Hanukkah in Germany: Where Public Events Take Place in Berlin, Frankfurt and Other Cities

Hanukkah in Germany is observed this year from the evening of Sunday, 14 December, to the evening of Monday, 22 December. Although the eight-day Festival of Lights is not a public holiday, it remains a visible feature of public life in several German cities. In Berlin, Frankfurt am Main, Munich, Cologne and other urban centres, organised candle-lighting ceremonies, community gatherings and cultural programmes are scheduled throughout the week, largely concentrated in the evening hours. Public attention is directed less towards religious doctrine than towards practical considerations — where public events are held, when they begin and which venues are accessible to visitors, reports NT24.
According to Jewish umbrella organisations, approximately 95,000 to 100,000 Jews live in Germany, with the largest communities based in major cities. This concentration helps explain why public Hanukkah observances are most prominent in urban areas with established community institutions and the administrative capacity to host visible, publicly coordinated events.
What Hanukkah Represents and Why It Is Publicly Visible
Hanukkah commemorates the rededication of the Second Temple in Jerusalem in the second century BCE. The central ritual of the holiday is the daily lighting of candles on the hanukkiah, with one additional candle lit each evening over eight nights.
A defining feature of Hanukkah is that the hanukkiah is traditionally placed where its light can be seen from outside — in windows, at entrances or in public spaces. This outward-facing practice gives the holiday a visible public dimension. In Germany, this results in officially coordinated candle-lighting ceremonies organised by Jewish communities in cooperation with local authorities.
Key Dates for Hanukkah in Germany
- Start: Evening of 14 December
- End: Evening of 22 December
- Duration: Eight evenings
- Typical event times: After sunset, generally between 4:30 pm and 8:00 pm
- Legal status: Not a public holiday
Public transport, government offices and businesses operate on normal schedules throughout the holiday period.
Where Hanukkah Is Celebrated Publicly in Germany

Berlin
Public Hanukkiah at Brandenburg Gate
- Address: Pariser Platz, 10117 Berlin
- Dates: 14–22 December
- Time: Daily after sunset; opening ceremony on 14 December at approximately 5:30 pm
- Format: Open public candle-lighting ceremony
Jewish Museum Berlin – Hanukkah Programmes
- Address: Lindenstraße 9–14, 10969 Berlin
- Dates: 14 and 21 December
- Times: 11:00 am (guided tours); 14 December family programme from 3:00 pm
- Format: Cultural and educational events
Frankfurt am Main
Hanukkah Celebrations by the Jewish Community of Frankfurt
- Address: Börneplatz 7, 60311 Frankfurt am Main
- Dates: 14–22 December
- Time: First candle lighting on 14 December at approximately 5:00 pm
- Format: Candle lighting, religious services, community events
“Latkes, Lights & L’Chaim” Hanukkah Evening
- Address: Grüneburgweg 9, 60322 Frankfurt am Main
- Date: 18 December
- Time: From 6:00 pm
- Format: Open evening event with music and traditional food
Munich
Public Hanukkiah at Karlsplatz (Stachus)
- Address: Karlsplatz, 80335 Munich
- Dates: 14–22 December
- Time: Opening ceremony on 14 December at approximately 4:45 pm
- Format: Public candle lighting
Israelite Religious Community of Munich and Upper Bavaria
- Address: Sonnenstraße 14, 80331 Munich
- Dates: 14–22 December
- Format: Candle lightings, lectures, cultural evenings
Cologne
Public Hanukkah Ceremony at Roncalliplatz
- Address: Roncalliplatz, 50667 Cologne
- Date: 14 December
- Time: Approximately 5:00 pm
- Format: Public candle lighting
Synagogue Community of Cologne
- Address: Unter Sachsenhausen 29, 50667 Cologne
- Dates: 14–22 December
- Format: Community events and religious services
Other German Cities
Public Hanukkah events are also held in:
- Hamburg: Rathausmarkt, 14 December, approx. 5:00 pm
- Düsseldorf: Marktplatz, 14 December, approx. 4:45 pm
- Stuttgart: Schlossplatz, 14 December, approx. 5:15 pm
- Leipzig: Cultural venues and concerts, 14–21 December
- Dresden: Neumarkt, 14 December, approx. 4:45 pm
- Erfurt: Rathaus am Fischmarkt, 14 December at 5:00 pm, with daily lightings through 22 December
How to Find Current Hanukkah Events
Event information in Germany is published decentrally. Reliable sources include:
- Official websites of Jewish communities
- City event calendars
- Museums and cultural institutions
- Local news outlets
Exact times may vary slightly depending on sunset times and local arrangements.
Hanukkah in Germany is organised at the municipal and community level, not through federal regulation. Cities grant permissions for public events without assigning the holiday any special legal status.
From 14 to 22 December, Hanukkah takes place alongside Christmas markets, end-of-year shopping and normal administrative activity. Its public presence is shaped by continuity and established practice rather than large-scale spectacle.
Stay connected for news that works — timely, factual, and free from opinion — and insights that matter now: Berlin, Ukraine, and the world: Head of German Physicians’ Association Demands Massive Hospital Closures to Curb Health Costs




