03/06/2026
What are the most famous canals in the world that changed the map of navigation forever?
Most people would probably name the Panama Canal (51 miles) and the Suez Canal (120 miles), and for good reason! Both transformed global shipping and reshaped trade routes across entire continents.
The Panama Canal saves ships from the epic voyage around South America. The Suez Canal spares them the equally inconvenient detour around Africa. Together, they have saved countless miles, billions in shipping costs, and probably a few captains’ sanity along the way.
But there is a third canal that deserves a place on that list, especially if you are a sailor: the Kiel Canal.😎
It may not be as famous as Panama or Suez, but for anyone travelling between the North Sea and the Baltic, it is a game changer.
The Kiel Canal cuts straight across northern Germany, connecting the North Sea with the Baltic Sea. At just 53 nautical miles (61 miles / 98 km) long, it saves vessels around 250 nautical miles compared with sailing all the way around Denmark via Skagen.
In other words: less distance, less fuel, less time, and significantly fewer opportunities for the North Sea to remind you who’s in charge.
What makes it even more interesting is that passing through the canal is an experience in itself. First come the locks. You wait your turn, enter alongside commercial ships that make your yacht look rather modest, and watch this enormous piece of engineering quietly do its job.
Once through, you spend almost 60 miles sailing through the German countryside. One moment you’re sharing a waterway with cargo ships; the next you’re passing farms, villages, ferries, cyclists and forests. It feels less like a canal and more like a moving front-row seat to northern Germany.
This summer we’re heading through the Kiel Canal into the Baltic, and there are still two opportunities to join us:
⚓ 24–27 July — The Hague to the Baltic via the Kiel Canal.
⚓ 24–27 August — Kiel back to The Hague via the Kiel Canal and the North Sea.
Not just a yacht passage, but a chance to experience one of the world’s great maritime shortcuts from the water.
Check details of the trips here https://bridgesailing.co.uk/milebuildingbaltic