According to ADAC, the last weekend of the year will be mostly quiet on German autobahns. Due to the holiday season, there will be limited traffic during rush hour on Friday. Saturday, December 31 (New Year’s Eve), many people are traveling to celebrate New Year’s Eve or for a ski holiday. However, long traffic jams are unlikely. Long-distance routes close to the Alps are especially affected. It looks different on Sunday 1 January. Traffic jams are to be expected, especially in the afternoon. In Berlin, Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Rhineland-Palatinate, Saxony and Thuringia the holidays are coming to an end and for many winter sports enthusiasts the Christmas holidays are coming to an end.
These are the most important traffic jams (in both directions):
– A 1 Cologne – Dortmund – Bremen – Hamburg
– A 2 Dortmund – Hanover – Braunschweig – Berlin
– A 3 Cologne – Frankfurt – Nuremberg – Passau
– A 4 Kirchheimer Dreieck – Erfurt – Dresden
– At 5 Hattenbacher Dreieck – Karlsruhe
– At 6 Heilbronn – Nuremberg
– A 7 Hamburg – Hannover and Würzburg – Füssen/Reutte
– A 8 Karlsruhe – Stuttgart – Munich – Salzburg
– A 9 Munich – Nuremberg
– A 10 Berliner ring
– At 24 Hamburg – Berlin
– A 61 Mönchengladbach – Koblenz – Ludwigshafen
– A 81 Stuttgart – Singing
– A 93 Inntal Triangle – Kufstein
– A 95 / B 2 Munich – Garmisch-Partenkirchen
– At 99 Munich ring road
On long-distance roads to winter sports areas, including the Tauern, Brenner and Gotthard motorways, a little more driving time should be planned for. There are waiting times at the borders. Controls focus on the main border crossings on the highways.
Press contact:
ADAC communication
T +49 89 76 76 54 95
aktuell@adac.de
Original content from: ADAC, broadcast by news aktuell
Original message: https://www.presseportal.de/pm/7849/5403009