Monitor Berlin Traffic in Real Time
Access 1,200+ live traffic cameras across Berlin and the surrounding Brandenburg motorways. According to INRIX 2025 data, Berlin drivers lost 60 hours annually to congestion, with a 10 km journey now taking an average of 28 minutes and 59 seconds. Our interactive map delivers real-time feeds from the Stadtring A100, Berliner Ring A10, and every major arterial through Mitte, Charlottenburg, and Kreuzberg. Track conditions on the AVUS, BER airport corridors, and construction zones across Germany's capital city.
View Berlin Traffic Cameras →Berlin's road network serves 3.7 million residents across 891 square kilometers, making it Germany's largest city by area and population. Street cameras along Ku'damm, Unter den Linden, and Potsdamer Platz provide live views of surface-level congestion in the urban core. TrafficVision.Live aggregates camera feeds from Autobahn GmbH, the Berlin Senate Department for Mobility, and regional traffic management systems into a single interactive map.
Our platform provides access to 135,000+ cameras from 600+ sources across 130+ countries, with extensive coverage of Berlin's Autobahn network and inner-city arterials.
Berlin Camera Coverage by Area
City Autobahn A100/A10 (400+)
The Stadtring A100 and its feeder sections carry the heaviest traffic in Berlin. Camera coverage spans every interchange from the Dreieck Funkturm through the Tunnel Britz to the Dreieck Neukölln, plus the western A10 Berliner Ring segments connecting to Potsdam and Brandenburg.
Mitte & Central Berlin (250+)
Dense camera coverage across the government district, Potsdamer Platz, Alexanderplatz, and the Hauptbahnhof area. Monitors Unter den Linden, Friedrichstrasse, Leipziger Strasse, and critical east-west transit corridors through the Tiergarten.
West Berlin & Charlottenburg (200+)
Cameras covering Kurfürstendamm, Ernst-Reuter-Platz, the Kaiserdamm corridor, and the A115 AVUS approach from the southwest. Includes Olympiastadion event monitoring and Messe Berlin trade fair traffic zones.
East Berlin & Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg (150+)
Coverage of Karl-Marx-Allee, Warschauer Strasse, Oberbaumbrücke, and the A100 eastern extension. Includes Ostkreuz junction feeds and surface street cameras along Frankfurter Allee and Landsberger Allee.
Outer Ring A10 & Brandenburg (200+)
The Berliner Ring A10 encircles the capital at 30-40 km distance. Cameras monitor the Dreieck Barnim, Dreieck Werder, Schönefelder Kreuz, and all major interchanges connecting radial Autobahns to the ring.
Stadtring A100: Berlin's Central Motorway
The A100 is Berlin's most critical and most congested road. This urban motorway forms a partial ring through the western and southern districts, carrying over 200,000 vehicles daily on its busiest segments near the Kurfürstendamm and Messedamm exits. The Rudolf-Wissell Bridge, a primary component of the A100, currently handles approximately 180,000 vehicles daily—far exceeding its original design capacity of 20,000.
Stadtring A100
Length: 24.3 km (partial ring, Dreieck Charlottenburg to Neukölln)
Daily Traffic: 180,000-220,000 vehicles depending on section
Critical Junctions: Dreieck Funkturm, Kreuz Schöneberg, Dreieck Neukölln, Tunnel Britz
Peak Congestion: 7-9:30 AM inbound, 4-7 PM outbound, Friday afternoon surge
Camera Density: Every 500 meters through tunnel sections, 1 km spacing on open stretches
The Dreieck Funkturm interchange, where the A100 meets the A115 (AVUS) and feeds into the A111 toward Tegel, is Berlin's single worst bottleneck. Morning queues regularly extend 5 km southward through Schöneberg. The Tunnel Britz section adds complexity with reduced speed limits and frequent closures for maintenance.
A100 Tunnel Sections
The A100 includes several tunnel segments with dedicated camera systems. Tunnel cameras update faster than open-road cameras and provide critical visibility during incidents. Always check tunnel feeds before entering — closures can add 30+ minutes via surface detours.
Radial Autobahn Corridors
Berlin's Autobahn network radiates from the city center like spokes, each serving distinct traffic flows and destinations.
A115 AVUS (Automobil-Verkehrs- und Übungsstrasse)
Germany's oldest Autobahn section connects the A100 at Dreieck Funkturm to the A10 Berliner Ring near Potsdam. Originally built as a racing circuit, the AVUS now serves as the primary southwest corridor with camera coverage at every on/off ramp. Heavy commuter traffic from Potsdam and weekend leisure traffic to the Grunewald forest.
A111 Northern Corridor
Runs from the A100 at Jakob-Kaiser-Platz northwest toward Oranienburg. Cameras monitor the former Tegel Airport zone, Reinickendorf interchanges, and the junction with the A10 at Dreieck Pankow. Despite Tegel's closure, the corridor remains busy with logistics traffic serving northwest Berlin industrial zones.
A113 BER Airport Route
The primary Autobahn link between the city center and Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER). Camera coverage extends from the A100 at Dreieck Neukölln through Adlershof and Schönefeld to the terminal access roads. Flight-schedule-driven traffic creates predictable peaks tied to departure waves.
Track BER Airport Access
Monitor real-time conditions on the A113 corridor and terminal approach cameras. Check for construction delays, accident backups, and weather impacts before heading to the airport. Use the route builder to plan your drive with live camera checkpoints.
View Airport Cameras →A114 and Northeastern Access
The short A114 connects the Prenzlauer Berg district to the A10 ring at Dreieck Pankow, serving as the main northeastern approach. Camera coverage includes the Pasewalker Strasse transition and the merge with suburban traffic from Bernau and Eberswalde.
Berliner Ring A10
The A10 Berliner Ring is one of Europe's longest city ring motorways at 196 km. It encircles Berlin at a distance of 20-40 km, routing long-distance through-traffic around the capital and connecting all radial Autobahns.
Key Interchanges:
- Dreieck Werder (southwest): A10/A2 junction, Hannover/Magdeburg traffic
- Schönefelder Kreuz (southeast): A10/A13 junction, Dresden/Leipzig traffic
- Dreieck Barnim (northeast): A10/A11 junction, Stettin/Poland traffic
- Dreieck Havelland (northwest): A10/A24 junction, Hamburg/Rostock traffic
The Berliner Ring A10 carries massive freight volumes between Poland and western Germany. Heavy truck traffic concentrates on the eastern and southern segments, particularly between Schönefelder Kreuz and Dreieck Spreeau. Check cameras during weekday mornings when commercial vehicles peak.
Inner-City Arterials and Street Cameras
Berlin's surface street network handles significant traffic volumes across wide, multi-lane boulevards inherited from successive eras of urban planning.
Kurfürstendamm (Ku'damm): West Berlin's premier boulevard. Cameras monitor the stretch from Breitscheidplatz and the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church to Halensee. Event closures for demonstrations and parades are frequent.
Unter den Linden: Central Berlin's iconic east-west axis from Brandenburg Gate to Alexanderplatz. Cameras capture government motorcade disruptions, tourist congestion, and construction around the Humboldt Forum.
Potsdamer Platz: One of Berlin's busiest intersections. Live feeds cover the Leipziger Platz roundabout, Stresemannstrasse approaches, and the tunnel portals connecting to the Tiergarten Tunnel (B96).
Karl-Marx-Allee / Frankfurter Allee: Major east-west arterial through Friedrichshain and Lichtenberg. Wide Soviet-era boulevard with tram lines and heavy commuter traffic toward Marzahn and Hellersdorf.
Bundesstrasse B1/B5: Runs east-west from Spandau through Charlottenburg, Mitte, and Friedrichshain to the eastern suburbs. Cameras at major signalized intersections provide surface-level congestion visibility across the full city width.
Berlin Traffic Patterns
Rush Hour
Berlin's rush hours follow the standard German pattern but with distinct characteristics tied to the city's polycentric layout. Unlike Munich or Frankfurt, Berlin has multiple employment centers spread across Mitte, Adlershof, Charlottenburg, and Potsdam, distributing congestion more evenly.
- Morning peak (7:00-9:30): A100 westbound through Schöneberg, A115 inbound from Potsdam, A111 southbound from Reinickendorf
- Evening peak (16:00-19:00): A100 southbound at Dreieck Funkturm, A113 outbound toward BER, B96 southbound through Tempelhof
- Friday surge (14:00-19:00): Extended evening peak with leisure traffic heading southwest on A115 and south on A13 toward the Spreewald
Construction Delays
Berlin is synonymous with perpetual construction. Major road projects run continuously across the Autobahn and inner-city networks. The A100 eastern extension, various A10 widening projects, and surface infrastructure upgrades for tram and cycling lanes create shifting bottleneck patterns.
Permanent Construction Zones
Berlin maintains more active road construction zones per kilometer than any other German city. Lane closures on the A100, bridge repairs on the Berliner Ring, and surface works on inner-city arterials shift weekly. Always check camera feeds before committing to a route — yesterday's clear path may have overnight lane closures.
Event Traffic
Major events generate severe localized congestion:
- Olympiastadion: Hertha BSC matches and concerts (74,000 capacity). A115 AVUS and Heerstrasse back up 60-90 minutes before kickoff.
- Messe Berlin: Trade fairs including IFA, ITB, and Grüne Woche. Messedamm, Kaiserdamm, and A100 exits near Funkturm see sustained congestion during multi-day events.
- Brandenburg Gate area: New Year's Eve, marathons, political demonstrations. Full closures of Strasse des 17. Juni, Unter den Linden, and surrounding streets.
- BER Airport surges: Holiday departure waves create predictable A113 congestion. Monitor airport cameras 2-3 hours before peak departure blocks.
Berlin Road Safety
In 2024, Berlin recorded 55 traffic fatalities, a significant increase from 33 in the previous year. Vulnerable road users remain the most impacted, with 24 pedestrians and 11 cyclists among those killed in 2024. Real-time camera monitoring, especially at high-volume interchanges and within the central Environmental Zone (Umweltzone), is a critical tool for identifying incidents early and avoiding high-risk corridors during periods of peak volume or winter black ice.
Weather Conditions
Winter (November-March)
Berlin's continental climate brings cold, gray winters with temperatures frequently below freezing. Black ice forms on bridges and overpasses, particularly on the elevated A100 sections and the Berliner Ring A10 where open farmland creates wind exposure.
- Black ice: A100 elevated ramps, A10 open segments, bridge decks on B1/B5
- Fog: Morning fog in the Havel river valley affects the A115 AVUS and western A10 segments near Potsdam
- Snow: Occasional heavy snowfall (2-4 times per winter) can paralyze the city for hours. Berlin's flat terrain means snow drifts across the A10 Berliner Ring on exposed sections.
Winter Camera Strategy
Berlin's bridge cameras are the best early indicators of icy conditions. If bridge surfaces appear wet or slushy while air temperatures are near freezing, expect black ice formation within 30-60 minutes. Compare elevated A100 cameras with at-grade surface cameras to assess ice risk.
Summer
Summer thunderstorms can produce flash flooding on low-lying road segments, particularly underpasses along the A100 and the Tunnel Britz area. Cameras provide immediate visibility into standing water conditions.
Using TrafficVision for Berlin
TrafficVision.Live provides several features optimized for navigating Berlin's complex road network:
Search and filter cameras by Autobahn number, district name, or street to isolate the feeds you need. The search supports German street names and Autobahn designations.
Favorites let you save your daily commute cameras for instant access. Pin the A100 Dreieck Funkturm, your neighborhood intersection, and the BER airport approach for one-click morning checks.
The route builder maps your planned drive and highlights every camera along the way. Build routes from Potsdam to BER via the A10 and see live conditions at every interchange before departure.
For broader coverage across Germany, see our Germany traffic cameras guide covering all 16 federal states and the complete Autobahn network.
How many live traffic cameras are available in Berlin?
TrafficVision.Live provides access to over 1,200 live traffic cameras in Berlin, covering the Stadtring A100, Berliner Ring A10, all radial Autobahns (A111, A113, A114, A115), and hundreds of inner-city street and intersection cameras.
Where can I view A100 Stadtring cameras?
All A100 cameras are available on our interactive map. Zoom into Berlin and click individual camera markers along the A100 route from Dreieck Charlottenburg through Tunnel Britz to Dreieck Neukölln. You can also search "A100" in the search bar to filter all Stadtring cameras.
Can I check live traffic conditions on the route to BER airport?
Yes. The A113 corridor from Dreieck Neukölln to BER airport terminal access has full camera coverage. Use the route builder to plan your airport drive and monitor every interchange along the way. Camera feeds show real-time congestion, construction zones, and weather conditions.
What causes the worst traffic in Berlin?
The A100 Dreieck Funkturm interchange is Berlin's primary bottleneck, with 200,000+ daily vehicles merging between the A100, A115, and A111. Construction zones across the city create additional unpredictable delays. Major events at Olympiastadion and Messe Berlin generate severe localized congestion. Use live cameras to identify which bottlenecks are active before choosing your route.
Are Berlin street cameras available, or only Autobahn feeds?
TrafficVision covers both. In addition to comprehensive Autobahn camera feeds, we aggregate street cameras from intersections along Ku'damm, Unter den Linden, Potsdamer Platz, Karl-Marx-Allee, and other major Berlin arterials. Use the map or grid view to browse all available feeds.
Connecting to the Broader Network
Berlin sits at the center of northeastern Germany's motorway network, with Autobahn corridors radiating to every major German and European destination.
- A2 West: Via Dreieck Werder to Hannover, Dortmund, and the Ruhr
- A9 South: Via Schönefelder Kreuz to Leipzig, Nuremberg, and Munich
- A13 Southeast: Via Schönefelder Kreuz to Dresden and the Czech border
- A11 Northeast: Via Dreieck Barnim to Stettin and Poland
- A24 Northwest: Via Dreieck Havelland to Hamburg and Rostock
Camera coverage extends well beyond city limits along these corridors. For nationwide Autobahn monitoring and regional guides, visit our Germany traffic cameras guide.
Start Monitoring Berlin Traffic
Access 1,200+ live traffic cameras and street feeds across Berlin. Track conditions on the A100 Stadtring, monitor BER airport routes, and check construction zones instantly.
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