Brandenberg Alps

Austrian mountain group
title: "Brandenberg Alps" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["brandenberg-alps", "mountain-ranges-of-the-alps", "northern-limestone-alps", "mountain-ranges-of-tyrol-(state)"] description: "Austrian mountain group" topic_path: "general/brandenberg-alps" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brandenberg_Alps" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Austrian mountain group ::
::data[format=table title="Infobox mountain"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| map | Austria |
| photo | Dalfazalm.jpg |
| photo_caption | The Dalfazalm, 1,693 m, Rofan range (Brandenberg Alps), Austria |
| country | Austria |
| region | Tyrol |
| parent | Northern Limestone Alps |
| highest | Hochiss |
| elevation | |
| length_km | 38 |
| range_coordinates | |
| :: |
|map=Austria |map_caption= |photo=Dalfazalm.jpg |photo_caption=The Dalfazalm, 1,693 m, Rofan range (Brandenberg Alps), Austria |country=Austria |region=Tyrol |parent=Northern Limestone Alps |geology= |period= |area_km2= |orogeny= |highest=Hochiss |elevation = |coordinates = |length_km=38 |range_coordinates =
The Brandenberg Alps () are a sub-group of the Northern Limestone Alps, that run in front of the Eastern Alps for their whole length. They lie entirely in Austria between Achensee in Tyrol, the Inn Valley and the Bavarian Prealps.
They are widely known in German as the Rofangebirge, although the actual Rofan (also Sonnwendgebirge) is only the western part of the area between the Brandenberger Ache stream and the Achensee lake. It consists of a central mountain group and three individual mountains. The Guffert (2,195 m), which is located outside the central group, forms a distinct mountain block. It is located north of Kramsach, between the Tegernsee Blauberge and the central Rofan. The Unnütze, at the northern end of the Achensee east of Achenkirch, and the Ebener Joch (1,957 m) east of Maurach at the southern end of the Achensee, are also outside the central mountain range.
Neighbouring mountain ranges
The Brandenberg Alps border on the following other sub-groups in the Alps:
- Bavarian Prealps (to the north)
- Kaisergebirge (to the east)
- Kitzbühel Alps (to the south)
- Tux Alps (to the southwest)
- Karwendel (to the west)
Central Group
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f4/AchenseeWinter13.JPG" caption="The Dalfazer Wände in the Rofangebirge"] ::
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c7/Rofan_from_Ebner_Joch.JPG" caption="Main Rofan group seen from the southwest (Ebner Joch). Left to right: Dalfaz Walls; Streichkopf, Hochiss, Spieljoch, Seekarlspitze, Haidachstellwand, Rofanspitze, Sagzahn, Vorderes Sonnwendjoch"] ::
Summits on the Rofan main ridge (''Rofan-Hauptkamm'') from west to east
- Klobenjochspitze (2041 m)
- Kotalmjoch (2122 m)
- Stuhljöchl (2157 m)
- Stuhlböcklkopf (2169 m)
- Streichkopf (2243 m)
- Hochiss (2299 m), highest summit in the Rofan
- Spieljoch (2236 m)
- Seekarlspitze (2261 m)
- Roßkopf (Nordgipfel 2257 m)
- Rofanspitze (2259 m)
Summits on the Dalfaz Walls from north to south
- Dalfázer Joch (2233 m)
- Dalfázer Köpfln (2208 m)
- Dalfázer Wand (2210 m)
- Dalfázer Roßkopf (2143 m)
- Rotspitze (2067 m)
Summits on the ridge starting south of the Rofanspitze
- Sagzahn (2228 m)
- Schokoladetafel (2165 m)
- Vorderes Sonnwendjoch (2224 m)
- Haidachstellwand (2192 m)
Summits in the Brandenberg Alps from northeast to southwest
- Pendling (1563 m), southwest of Kufstein
- Köglhörndl (1645 m)
- Hundsalmjoch (1637 m)
- Kienberg (1786 m), northeast of Brandenberg
Waterbodies
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f8/Zireiner_See_Rofanspitze_2006_10.jpg" caption="The Zireiner See in front of the east face of the Rofanspitze"] ::
::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::