What to pack for Hamburg in February
Heading to Hamburg in February? Here's a packing list built directly from local climate averages — not generic blog advice.
February is one of the coldest months of the year in Hamburg (ranked 10 of 12) and among the driest (ranked 10 of 12). Day temperatures are 2°C warmer than January and still warming into March — so this month's packing list won't be identical to January's or March's.
Essentials
- ★ Passport + a photocopy stored separately Travel documents
- ★ Phone + charging cables (USB-C, Lightning as needed) Daily essentials
- • Refillable water bottle (1L) Reduces single-use plastic + saves money
- • Compact daypack (15–20L) For day trips, hands-free walking
- • Travel-size first-aid kit (band-aids, ibuprofen, antihistamines) Pharmacy access varies
Tops
- ★ Long-sleeve shirts (4–5) — flannel, henley, or merino Avg high 6.6°C — chilly
- ★ Lightweight sweater or fleece (2) Layering for cool days
- • Thin merino base layer (1) Wicking + warmth without bulk
Bottoms
- ★ Insulated/lined trousers (2) — Uniqlo HEATTECH lined or similar Cold weather
- • Heavy jeans or wool pants (1) Backup for travel days
Outerwear & layers
- ★ Warm winter coat (wool overcoat or insulated parka) Overnight lows 0.7°C
- ★ Wool scarf + warm beanie Heat retention
- ★ Insulated gloves (touchscreen-compatible) Cold mornings
Rain & weather protection
- ★ Full waterproof shell jacket (Gore-Tex or similar — NOT a 'water resistant' soft shell) 17 rain days, 60 mm
- ★ Compact umbrella (windproof, vented) Heavy rain — basic umbrellas invert in wind
- ★ Quick-dry pants (1 pair) Cotton/jeans become miserable when soaked
- • Waterproof phone pouch + dry-bags for electronics Heavy rain WILL find its way in
Footwear
- ★ Insulated waterproof boots (Blundstone, Sorel, or hiking-grade) Cold + possibly wet conditions
- ★ Wool socks (5+ pairs) — Smartwool, Darn Tough Warmth and dryness; cotton socks freeze fingers in damp cold
Accessories
- • Lip balm with SPF + thick hand cream Cold dry air cracks skin fast
Power, voltage & adapters
- ★ 230V at 50Hz Mains electricity standard for Germany
- ★ Plug types: F, C (Type F — round 2-pin + side clips (Schuko — Germany, most of EU)) Most common: F. Older buildings may also use C.
- ★ From the US/Canada: bring an A→F travel adapter US Type A/B plugs don't fit Germany's outlets
- ★ Check device voltage labels: 'INPUT: 100–240V' is dual-voltage (most modern phones, laptops, chargers — safe). Single-voltage 110V devices (older hairdryers, curling irons) need a step-down converter, not just an adapter. Germany runs 230V — too high for US-only 110V devices
- • From the UK/Ireland: bring a G→F travel adapter UK Type G plugs don't fit Germany's outlets
- · Easiest option: a universal travel adapter (e.g. Anker, Epicka) that handles A/B/C/E/F/G/I in one — covers ~95% of countries. If you travel to multiple regions
⚖️ Can you carry-on?
Maybe — possible with a packable down jacket, careful shoe choices (one warm + one walking), and wearing your bulkiest layer on the plane. Expect to use most of the carry-on volume.
26 suggested items total — 5 essentials, 8 clothing items, 2 pairs of shoes.
What you can leave at home
Based on Hamburg's February climate, here's what won't earn its bag space:
- shorts & sandals (too cool to wear comfortably)
- beach towel (unless you're brave)
- delicate suede or leather shoes (they'll get ruined)
- snow boots and ice grips
How this list was built
Every recommendation above maps to specific climate data for Hamburg in February: average high (6.6°C), average low (0.7°C), expected rain days (17), and any peak hazard seasons. Heavier items appear at colder temperatures; rain gear scales with how often it rains; sun protection appears when it's warm and dry.
The ★ items are essential — pack these first. The • items are recommended for comfort. The · items are nice-to-have if you have space.
Other months in Hamburg
Daily forecasts, climate averages, and the best activities for the season.