Selb‑Wildenau & Aš Border Crossing

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Close-up map showing a border crossing point with marker at the selected land port of entry between Germany and Czech Republic

Approximate Border Location

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Border Countries

Border Cities

  • 🇩🇪Selb‑Wildenau
  • 🇨🇿

Wait Times

Cars 0-15m; peaks 20-120m checks

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Operating Hours

Open 24 hrs (12:00 AM-11:59 PM)

Crossing Types

Cars,buses,trucks; main road crossing

Border Type

Land crossing via road (border town)

Peak Times

Mon-Fri 02:00-07:00 PM; weekends

Daily Crossings

6,000-25,000/day

Currency Exchange

EUR; CZK in Aš/Selb; ATMs

Cut Fees With Wise

Safety Information

Queue spillback at times; follow cones

Languages Spoken

German/Czech

Connectivity Options

Wi-Fi points; 4G

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Accessibility Features

Paved pullouts; accessible restrooms nearby

Emergency Contacts

🇩🇪 112 🇨🇿 112

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About Selb‑Wildenau & Aš

Monthly Update (May 2026):

As of May 2026, the Selb‑Wildenau & Aš Border Crossing is staying mostly stable and understated. You might find things slow down on the Czech side when shoppers head back across the bridge in the late afternoon. It’s a predictable route, though a weekend rush of bargain hunters can easily make the cars stack up and stretch the wait.

Location and Connections

You arrive here where Wildenau, a small district of Selb in Germany, meets the western edge of Aš (formerly Asch) in Czechia’s Karlovy Vary Region. The road follows Bundesstraße 299 (B299) on the German side, transitioning to Silnice I/25 or local routes into Aš. From Selb’s center, Wildenau sits a short 5 to 10 minute drive south. On the Czech side, Aš lies about 5 minutes from the line, with connections to Cheb (20-30 minutes) or Františkovy Lázně nearby. Cars, local buses, cyclists, and pedestrians dominate; truck use remains limited on this non-motorway path. The crossing supports shopping trips, work commutes, and access to the tri-border area near Germany, Czechia, and Poland farther north.

Alternative Names

It appears as Selb-Wildenau – Aš border crossing, Wildenau-Aš, or Selb-Aš (with Wildenau as the German border point). Older references use Selb-Asch or Wildenau-Asch.

Historical Background

The spot gained fame on October 3, 1938, when Adolf Hitler crossed here into the Sudetenland after the Munich Agreement, entering annexed territory amid Nazi propaganda fanfare. Stones and the old German customs building still mark the 1938 line on the German side near today’s crossing. Post-WWII, the Iron Curtain fortified it heavily until 1989. The border reopened gradually in the early 1990s (noted as one of six new crossings in July 1990), with full Schengen access in 2007 removing permanent infrastructure. Old checkpoint buildings were dismantled around 2008, leaving little trace beyond markers and photos from that era.

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Geopolitical Context

Schengen since late 2007 normally permits unrestricted movement. Germany maintains temporary controls on all Czech land borders due to migration and security concerns. As of February 10, 2026, these extend at least through March 15, 2026, with Bundespolizei conducting random spot checks. This smaller crossing sees lighter enforcement than motorways, but inspections for ID or vehicles can occur near the line. No fixed booths remain. Check German Federal Police or Czech Interior Ministry sources for updates, as extensions follow periodic reviews.

Practical Crossing Procedures

You drive straight across the local road, guided by border signs or stones. Temporary measures may lead to a police stop shortly after entering Germany for passport/ID verification, travel questions, or quick document checks. EU citizens show national ID or passport. Non-EU nationals need valid passports, visas/residence permits if required, and supporting details like accommodation. Carry vehicle insurance; no vignette needed for this non-highway route. Pedestrians and cyclists cross easily on the road or shoulder.

Typical Wait Times

Under normal flow, you pass in seconds. Random checks introduce variability: most vehicles clear quickly, but selected stops take 10 to 30 minutes depending on questions or short queues. Traffic stays moderate with locals and shoppers, so delays rarely build significantly even on weekends.

Operating Hours

The road operates 24 hours a day, year-round. Schengen eliminated fixed schedules. Winter snow might slow hilly approaches briefly, but the crossing point remains open.

Transportation Options and Road Conditions

Own car offers flexibility; local buses connect Selb to Wildenau and Aš to Cheb or nearby towns. No direct rail crosses here (nearest lines serve Selb or Aš indirectly). The road provides decent pavement through gentle hills with curves, farmland, and wooded patches. Views include open fields and the Fichtelgebirge slopes. Watch for local vehicles or bikes on quiet sections.

Scams and Warnings

Scams stay minimal at this community-oriented crossing. No widespread touts or fake services reported. Czech border shops in Aš sell cheaper fuel, groceries, tobacco, alcohol, or other goods to Germans; occasional mentions involve pushy vendors or unfavorable informal exchanges. Secure items in cars during any police stops. The area feels calm and low-risk for prepared travelers.

Nearby Attractions

Aš features the Aš lookout tower (rozhladna) on Benešův palouček hill, offering views over the tri-border region, plus historic sites and spa proximity in Františkovy Lázně. Selb is known for porcelain museums and factories (Porzellanikon). Wildenau provides quiet village access. Cross-border cultural trails include art installations like “Wir 2 / My 2” steel sculptures along paths between Selb and Aš. The zone suits hikers, cyclists, and those interested in border history or porcelain heritage.

Seasonal Variations and Weather Impacts

Winter snow December to March calls for winter tires; roads can ice in shaded hills. Summer brings more day-trippers and hikers with milder conditions. Autumn colors the landscapes with fewer crowds. Rain slicks surfaces occasionally, but weather closures remain uncommon on this local route.

Travel Tips and Preparation

Carry passport or ID always due to possible checks. Shop or refuel in Czechia for savings. Offline maps help in rural areas with variable signal. Pack layers for hill weather shifts. Check police sites or border apps for control updates before setting out. Follow marked paths on trails to respect private land.

Cultural and Economic Significance

Cross-border shopping sustains local trade: Germans buy affordable Czech items, supporting Aš’s small economy. The route fosters ties in the Fichtelgebirge and western Bohemia through shared history (including Sudetenland events), joint cultural trails, and community projects that bridge past divisions.

Before You Cross

Confirm temporary check status from official sources right before travel. With prep for occasional stops and regional roads, you handle this historic local crossing and explore the porcelain-spa borderlands. Safe travels.

See other crossings between Germany and Czech Republic

See other crossings between Germany and Czech Republic

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