was founded in
Hamburg in 1946 by the British occupying forces, aiming to provide a "quality newspaper" modeled on
The Times. It originally carried news and British-viewpoint editorial content, but from 1947 it adopted a policy of providing two leading articles on major questions, one British and one German. The newspaper was bought by Axel Springer in 1953. The 1993 circulation of the paper was 209,677 copies. At its peak in the occupation period, it had a circulation of approximately a million. In 2002 the paper experimented with a
Bavarian edition. In November 2010, a redesign for the newspaper was launched, featuring a new logo with a dark blue globe, a reduced number of columns from seven to six, and typography based on the Freight typeface designed by
Joshua Darden.
Welt Kompakt was also redesigned to use that typeface. On 2 May 2014, the Swiss German business magazine
Bilanz began to be published as a monthly supplement of . On 18 January 2018, the German television channel N24 changed its name to
Welt. was forced to resign as editor in chief in January 2026; he was replaced by . == Ban ==