4 locations · Germany
Berlin
Every clothing-optional place we've verified in Berlin. Tap any entry for full visit notes, etiquette, access and seasonal advice.
Berlin, Germany
FKK Strand
FKK Strand is a clothing-optional beach in Berlin, Germany, where FKK (Freikörperkultur — 'free body culture') is the established norm at designated bathing areas. German naturism has deep roots in early-20th-century reform movements and is socially mainstream, with FKK sections of lakes and coastal beaches plainly marked and used by families, retirees, and solo visitors across the warm-weather season. Access is typically straightforward from a marked car park or footpath. Expect calm, low-key etiquette and the standard German bathing rules: pack out trash, no loud music, towel on shared seating.
Berlin, Germany
FKK Strandbad Müggelsee
FKK Strandbad Müggelsee is an FKK (clothing-optional) bathing area on a lake in Berlin, Germany. Lake-based FKK is the dominant model of inland German naturism — Strandbad and Badestelle facilities on local Seen draw a mix of naturist regulars and casual textile bathers, with the FKK section clearly signposted from the main entrance. Typical season runs May through September, with the highest naturist use on weekday mornings and shoulder months. Bring sunscreen, a towel, and water shoes if the shoreline is rocky; many smaller Badestellen have no on-site staffing.
Berlin, Germany
FKK-Strand am Flughafensee
FKK-Strand am Flughafensee is an FKK (clothing-optional) bathing area on a lake in Berlin, Germany. Lake-based FKK is the dominant model of inland German naturism — Strandbad and Badestelle facilities on local Seen draw a mix of naturist regulars and casual textile bathers, with the FKK section clearly signposted from the main entrance. Typical season runs May through September, with the highest naturist use on weekday mornings and shoulder months. Bring sunscreen, a towel, and water shoes if the shoreline is rocky; many smaller Badestellen have no on-site staffing.
Berlin, Germany
Strandbad Wannsee
Strandbad Wannsee is one of the largest inland lidos in Europe — a 1,275-metre stretch of imported Baltic sand on the eastern shore of Lake Wannsee in southwestern Berlin. It's been operating continuously since 1907, with the current art-deco bath complex completed in 1930. Berliners have been coming here for swimming, sunbathing, and the warm-weather civic ritual of a beach day for well over a century, and the lido was rebuilt and reopened post-war specifically to preserve the tradition. The FKK section sits at the southern end of the main beach, occupying roughly 10 percent of the total area. It's officially designated — full nudity is required within the section, not just optional — and the boundary with the textile beach is clearly marked. Staff enforce the rule both ways: textiles aren't admitted to the FKK area and naturists aren't admitted to the main textile beach. Wannsee handles this transition straightforwardly, the way most German municipal lidos do — FKK is treated as a normal facility option, not as something to euphemise. The lido is full-service. Showers, changing rooms, lockers, snack bars, ice cream, a wooden boardwalk along the beach edge, classic wicker beach baskets (Strandkörbe), and a playground including a water slide for kids. Capacity is roughly 50,000 bathers, though FKK section attendance is much smaller and the area rarely feels crowded except on the hottest summer Sundays. Operated by the city's Berliner Bäder-Betriebe (public pool operator), Strandbad Wannsee charges an entry fee in the standard German lido model — pay at the gate, spend the day. Summer opening is daily 9 AM to 7 PM. Off-season the lido closes; check the official Berliner Bäder-Betriebe page for current dates before a visit.