- New 2025 events and conference statistics: number of attendees rises by 6 per cent to 13.7 million, with a slight increase in the number of events
- Berlin remains Germany’s leading conference destination and its most international events venue
- New capacity at the Estrel and the exhibition centre, as well as the extension of the conference fund, strengthen Berlin’s position as an events destination
Berlin, 7 July 2026 Berlin is consolidating its position as Germany’s leading conference and events hub: in 2025, 13.7 million people attended around 87,000 events in the capital. This is shown by statistics published today by visitBerlin. The number of participants rose by six per cent compared with the previous year, whilst the number of events increased by 0.7 per cent.
Franziska Giffey, Senator for Economics, Energy and Public Enterprises: “Berlin is Germany’s leading meeting and conference destination – last year alone, around 10 million national and international guests from the worlds of business, science and the creative industries came together for professional purposes. This success is a key driver for our city: it generates added value in the hotel and catering sectors, in transport services, retail and the events industry, and secures many jobs in Berlin. Around one in ten jobs depends on the tourism and conference sector. To ensure that Berlin remains the number one conference destination in the future, we are making targeted investments in modern infrastructure and sustainable formats: through the Conference Fund for Sustainable Conferences, new exhibition facilities such as dock9, the revitalisation of the ICC – and with strong private partners. In this way, we are preparing Berlin for the next generation of conferences and international events.”
Berlin is particularly strong when it comes to congresses, conferences, seminars and similar professional events: in 2025, 64,690 such events (+6 per cent compared with 2024) took place, attracting 10 million participants (+10 per cent compared with 2024). These events account for 74.5 per cent of Berlin’s events market, exceeding the national average of 68 per cent. This shows that Berlin is not only a city of culture, concerts and festivals, but also a key venue for congresses, conferences and professional exchanges. Around 25 per cent of Berlin’s events market is made up of cultural and sporting events, concerts, festivities, banquets and anniversaries.
Berlin is Germany’s most international meeting destination
Dr Jürgen Amann, Managing Director of visitBerlin: “In 2025, one in five event attendees came to Berlin from abroad; for business events, the figure was as high as one in four. This international character is our strength: Berlin brings people from all over the world together and stands for personal encounters across borders. This makes our city one of Europe’s leading meeting destinations and a global hub for business, science and the creative industries.”
In 2025, international events accounted for 23 per cent of all events in Berlin; the national average was 9.5 per cent. The city’s international appeal is also evident in its participants: 2.6 million (20 per cent) travelled from abroad. For business events, the proportion of international participants was as high as 23 per cent. The most important international source markets for Berlin were North America (14 per cent), the United Kingdom (13.5 per cent) and France (9 per cent).
Key sectors: creative industries, science and medicine
The strongest sectors in Berlin’s conference and events market were ICT, media and the creative industries (21 per cent), science and research (14 per cent), and health and medicine (13 per cent). This sectoral structure underlines Berlin’s importance as a hub for innovation, research and the creative industries.
Berlin is also the German market leader for large-scale events. The proportion of events with more than 1,000 attendees stood at 3.6 per cent, which is above the national average of 2 per cent. At the same time, smaller and medium-sized events contribute to the stability of the Berlin market: just under two-thirds of congresses, conferences and seminars took place with up to 100 participants and are predominantly held in conference hotels and event venues.