examining the 1944 assassination attempt on Hitler

Hitler's reinforced bunker at the Wolfsschanze

The Eagle's Nest, Hitler's mountaintop retreat in Bavaria:

  • Captured largely intact by American troops

  • It turned into a tourist destination

  • Visitors can tour the lavish complex and take in panoramic views of the Alps

The Eagles Nest

The differing approaches to these sites reflect the complexities of preserving dark heritage:

  • Some argue that places like the Wolf's Lair and Eagle's Nest provide valuable historical insights.

  • Others worry that they risk glorifying the Nazi regime.

  • The Führerbunker, in its unassuming anonymity, sidesteps this dilemma but raises its own questions about remembrance and erasure.

Ultimately, there is no easy answer for dealing with the physical remnants of a painful past. But by grappling openly with these challenges, as Germany continues to do, we can learn from history's darkest chapters and build a more just future.


Further Reading and Resources

For those interested in delving deeper into the history of Hitler's bunker and its role in the final days of World War II, consider exploring these additional resources:

  • "The Bunker" by James P. O'Donnell - This classic book, based on interviews with survivors, provides a gripping account of the last days in the Führerbunker.

  • "Inside Hitler's Bunker: The Last Days of the Third Reich" by Joachim Fest - Renowned historian Fest offers a meticulously researched and vividly written chronicle of the bunker's final chapter.

  • "Berlin: The Downfall 1945" by Antony Beevor - While not solely focused on the Führerbunker, Beevor's acclaimed book gives a comprehensive overview of the Battle of Berlin and the regime's collapse.

  • The German Resistance Memorial Center - Located in Berlin, this museum is dedicated to those who fought against the Nazi regime, including the July 20 plotters who attempted to assassinate Hitler at the Wolf's Lair.


Conclusion

A pilgrimage to the site of Hitler's bunker is a must for any WWII history buff visiting Berlin. While the bunker itself is long gone, standing where the Führer met his ignominious end is a powerful experience that brings the war's final days to vivid life.

By understanding what happened in this small patch of Berlin real estate, we can better grasp the magnitude of the conflict that reshaped the 20th century - and honour the memory of the millions who suffered under Hitler's brutal regime.

 

The article was written by Matthew Menneke. 

Matt is the founder and guide of 'On the Front Tours', offering military history tours in Berlin. Born in Melbourne, Australia, Matt's passion for history led him to serve in the Australian Army Reserve for eight years. With a degree in International Politics and a successful sales career, he discovered his love for guiding while working as a tour guide in Australia. Since moving to Berlin in 2015, Matt has combined his enthusiasm for history and guiding by creating immersive tours that bring the past to life for his guests.


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