REVIEW · BERLIN
Berlin: Gong Bath Session at The Feuerle Collection
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by The Feuerle Collection · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Silent sound meets Berlin’s art world. I love how this session turns a gallery space into a calm reset: a 50-minute gong bath where you lie on a mat and let the vibrations do the work. I also love that your ticket doesn’t end with the final chime—The Feuerle Collection visit is built in, with contemporary and Southeast Asian pieces plus Imperial Chinese furniture to round out the experience.
One thing to plan for: the room can feel cold. The session space is advertised around 19°C, but I’d treat that as a minimum, not a promise—bring warm layers so you can actually relax instead of bracing.
In This Review
- Key highlights you’ll notice right away
- The Feuerle Collection setup: a gallery that goes quiet
- The 50-minute gong bath: what you actually do
- Dress for relaxation: 19°C is real, and cold is colder
- Timing and flow: 75 minutes total, with museum time after
- The art visit: contemporary and Southeast Asian works, plus Imperial Chinese furniture
- Price and value: $38 for sound therapy plus a museum visit
- Who this is perfect for (and who should skip it)
- Practical stuff that keeps the experience smooth
- Should you book the Berlin gong bath at The Feuerle Collection?
- FAQ
- How long is the gong bath session?
- What does the full 75 minutes include?
- Where do I meet for the session?
- Is yoga mat and a blanket provided?
- What should I bring or wear?
- Can I take photos or videos during the session?
- Are pets allowed?
- Is this experience suitable for children?
- Is the venue wheelchair accessible?
- Can I cancel, and is there a pay-later option?
Key highlights you’ll notice right away

- Gong bath in an actual exhibition space, not a blank studio
- Sound-wash relaxation for stress and tension, timed at 50 minutes
- Included museum time after the session, with contemporary and Southeast Asian art
- Yoga mat and blanket provided, so you’re not lugging your own gear
- Strict no-camera and no-luggage rules, which helps keep the room quiet
- Park behind the building for a fee, if you’re driving (ask locally for specifics)
The Feuerle Collection setup: a gallery that goes quiet

This is the kind of Berlin experience that sounds a little unusual at first—gong bath in a museum setting. And that’s exactly why it works. The Feuerle Collection isn’t just a backdrop. It’s the place where you lie down in a peaceful exhibition room and let the sound waves take over your attention.
The experience is designed around stillness. You arrive, you get oriented, and then you settle in on a yoga mat in the center of the space. The location matters because you’re surrounded by art rather than fluorescent silence or a random side room. That shift helps you stop mentally multitasking—your brain has fewer “things to do,” so it has an easier time settling.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Berlin.
The 50-minute gong bath: what you actually do

Here’s the simple version: you lie down, you listen, and you try not to fight the sensations.
During the 50-minute gong bath, you’ll be on a yoga mat with a blanket. The gong vibrations create sound waves meant to balance emotions and bio-rhythms, guiding you toward deeper relaxation. You don’t need special skills, and you’re not expected to meditate in a strict, performative way. The whole point is that you can be passive.
If you’re wondering what the time feels like, think “slow sound treatment.” The session gives your body a steady rhythm to track. Many people find that when you stop trying to analyze every moment, the gong tones start to feel less like noise and more like a steady physical presence. You may not feel the same way the entire time—some parts land fast, other parts take a minute—but the structure is there to keep you from getting restless.
After the gong session, you’re free to explore. That’s a big deal: you don’t have to choose between calm and curiosity. You get both in one ticket, with your head already quieter when you walk back into the gallery.
Dress for relaxation: 19°C is real, and cold is colder

Pay attention to clothing here. The room temperature is listed at 19°C, and that’s often “fine” for standing around. It’s not always “fine” for lying still on a mat while sound vibrations do their thing.
I’d come prepared for a chillier-than-expected session. Warm clothing is specifically recommended, and it’s not just marketing padding. One recent German booking complaint described having to lie down in winter jackets because it felt far colder than promised. That’s your hint: treat warm layers as essential, not optional.
Practical packing tip:
- Wear something that keeps heat without making you feel bulky while lying down.
- Bring socks if you can (even if socks aren’t mentioned, it’s a smart comfort move when a room runs cool).
- If you tend to get cold easily, choose warmer layers over fashion.
If you show up underdressed, you’ll spend your quiet time negotiating with your own discomfort. If you show up warm, you’ll spend the quiet time listening.
Timing and flow: 75 minutes total, with museum time after
The total experience runs 75 minutes. The gong bath itself is 50 minutes, and the rest is for visiting The Feuerle Collection.
This timing matters. A lot of “wellness + city” activities try to cram everything into one frantic block. Here, you get a clear order of operations:
1) arrive and get settled
2) do the gong session
3) explore the exhibition at your pace
After sound therapy, your senses may feel a little “slower” and more receptive. That makes the art part more enjoyable for many people. You’re not bouncing from one thing to another at full speed—you’re transitioning from inward calm to outward viewing.
Also note the meeting guidance: arrive 5 minutes at the entrance before the visit starts. You don’t want to be late and rushed right when you’re supposed to soften your body.
The art visit: contemporary and Southeast Asian works, plus Imperial Chinese furniture
The art side is not an afterthought. It’s a real portion of your ticket.
Once the gong bath ends, you can explore The Feuerle Collection, which includes:
- contemporary artworks
- Southeast Asian art
- Imperial Chinese furniture
That mix is unusual in a good way. You’re not limited to one school, one time period, or one predictable style. The variety gives you something to look at while your mind is still “settling.” If you’re the type who usually rushes through museums, this part is gentler. You’re already calm. You can move slowly and let details come to you.
One added real-world detail from a recent booking: there’s time to explore on multiple levels, and people appreciated having a window to take it in without feeling squeezed.
Price and value: $38 for sound therapy plus a museum visit
At $38 per person, this isn’t a “cheap and quick” add-on. But it also isn’t trying to charge wellness pricing for a bare-bones experience.
You’re getting two things bundled together:
- a 50-minute gong bath with yoga mat and blanket
- a ticketed visit to The Feuerle Collection
That blend is the value logic. If you separately planned a museum visit and some kind of sound session, the costs would likely stop you from taking both. Here, the math is simpler: one price, one calm experience, one included gallery time.
Also, the rules help keep the session focused. No cameras and no large bags/pets mean fewer distractions and less chaos. That’s not just about control—it’s about protecting the quiet that makes the gong bath work.
Who this is perfect for (and who should skip it)
I think this experience is best for people who want a calm reset in the middle of Berlin sightseeing.
You’ll likely enjoy it if you:
- like wellness experiences that don’t require performance or special knowledge
- enjoy museum-style spaces and want art as part of the atmosphere
- want a quieter activity that still feels cultured and thoughtful
You might want to skip it if:
- you’re under 16 (the experience isn’t suitable for children under 16)
- you have claustrophobia (it’s listed as not suitable)
If you’re on the fence because you’re not sure how you’ll feel lying down in a room while listening to gongs, consider this: the session is time-limited (50 minutes). It’s long enough to matter, short enough to still feel manageable.
Practical stuff that keeps the experience smooth
Small details matter here because the session itself asks you to slow down.
Arrive on time. Meeting point instructions say: get to the entrance 5 minutes early. That gives you time to check in without feeling rushed.
Leave distractions behind. The experience doesn’t allow:
- pets
- cameras
- luggage or large bags
If you’re traveling light, you’re already ahead. If you’re traveling with a big bag, plan to store it elsewhere before you arrive.
Dress for the room. Warm clothing is recommended, and you’ll be lying down. This is one of those activities where comfort affects results more than you’d think.
Parking note if you drive. One booking mentioned paid parking behind the building. That’s useful if you’re doing Berlin by car or picking up friends.
Should you book the Berlin gong bath at The Feuerle Collection?
I’d book it if you want something different from the usual Berlin routine: a sound-based relaxation session paired with a real museum visit. The included art time turns the ticket into more than a wellness moment—it becomes a full little arc of calm, then curiosity.
But don’t book it expecting a warm spa room. Bring warm layers. And if claustrophobia is an issue for you, skip it—this isn’t the kind of setup you can “tough out” safely.
If your goal is stress relief in a quiet, art-filled setting, this is a smart, good-value choice at $38. One calm hour, plus time to look slowly at art—exactly the kind of Berlin day I like.
FAQ
How long is the gong bath session?
The gong bath lasts 50 minutes. The full experience is 75 minutes total.
What does the full 75 minutes include?
It includes the 50-minute gong bath plus time to visit The Feuerle Collection afterward.
Where do I meet for the session?
Arrive 5 minutes at the entrance before the visit starts.
Is yoga mat and a blanket provided?
Yes. You’ll get a yoga mat and blanket for the gong bath.
What should I bring or wear?
Bring warm clothing. The room temperature is listed around 19°C, so dressing appropriately helps a lot.
Can I take photos or videos during the session?
No. Cameras are not allowed.
Are pets allowed?
No. Pets are not allowed.
Is this experience suitable for children?
No. It’s not suitable for children under 16.
Is the venue wheelchair accessible?
Yes. The experience is wheelchair accessible.
Can I cancel, and is there a pay-later option?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours in advance. There’s also a reserve now & pay later option.

























