Oktoberfest: Origins, Traditions, and How to Celebrate

A royal wedding feast that grew into a global celebration of beer, pretzels, and Bavarian good cheer.

Bavarian pretzel and a frothy one-liter beer stein on a wooden table at Oktoberfest, with blue-and-white tent garlands and warm fall lights in the background.
Oktoberfest essentials—a fresh pretzel and a Maß of Festbier

🍺 What Is Oktoberfest?

Oktoberfest is Munich’s city-run folk festival (Volksfest) held on the Theresienwiese fairgrounds—locals call it the Wiesn. In 2025, it runs September 20–October 5 and mixes festival beer, classic Bavarian food, brass bands, parades, and fairground rides in one huge event.


🕰️ Origins & Early History

It began in 1810 as a public celebration of Crown Prince Ludwig’s marriage to Princess Therese. A horse race capped the party on the meadow, and Munich later named the field Theresienwiese (“Therese’s Meadow”).—the setting still used today. That wedding party is what seeded the annual tradition.


⭐ Why It Became Famous

Scale + tradition.At Oktoberfest, the beer tents pour only beer from Munich’s six historic breweries—Augustiner, Hacker-Pschorr, Hofbräu, Löwenbräu, Paulaner, and Spaten—as the official “Oktoberfestbier.” At noon, the mayor taps the first keg and opens the festival with “O’zapft is!” (“It’s tapped!”). These rituals, repeated every year, are a big part of the magic.


📍 Where It Happens & How It’s Organized

The festival is a grid of large beer tents, smaller food tents, and rides set across the Theresienwiese. A tradition-focused area called Oide Wiesn (“Old Wiesn”) highlights nostalgic rides, brass bands, and heritage tents, showing how the celebration looked in earlier times. Official opening hours and daily schedules are published each year by the city.


👥 Who Shows Up

Everyone. Munich locals in dirndls and lederhosen, families (there are family-friendly days), and visitors from all over the world fill the tents and fairgrounds. It’s a communal table culture—you’ll likely share a bench with strangers and leave with new friends.


🎺 What Actually Happens (Events & Rituals)

  • Keg tapping (Opening Saturday): The mayor taps the first keg in the Schottenhamel tent—O’zapft is!
  • Parades: The Landlords & Breweries parade (opening Saturday) brings horse-drawn brewery wagons and bands; the Traditional Costume & Riflemen’s Parade follows on the first Sunday at 10 a.m., marching through the city to the Wiesn.
  • Tent life: Each tent has its own music vibe, signature dishes, and atmosphere—from heritage-forward Oide Wiesn tents to big sing-along halls.

✅ How to Enjoy It Properly

  • Go off-peak. Weekdays and earlier hours are far easier for seats than Saturday nights.
  • Order like a local. A Maß (1-liter stein) of Oktoberfestbier with Hendl (roast chicken) or a giant Brezn (pretzel) is a classic combo.
  • Mind the etiquette. Share tables, toast “Prost!”, and follow staff directions.
  • Check the official schedule. Hours and special events vary by day—verify before you go.

🇺🇸 Oktoberfest in the U.S. (Where & When)

You don’t have to fly to Germany—American cities host Bavarian-style fests every fall (dates vary by year; here are 2025 examples):