🇩🇪 Cross-border drive · Germany → France 🇫🇷
Driving from Berlin to Toulouse
Drive from the German capital to the Pink City of France. Expert advice on navigating the Autobahn, border transitions, and toll systems across Europe.
- Drive time
- 17h 17m
- Distance
- 1,714 km
- Same day?
- Split it
- 12 h+, plan a stop
- Fuel cost
- ≈ €263
- petrol · diesel ≈ €218
- Tolls
- ≈ €125
- mixed
- EV charging
- Unknown
- not yet surveyed
On this page
Route map
Route options
Other paths OSRM found between the two cities — handy when traffic, tolls, or scenery matter more than raw speed.
Avoids motorways
+9h 18m- Distance:
- 1,699 km (−14 km)
- Duration:
- 26h 36m
Via: N 57 · B 9 · B 84 · D 921
How else can you make this trip?
Driving is the focus of this guide; here's how cycling, coach, and (soon) train and plane stack up for the same pair.
17h 17m
1.714 km · €263 fuel
See details ↓
Not realistic
1.714 km is far beyond a typical multi-day cycle tour. Try a shorter pair like a day or weekend stage.
No direct service
Our coach data (FlixBus + BlaBlaCar) doesn't list a direct service for this pair. National operators (e.g., National Express in the UK, Eurolines feeders) may still cover it — check their site directly.
What the drive is like
Drafted from the route's computed data on April 25, 2026 and reviewed against the route summary card. Read our methodology.
You leave Berlin via the A115 Avus, the historic track that transitions from urban pulse to the open expanse of the A10 and A9, marking the start of your long-haul transit south. As you push through the heart of Germany, expect the pace to remain high on the unrestricted sections of the Autobahn, though dense lorry traffic near major industrial nodes like Nuremberg often dictates the rhythm. Keep a sharp eye on the speedometer when the electronic signs shift from variable limits to the suggested 130 km/h; German lane discipline is rigid, and the left lane is strictly for rapid overtaking.
Crossing the border into France brings an immediate change in the driving culture as you shift from the toll-free German network to the French autoroute system. You will find yourself pulling tickets at toll barriers, with costs calculated by distance traveled; keep a credit card or change handy to avoid hold-ups at the gates. The atmosphere softens as the dense forests and hills give way to the sprawling landscape leading toward the Occitanie region. Remember that French motorway limits drop from 130 km/h to 110 km/h the moment rain begins to fall, a rule strictly enforced by cameras regardless of your vehicle's performance.
Approaching Toulouse, the landscape flattens into the distinctive Garonne river basin, signaling the end of your cross-country haul. While Germany requires no stickers for the highway, ensure your vehicle is ready for potential low-emission zones in French urban areas, which now require a Crit'Air vignette. Fuel up while still in Germany or on the cheaper rural stretches of France, as the motorway service stations close to major cities command a premium. By the time you reach the Pink City, the transit from the high-energy German capital to the laid-back, sun-drenched pace of southern France will feel complete.
Route highlights
- The A115 Avus in Berlin, a historic high-speed thoroughfare
- Transitioning from the toll-free German Autobahn to the ticketed French autoroute system
- The scenic approach to Toulouse through the Garonne river basin
- Navigating the dense industrial corridors near Nuremberg and Frankfurt
Trip plan
How to think about the drive: one day, split, or overnight.
Overnight recommended
Too long for a single-driver day. Plan on 1 overnight stop(s) to do this trip right.
A natural overnight stop near the halfway point: Baume-les-Dames (fr).
- Distance:
- 1,714 km
- Duration:
- 17h 17m (free-flow, no traffic)
Where to stop
Places along the route that make natural breaks for coffee, lunch, or a night.
-
Eisenberg 🇩🇪 de
≈214 km≈ 10.5 km detour from the main route
-
Niederaula 🇩🇪 de
≈428 km≈ 14.3 km detour from the main route
-
Sankt Leon-Rot 🇩🇪 de
≈643 km≈ 2.7 km detour from the main route
-
Pfastatt 🇫🇷 fr
≈857 km≈ 1.3 km detour from the main route
-
Nuits-Saint-Georges 🇫🇷 fr
≈1,071 km≈ 10 km detour from the main route
-
Commentry 🇫🇷 fr
≈1,285 km≈ 25.9 km detour from the main route
-
Malemort-sur-Corrèze 🇫🇷 fr
≈1,499 km≈ 10.8 km detour from the main route
Key moves
Things to know before you set off — borders, sides of the road, tolls.
Multi-country chain · DE → FR → CH
You'll cross 3 countries on this drive — each with its own toll system, fuel pricing, and motorway rules. Skim the must-know section below before you set off, and have your registration plus insurance card in the door pocket for any roadside check.
Tolls on motorways in FR
Budget for motorway tolls — France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal charge per-km, Croatia and Greece by section. Contactless cards work almost everywhere; have one loaded.
Vignette required in CH
Austria, Switzerland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, Bulgaria, and Romania require a sticker or e-vignette for motorway use. Buy at the border — missing one is a heavy on-the-spot fine.
Long rural stretch on N 70
Plan for about 44 km of two-lane country roads. Slower than motorway, but often the pretty part — fewer overtakes after dark.
Long rural stretch on Route Centre-Europe Atlantique
Plan for about 26 km of two-lane country roads. Slower than motorway, but often the pretty part — fewer overtakes after dark.
Must-know before you go
The things a driver from another country wouldn't think to ask about — fines, stickers, payment cards, opening hours.
City access & emission zones
Berlin Umweltzone covers everything inside the S-Bahn ring
Must knowBerlin
Green sticker required, no exceptions. The zone runs 24/7. Old diesels (Euro 4 and below) are banned outright. Foreign plates can order the sticker online at umwelt-plakette.de — about €13 plus shipping. Allow 7–10 days. Without it you're looking at a €100 fine even for parked cars.
Berlin, Munich, Stuttgart need a green Umweltplakette
Must knowGermany's low-emission zones (Umweltzone) are simpler than the French system but stricter on entry. You need a colour-coded sticker physically on your windscreen before entering. The vast majority of zones today require a green sticker (Euro 4+ petrol, Euro 6+ diesel). Order via TÜV / DEKRA / certified workshops — about €6–13, ships in days. Driving without one costs €100 even if your car would qualify.
Order your Crit'Air sticker before the trip
Must knowParis, Lyon, Strasbourg, Marseille, Toulouse and a growing list of cities require a Crit'Air air-quality sticker visible on your windscreen — even for a single drive-through. It's €4.51 from the official site and ships by post (allow 2–6 weeks abroad). Without it, expect on-the-spot fines from €68. Your registration document tells the issuer your emission class.
Borders & documents
You're leaving the EU customs zone
Must knowSwitzerland is in Schengen but NOT in the EU customs union. Random customs stops happen at every border. Personal allowance: €300 in goods (CHF cash equivalent), 5L wine, 1L spirits. Above that you declare and pay duty. If you've loaded the boot with cured meat or cheese in Italy, declare it — confiscation is routine.
Tolls, vignettes & road payment
Mont Blanc, Grand St Bernard, San Bernardino tunnels charge extra
Must knowThe vignette covers most motorways but NOT the major Alpine road tunnels. Mont Blanc tunnel (FR-IT) is roughly €54 one-way for a passenger car, Grand St Bernard about €33, San Bernardino is included in the vignette but Gotthard road tunnel is a vignette-only route in summer (the queue can be 2 hours; the rail-shuttle alternative through the Lötschberg is faster).
Vignette is annual only — CHF 40
Must knowSwitzerland sells one vignette: an annual sticker (or e-vignette) for CHF 40 / about €42. There's no 10-day option. Buy at any border post or online before you leave. The sticker must be physically affixed to the windscreen — keeping it loose in the glovebox earns the same CHF 200 fine as not having one.
You'll hit three different toll systems on this trip
Must knowThis route crosses countries with mismatched toll mechanics — France's ticket-and-pay, vignette stickers, electronic-only stretches. There's no single transponder that works everywhere, but a Telepass EU device covers FR/IT/ES/PT and a Bip&Go covers the same plus a few more. For a one-off trip, contactless cards plus a Swiss vignette and Austrian e-vignette is the simplest mix.
Contactless works at every autoroute booth
UsefulFrench autoroutes use a ticket system: take a card on entry, pay on exit. Every barrier accepts contactless tap-to-pay — pull into the "CB / bank card" lane (orange "t" logo means Liber-T transponder only, avoid those). For frequent EU travellers a Bip&Go transponder pays itself off in two trips by skipping the queue.
What your car must carry
Triangle, first-aid kit, hi-vis vest — all three
Must knowGermany requires a warning triangle, a first-aid kit (compliant with DIN 13164, with a "use by" date — €10 at any pharmacy), and a reflective vest in every passenger car. Roadside checks do happen at borders. The first-aid kit is the one foreign drivers most commonly miss.
Hi-vis vest in the cabin, triangle in the boot
Must knowA reflective vest must be reachable without leaving the vehicle (in the door pocket or under your seat — boot is too late). One warning triangle is also mandatory. The 2012 breathalyzer rule was scrapped in 2020 but is still nice to keep. No spare-bulb requirement.
Driving rules & habits
Left lane is for overtaking only — return immediately
UsefulOn unrestricted Autobahn sections (where you'll see no speed-limit-end signs), faster cars expect to use the left lane unobstructed. Drift into it without checking the mirror and a 911 closing at 250 km/h becomes your problem. Indicate, overtake, return right — every time. Slowing in the left lane to "make space" is more dangerous than predictable speed.
Phone-mounted radar warnings are illegal
UsefulActive radar-detector apps (and the "police nearby" feature on Waze / Google Maps) are technically banned in Germany — fines hit €75. Most drivers leave them on without consequence, but if you're stopped for any reason, the officer can ask to see your phone. Switch the warning layer off when crossing into DE if you want to play it strict.
Priorité à droite still applies in towns
UsefulOn urban streets without signs, traffic from your right has priority — even from a side street that looks subordinate. Outside cities the rule is mostly retired, but in residential French villages it survives. Slow at every right-hand junction unless a yellow diamond on your road tells you you're on the priority road.
Plan your stops, not just your finish time
UsefulOSRM gives you free-flow drive time. Realistic add: 10% on motorway-heavy routes, 25% if you're crossing two cities. Eat at off-peak hours (11:30 lunch, 18:00 dinner) — service-area queues at noon kill 20 minutes. EU fatigue research is consistent: 15-minute break every 2 hours, full 45-minute break before 6 hours. The drive between hours 7 and 9 is where avoidable accidents cluster.
Rules, fees, and thresholds change. Always verify against the official source the day before you drive — this page is a checklist, not a legal reference.
Main roads
The highways this route spends the most kilometres on.
-
A 5 —347 km
-
A 36 —237 km
-
A 9 —186 km
-
A 4 —181 km
-
A 20 L'Occitane174 km
-
A 89 La Transeuropéenne160 km
-
A 79 La Bourbonnaise91 km
-
A 6 Autoroute du Soleil60 km
-
A 71 L'Arverne46 km
-
N 70 —44 km
-
A 62 Autoroute des Deux Mers38 km
-
A 67 —38 km
Route character
How much of the drive is motorway vs. secondary vs. rural.
Motorway drive — fast, predictable, uneventful.
- Motorway
- 93%
- Secondary
- 4%
- Other / rural
- 3%
Drive difficulty
At-a-glance feel: how demanding is this drive for one driver?
Overall
Demanding
Tough drive — multiple complicating factors compound fatigue. Strongly recommend splitting across days.
- Long drive: 17h 17m behind the wheel at free-flow speeds.
- Cross-border: de → fr. Keep documents accessible and check border rules.
Fuel & tolls
Rough cost expectation for a typical EU passenger car. Treat as an estimate — pump prices change weekly.
Petrol (RON 95)
≈ €263
128.5 L × €2.05 / L · 7.5 L/100 km
Diesel
≈ €218
102.8 L × €2.12 / L · 6 L/100 km
Electric (DC fast)
≈ €176
300 kWh × €0.59 / kWh · 17.5 kWh/100 km
Public DC fast charging — slower AC charging at home or hotels typically costs about half.
Motorway tolls & vignettes
≈ €125
- FR — €0.10/km on the motorway network (≈ 832 km in-country ≈ €83)
- CH — Vignette (motorway sticker / e-vignette) — €42.00 for 365 days
Prices last refreshed 2026-05-04.
Weather by month
Average daytime high / overnight low and typical monthly rainfall, over the past five years.
🇩🇪 Berlin
| Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
5°
0°
|
7°
0°
|
11°
2°
|
15°
6°
|
20°
10°
|
24°
14°
|
25°
15°
|
25°
15°
|
22°
13°
|
15°
8°
|
8°
3°
|
5°
2°
|
| 69mm | 52mm | 45mm | 36mm | 45mm | 65mm | 112mm | 49mm | 37mm | 65mm | 61mm | 61mm |
hot mild cold
🇫🇷 Toulouse
| Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
10°
3°
|
12°
4°
|
15°
6°
|
18°
8°
|
21°
11°
|
27°
17°
|
28°
18°
|
30°
18°
|
24°
14°
|
22°
12°
|
15°
7°
|
11°
5°
|
| 72mm | 46mm | 72mm | 74mm | 110mm | 90mm | 54mm | 64mm | 52mm | 67mm | 93mm | 69mm |
hot mild cold
Next 5 days at Toulouse
Live forecast — refreshes every few hours.
-
Tue 12
⛅
13° / 13°
—
-
Wed 13
🌧️
17° / 11°
11.1mm
-
Thu 14
🌧️
15° / 10°
46.6mm
-
Fri 15
🌧️
12° / 9°
32.8mm
-
Sat 16
🌧️
15° / 8°
1.7mm
Forecast: MET Norway
Directions
Turn-by-turn summary of the main manoeuvres, generated by OSRM.
Show all 54 manoeuvres
- —
- Straße des 17. Juni (B 2; B 5) 0.1 km
- Bismarckstraße (B 2; B 5) 0.2 km
- (A 100) 0.4 km
- AVUS 12 km
- (A 115) 16 km
- (A 10) 11 km
- (A 9) 186 km
- — 0.7 km
- (A 4) 129 km
- — 0.5 km
- — 0.1 km
- (A 4) 51 km
- (A 4) 0.6 km
- — 0.4 km
- (A 7) 3 km
- (A 5) 149 km
- (A 67) 38 km
- — 0.4 km
- (A 6) 28 km
- (A 5) 10 km
- (A 5) 6 km
- (A 5) 51 km
- — 0.3 km
- (A 5) 132 km
- (A 36) 237 km
- Autoroute de Lorraine-Bourgogne (A 31) 4 km
- Autoroute du Soleil (A 6) 31 km
- —
- (N 80) 0.1 km
- Route Centre-Europe Atlantique
- Route Centre-Europe Atlantique 26 km
- (N 70) 0.2 km
- (N 70) 44 km
- Route Centre-Europe Atlantique (N 79) 10 km
- La Bourbonnaise (A 79) 91 km
- Route Centre Europe Atlantique 0.7 km
- L'Arverne (A 71) 46 km
- La Transeuropéenne (A 89) 160 km
- (A 89) 1.0 km
- L'Occitane (A 20) 40 km
- (A 20) 0.2 km
- (A 20) 117 km
- L'Occitane (A 20) 10 km
- L'Occitane (A 20) 7 km
- — 0.7 km
- — 0.9 km
- Autoroute des Deux Mers (A 62) 33 km
- Périphérique Intérieur - Autoroute des Deux Mers (A 62) 5 km
- Route d'Agde (M 112)
- Route d'Agde (M 112)
- Avenue Yves Brunaud
- Rue Lapeyrouse 0.1 km
- Rue du Poids de l'Huile
Frequently asked
Do I need a vignette to drive from Berlin to Toulouse?
No, you do not need a vignette for either Germany or France. Germany's motorway network is toll-free, while France uses a distance-based toll system where you pay at gates along the autoroute.
Is there a speed limit on the German Autobahn?
Much of the route features unrestricted sections where 130 km/h is the recommended advisory speed. However, you must obey all posted limits, which are common near construction zones, major junctions, and urban areas.
What should I know about driving in France during rain?
French law mandates a reduction in motorway speed limits from 130 km/h down to 110 km/h whenever the road surface is wet, and you should adjust your driving accordingly to avoid fines.
How this page is built
Compiled by COD Solutions Oy from open European data — OSRM over OpenStreetMap for the route geometry, Open-Meteo for monthly climate normals, EU Weekly Oil Bulletin for cross-border fuel-price bands, and Google Gemini drafts the narrative and FAQ from the computed route data. See our methodology for refresh cadence and limitations.