Top picks for Mirow Shared car tours

Discover 16 Shared car tours in Mirow on Trip.com, updated January 13, 2026, with experiences lasting from 1 to 12 hours. Find the perfect adventure for your day!

From NZD 34.50 per person, with an average total of NZD 1,118.21. Choose the option that suits your plan.

With 1.242k verified reviews, Shared car tours Mirow boast an average rating of 4.9.

This week's most popular Shared car tours: "Berlin: Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp Tour in English", with 427 reviews and a 4.9 rating.

Now on Trip.com: "Berlin: Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp Tour in English", a 6-hour adventure in Mirow!

The next available day tour departs on January 14, 2026. Book now to secure your spot!

Mirow Shared car tours usually take about 6 hours — perfect for a relaxed, immersive experience!

100% of Mirow Shared car tours now offer English-speaking guides

January is the perfect time to visit Mirow! Choose from Shared car tours available day tours, including seasonal favorites like Berlin: Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp Tour in English.

Your trip, worry-free! All day tours are run by licensed suppliers with verified reviews, and many include free cancellation before departure.

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16 results for Mirow Shared car tours

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Reviews/Trip Moments

Reviews: Berlin: Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp Tour in English
Guest User2026-01-09
Fantastic! Outstanding knowledge shared and conveyed in an easy to understand manner. Irish Paul was a friendly, funny and likeable guide. He made outstanding choices in adverse weather to ensure the safety of Participants but to also deliver a quality your. He should be commended for his knowledge, organisation and care as a tour guide.
Reviews: Warnemünde Shore Excursion: Private Tour of Berlin's World War II and Cold War Sites
Guest User2023-06-24
This tour was just super!!! We requested that our tour guide have a knowledge of World War II and the Cold War. Glen our tour guide was perfect! He exceeded all our expectations, and his knowledge was excellent. For myself, I learned a lot from Glen and I am very grateful! Again, this was a super tour and it is worth every penny and more!!!
Reviews: Nazi Berlin and the Jewish Community Tour
Guest User2026-01-03
Silvio, very knowledgeable, explained to us very well the birth of Nazism, giving us much food for thought.
Reviews: Berlin Private Custom Tour in a Minivan, East and West
Guest User2025-08-02
Our family had a wonderful time with Stefan. He showed us all of the important sites while explaining the history of Berlin with visual references. He also made sure to show us a few of the additional sites our family wanted to see. We definitely left Berlin with a new appreciation thanks to Stefan. Highly recommend!
Reviews: Private Berlin: Iconic Sights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour
Guest User2025-10-17
Xavier is a great guide. He speaks several languages. He was very helpful and friendly. Highly recommended. He took us to several tourist spots and explained everything.
Reviews: Berlin Private Custom 5-Hour Tour by Car
Guest User2025-09-28
Our Berlin tour with Jan (Jon) was far more than sightseeing—it was a thoughtful walk through history, culture, and memory, guided by someone who knows how to make the city speak. Jan weaved the story of Berlin through its landmarks. At the Holocaust Memorials, he explained how design forces us to feel the disorientation of persecution, while the Queer Memorial revealed histories long suppressed. At the Brandenburg Gate, he unpacked how its meaning shifted—from peace, to victory, to unity—making clear how architecture carries politics. Potsdamer Platz became a lesson in urban reinvention, contrasting Renzo Piano’s terracotta façades with Helmut Jahn’s glass Sony Center, while Jan reminded us of the fragility of modern materials with tales of falling glass panes. At the Reichstag, he pointed out Norman Foster’s glass dome as a symbol of transparency, born of controversy but now iconic. The tour never shied from contradictions: Frederick the Great’s tolerance paired with antisemitism, the Palace of the Republic erased for a reconstructed royal castle, and the scars of WWII intentionally preserved at the Neues Museum. Even lighter stops—Ampelmann souvenirs, chocolate shops at Gendarmenmarkt, graffiti under bridges, and Berlin’s techno temples in industrial ruins—were tied into the larger theme: Berlin remembers not just through plaques, but through everyday spaces. Jan’s strength is context. He could pivot from explaining the White Crosses for Berlin Wall victims to anecdotes about “candy bombers” dropping sweets during the Airlift, then to present debates about housing affordability and community gardens in Kreuzberg. He balanced facts with reflection, often asking us to consider not only what happened, but how Berlin chooses to remember it. This was less a tour and more a moving seminar in the open air. Thanks to Jan’s depth, humor, and candor, Berlin unfolded not as a static museum but as a city still arguing with itself—through scars, reconstructions, and celebrations. Verdict: ★★★★★ — A deeply enriching experience, best for anyone who wants to understand Berlin’s soul, not just its sights.