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Munich streetscape — representative photo

Living in Munich

Expensive, beautiful, alpine-adjacent. Why Munich rewards Bavarian etiquette and punishes everything else.

Photo: Unsplash · representative city image

Munich is Bavaria's capital — TUM and LMU at the centre, plus a half-dozen smaller institutions. Rent is Germany's most expensive. The city culture is more formal than Berlin's, more punctual, more 'Servus' than 'Hallo.' Garching is where TUM's main science campus sits (30 minutes north by U6) and where most international engineering grads end up. This guide covers Bavarian etiquette, why Oktoberfest is not what it looks like in photos, and the small things that make Munich feel like home.

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Living in Munich

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Maxvorstadt, Munich, Germany

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Specific, actionable things that change your life.

Book your KVR (Bürgeramt) Anmeldung 4-6 weeks before arrival

Munich's KVR has the longest wait times of any German city office. Book before you fly. You can change the appointment time once you arrive, but having any booking is better than none.

Get the Deutschlandticket the day you arrive

€49/month covers all of Bavaria's local + regional transit. Munich's S-Bahn, U-Bahn, trams, plus weekend trips to the Alps (Garmisch, Tegernsee, Salzburg). One of the best transit deals in Europe.

Visit Garching at least once before signing in Maxvorstadt

If you're a TUM master's student, your classes are likely in Garching. Maxvorstadt is gorgeous but you'll be doing the U6 commute daily. Many students prefer to live in Garching and visit central Munich on weekends.

Say 'Servus' and 'Grüß Gott' instead of 'Hallo'

Bavarian greetings. Used in shops, restaurants, with neighbours. It's the small social signal that you're trying. Same with 'Pfiat di' on the way out.

Take a weekend hiking trip in the Alps

Garmisch is 90 minutes south by Deutschlandticket. Tegernsee is 60 minutes. These trips are why people live in Munich. Don't skip your first autumn or spring.

Don't do this

Mistakes other students consistently make.

Don't expect Oktoberfest to be like the Instagram version

It's a 6-million-person beer festival run by Munich locals, not by tourists. Tables in tents are reserved months in advance. Walk-in is possible Monday-Thursday in the afternoon. Costs add up fast: dirndl + tracht + €15 beer + €25 chicken.

Don't sign for any rental without checking the 'Kaltmiete' vs 'Warmmiete' distinction

Kaltmiete = base rent. Warmmiete = base rent + utilities + heating. Munich landlords often quote one and bill the other. Ask which is which on every listing.

Don't sit at a tisch marked 'Stammtisch' at a traditional restaurant

Reserved for regulars. Often unmarked except by a small sign or flag. Ask before sitting if the table is empty but feels 'too obvious.'

Don't expect English service at Bavarian-style restaurants

Touristic places yes. Real Wirtshäuser no. Learn 5 menu words: Schnitzel, Brez'n, Weißwurst, Apfelschorle, Spezi. You'll order with confidence.

First week

In your first 7 days.

Ordered by urgency. Top items have hard deadlines.

  1. 1

    Book KVR Anmeldung appointment (book online at muenchen.de — earliest slot)

  2. 2

    Open a German bank account (N26 or Sparkasse München)

  3. 3

    Get a German SIM (Aldi Talk or O2 prepaid €10-20)

  4. 4

    Buy a Deutschlandticket or set up the DB Navigator app

  5. 5

    Sign up for TK/AOK student health insurance after Anmeldung

  6. 6

    Get a bike (essential in Garching; useful in central Munich)

  7. 7

    Get the MVG Fahrinfo app for transit alerts

Local customs

The unwritten rules.

Quiet hours (Ruhezeiten) are law, not suggestion

22:00-07:00 weekdays, plus all day Sunday and public holidays. No vacuuming, drilling, loud music, washing machine cycles. Neighbours WILL knock.

Bavarian formality is real

More 'Sie' than other German cities. More 'Grüß Gott' than 'Hallo.' Less directness than Berlin. Take cues from locals.

Bavarian food is heavy and the portions are huge

A Schnitzel comes the size of your plate. Weißwurst is breakfast (eaten before noon, with sweet mustard, peeled). Order half-portions ('halbe Portion') when in doubt.

Safety

Honest, not paranoid.

Munich is one of Germany's safest cities

Violent crime rates are very low. The main risks are bike theft and pickpocketing at Marienplatz / Hauptbahnhof. Standard urban awareness applies.

Don't cycle on the wrong side of the bike path

Bike paths have direction. Cycling against traffic earns you Bavarian fury and occasionally a police fine.

112 + 110 + 116 117 — same as the rest of Germany

112 emergency. 110 police. 116 117 after-hours medical non-urgent.

Insider savings

Where the math wins.

The Mensa is even more essential in Munich

TUM and LMU Mensas serve €3-5 lunches. Compared to Munich's €15-20 restaurant lunches, this is the single biggest budget lever.

Aldi/Lidl/Penny over Edeka/Rewe

Same rule as Berlin. 30-40% cheaper for the same groceries. Walk the extra block.

Get a 'Studentenwerk' meal card

Pre-loaded card for the Mensa. Avoids cash. Often gives a 10-15% discount vs. paying cash.

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