The travel wave is still slowly rolling in. Motorists will be largely free to drive on German trunk roads next weekend. In the direction of the coasts, however, it could get narrower.
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the essentials in brief
- Above all, the numerous construction sites will bring motorists next weekend (20.
to May 22) on the highways to a halt. According to the ADAC, they are now in high season – there are more than 1000. When the weather is nice, excursion traffic can be expected, especially on Sundays.
In addition, the one-week spring break begins in Saxony-Anhalt and Hamburg. The Auto Club Europa (ACE) assumes that things will get tight, especially around Hamburg and on the routes towards the German coast.
ACE often considers delays and traffic jams to be possible in both directions, particularly on the following routes: A 1 Cologne – Dortmund – Bremen – Hamburg – Lübeck A 2 Hanover – Dortmund A 3 Oberhausen – Cologne – Frankfurt/Main – Würzburg – Nuremberg A 5 Frankfurt/Main – Karlsruhe A 6 Mannheim – Heilbronn – NurembergA 7Hamburg – Hanover and Würzburg – Ulm – Füssen/ReutteA 8Karlsruhe – Stuttgart – Munich – SalzburgA 9Nuremberg – MunichA 10Berliner RingA 45Olpe – HagenA 61Mönchengladbach – Koblenz – LudwigshafenA 81Heilbronn – Stuttgart – SingenA 93Rosenheim – KiefersfeldenA 95Munich – Garmisch-PartenkirchenA 96A 96 Bypass Munich
According to the ADAC, the classic foreign routes will be largely freely passable next weekend. But there are now many construction sites there, too. Anyone planning an Alpine road tour should know that many passes are currently still closed and will only be released later in May or even in June.
Drivers can find out about waiting times at the Walserberg, Kiefersfelden and Suben border crossings online in advance from the Austrian infrastructure company ASFINAG.
In Switzerland, according to ACE, traffic jams can occur in front of the Gotthard tunnel (A 2) on Saturday in the late morning hours, but the waiting time is manageable.
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More on the subject:
Gotthard weather
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