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Car Hire Locations in Germany


Finding and booking your low-cost Germany car hire is made easy with ArgusRentals.com. Every time you book your car rental in Germany, you can take pride in the fact that you have scored the cheapest rate. Argus Rentals sorts out the best deals on rentals from car hire agents in Germany. When you pick up your low priced offer, you can rest easy knowing that you have found the best deal on your wheels in Germany.

Just as the country of Germany is diverse, so too are the many pickup locations that you can grab your Argus rental. Pickup locations in Germany range from train stations and hotels to downtowns and major airports like Frankfurt and Munich. Many travellers to Germany seek out smaller vehicles like the Volkswagen Golf or the Peugeot 207 for their travels throughout the country. If you need roomier options, our fleet includes larger choices such as the Mercedes Vito or the Ford Focus Stationwagon. You can also take advantage of our wealth of extras such as sat nav, diesel vehicles, 7 seaters and automatics.

Five Fantastic Reasons to Travel to Germany

  • Gardens and Beer: There might be no better invention than that of the German biergarten. These outdoor watering holes are a feast for not just beer lovers but also for hearty German cuisine.
  • Stages and Shows Galore: Germany boasts more theatres, concert halls and opera houses per capita than any other country in the world.
  • The Coffee and Cake Schedule: The Germans know how to keep the day going with the tradition of kaffee und kuchen, afternoon coffee with cake typically around 3PM.
  • King of the Castle: Germany leaves the visitor with no shortage of medieval castles and Renaissance palaces to roam. Perhaps the most famous is the Disneyesque Schloss Neuschwanstein.
  • Great Minds: Germany is not just the economic and political powerhouse of Europe, but it also brags of being the birthplace of great minds like Albert Einstein, Goethe and Beethoven.

Handy Guide to Germany

Germany is a hearty meal that most have trouble resisting, even if they are uncomfortably full. Beer comes by the stein and rich meaty dishes are always on the biergarten table. Beyond the cuisine, Germany is a feast for its thick layers of history, layers that delve into the horrific and the great all in one country. It is a meal comprised of a varied landscape of jagged peaks, fairy-tale forests, roaring rivers and sand swept islands. Right smack in the middle of the continent, Germany borders nine other countries, making it a major transport hub and an obvious stopping point for travellers.

It is a meal that the traveller is certainly not the first to sample. In fact the greatest of minds hail from Germany including Martin Luther, Albert Einstein, Goethe, Beethoven and those Grimm brothers. Germany also lays claim to great innovations such as the printing press and every headache’s worst nightmare, aspirin. The economic and political player of Europe invites the traveller to come sample what is on the plate. After all, you will be following in the footsteps of Einstein. This must be a smart decision.

Most travellers begin the German feast in one of its major cities. While divided after World War II, Berlin is putting its pieces back together again. It might not know its exact identity just yet, but the completed picture is one of a contemporary art heaven. Down in Munich, the city life could be confused for village existence. Munich blends age-old traditions with high-powered industry in a fashion that is decidedly provincial. Over in Frankfurt, finance and transportation are the main orders of business. Comb through the cities of Dresden and Cologne and you will find delicate spires and captivating cathedrals, squashing perceptions that all of Germany’s heritage and historical gifts were bombed to bits.

Beyond the cities are medieval towns galore, where you half expect Hazel and Gretel to walk out of a gingerbread house. Drivers cruise the Romantic Road, a trail of walled towns and half-timbered homes like Rothenburg-ob-der-tauber. The town of Quedlinburg presents the postcard perfect picture of a medieval town with 1,600 half-timbered houses.

Scattered amidst these villages and towns is a scenery that causes jaws to drop. The Bavarian Alps present the best skiing in the winter and some of the most captivating hikes in the summer months. Germany is not just mountainous but also snakes in plenty of rivers like the Rhine, Elbe and Danube.

As if the landscape and towns of Germany weren’t enough of a feast for the traveller, the country dangles in moments of questioning fact or fiction. The castle that Walt Disney used as a model, Neuschwanstein looks like it fell out of a fairy-tale. Over in Trier, a mi

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