In addition the hamlet is part of Sailauf. It consists of an industrial area near the Bundesautobahn 3 and the . Moreover, the municipal territory includes 19 small exclaves to the northeast surrounded by the Sailaufer Forst.
Sailauf is among the Vorspessart's oldest settlements. As early as 1089, the original parish church in the upper Aschaff valley stood here. In 1189, the lordly estate of Sigilovf, meaning "glistening brook", and out of whose name arose the placename Sailauf, had its first documentary mention. In the 13th century, Sailauf was for a short time ruled by the Counts of Rieneck, who built the castleLandesere on the nearby. In 1265, the Archbishop of Mainz, built the hunting lodgecastrum vivarium, which was later renamed Weyberhof. When the Plague raged in Europe in 1349, the Vorspessart was all but emptied of people. Newcomers later came to Sailauf from the Steigerwald. In 1552, Schloss Weyberhof was destroyed. In the Thirty Years' War, Sailauf was almost completely destroyed. In 1789, Saint Vitus's Church was built above Sailauf, believed to be the fourth church built on this spot. In 1803, lordship of Mainz over the Vorspessart came to an end and in 1814, Aschaffenburg and its surrounding area passed to the Kingdom of Bavaria. In 1972, the outlying community of Eichenberg was merged with Sailauf.
Governance
Community council
The council is made up of 17 council members, counting the mayor.
The community's arms might be described thus: Argent a bend sinister gules surmounted by a wheel spoked of six of the first, in chief dexter a bend sinister wavy azure, in base sinister an oak sprig with a leaf in bend sinister and an acorn in bend vert. The German blazon specifies a silver wheel, although the example shown here has a golden wheel. This wheel – the Wheel of Mainz – and the bend sinister – the slanted stripe, so called because at the top it begins on the sinister side – stand for the community's history, lasting from the 13th century until 1803, as an Electoral Mainz holding; the tinctures gules and argent were Mainz's colours. The blue wavy bend sinister stands for the community's location at the forks of the Sailauf and the Steinbach, two local brooks. The green oak twig with the acorn refers to the Spessart range, which is thickly wooded with oaks, and in which the community lies. The arms were conferred on 21 March 1969.
Culture and arts
Sailauf features the yearly Sailaufer Knoblauchfest and the Tsukahara-Festival.
Infrastructure
Transport
Sailauf has an interchange to the Bundesautobahn 3.