Find your UK to Germany route
Start with your departure city, compare real routes and move into planning with the right corridor in place.
Start a route check
Set your route and move straight into the planner.
What changes between routes
Distance affects timing
Longer corridors widen delivery windows and can change how shared and direct transport behave.
City access affects cost
Parking, stairs, narrow streets and unloading conditions can change labour time and final pricing.
Route pressure affects availability
Popular city pairs and fixed dates can reduce flexibility, especially in grouped transport setups.
Find routes from your UK city
Search by departure city only. Start with London, Manchester, Birmingham or any UK origin and compare your route options.
Routes
Type London, Manchester or another departure city to load matching UK → Germany routes here.
Popular UK → Germany routes
Choose a real UK → Germany route to move straight into planning for that corridor.
Browse routes by departure city
Use these city groups to jump straight to the corridor cluster that matches your move.
Browse every route in the corridor system
Open one departure city at a time to browse the full corridor list without turning the page into a wall of links.
- Manchester to Berlin
- Manchester to Hamburg
- Manchester to Munich
- Manchester to Frankfurt
- Manchester to Cologne
- Manchester to Stuttgart
- Manchester to Dusseldorf
- Manchester to Leipzig
- Manchester to Dresden
- Manchester to Nuremberg
- Manchester to Hannover
- Manchester to Bremen
- Manchester to Essen
- Manchester to Bonn
- Manchester to Mannheim
- Birmingham to Berlin
- Birmingham to Hamburg
- Birmingham to Munich
- Birmingham to Frankfurt
- Birmingham to Cologne
- Birmingham to Stuttgart
- Birmingham to Dusseldorf
- Birmingham to Leipzig
- Birmingham to Dresden
- Birmingham to Nuremberg
- Birmingham to Hannover
- Birmingham to Bremen
- Birmingham to Essen
- Birmingham to Bonn
- Birmingham to Mannheim
How to choose the right corridor
Major cities offer more options
Routes from larger UK cities usually have more transport frequency and more flexibility when dates are fixed.
Longer routes widen delivery windows
Distance and inland German delivery structure can increase timing variability, especially in grouped transport.
Start with the route before the planner
Choosing the route first gives your move plan better timing, transport and access logic from the start.
Route questions users ask most
What is the fastest UK to Germany route?
Direct transport is usually fastest. Final timing still depends on the origin city, destination and delivery setup.
Does London cost more than Manchester?
Sometimes. Route pressure, access conditions and exact destination often matter more than the departure city alone.
How much does route choice affect timing?
Route choice affects both grouping and delivery sequence, which can change timing even when move size stays the same.
Should I choose a route before using the planner?
Yes. Starting with the route makes your move plan more accurate from the beginning.