- Why Visit St. Gallen?
- Where Is St. Gallen?
- Quick Facts About St. Gallen
- History of St. Gallen
- Best Time to Visit St. Gallen
- Top Things to Do in St. Gallen
- Hidden Gems: What Only Locals Know
- One-Day St. Gallen Itinerary
- Two-Day St. Gallen Itinerary
- Three-Day St. Gallen Itinerary
- Best Food to Try in St. Gallen
- Best Restaurants in St. Gallen
- Where to Stay in St. Gallen
- How to Get to St. Gallen
- Getting Around St. Gallen
- Shopping Guide for St. Gallen
- Local Culture & Etiquette
- St. Gallen with Kids
- Budget Guide
- Safety Tips
- Accessibility
- Digital Nomad Guide
- University of St. Gallen (HSG)
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Plan Your St. Gallen Trip Today
Why Visit St. Gallen?
Most first-time visitors to Switzerland race between Zurich, Lucerne, and the mountains, and skip St. Gallen entirely. That’s the city’s biggest advantage. You get a genuine UNESCO World Heritage site, one of the finest surviving Baroque libraries on Earth, and a beautifully preserved Old Town of painted oriel windows (Erker), all without the tour-bus crowds of more famous Swiss destinations.
St. Gallen earns its place on any itinerary for six reasons:
- UNESCO heritage: the Abbey District has been protected World Heritage status since 1983.
- Swiss textile history: St. Gallen embroidery once dressed royalty and Hollywood stars, and the legacy still shapes the city’s museums and shops.
- University city energy: the University of St. Gallen (HSG) gives the city a youthful, café-lined atmosphere.
- A genuinely walkable Old Town: nearly every major sight sits within a 15-minute walk.
- A gateway to Appenzell: rolling hills, traditional villages, and the Säntis cable car are a short ride away.
- Fewer crowds, lower prices: compared with Lucerne or Interlaken, St. Gallen is refreshingly uncrowded and often cheaper to visit.
Where Is St. Gallen?
St. Gallen is the capital of the canton of the same name, tucked into northeastern Switzerland close to the borders of Austria and Germany, and just south of Lake Constance (Bodensee). Its hillside setting means several of the best photo spots, including Drei Weieren, look down over the Abbey towers and rooftops toward the Alpstein range.
| From | Distance | Train Time |
|---|---|---|
| Zurich | ~85 km | ~55 minutes (direct) |
| Bern | ~185 km | ~2 hours 10 minutes |
| Lucerne | ~110 km | ~1 hour 20 minutes |
| Appenzell | ~20 km | ~45 minutes (Appenzeller Bahnen via Gossau) |
Quick Facts About St. Gallen
| Population | ~80,000 (city), ~160,000 (metro area) |
| Elevation | ~670 m above sea level |
| Currency | Swiss Franc (CHF) |
| Language | Swiss German (standard German used in writing/tourism) |
| Best time to visit | May–September for weather; December for the Christmas Market |
| Nearest airport | Zurich Airport (ZRH), ~1 hour by train |
| Main train station | St. Gallen Bahnhof (SBB) |
| Safety | Very safe, low crime, standard city precautions apply |
| Walkability | Excellent, compact, pedestrian Old Town core |
| Time zone | Central European Time (CET/CEST) |
| Daily budget | CHF 90–280 depending on travel style |
| Typical weather | Cool winters, mild summers, frequent light rain year-round |
History of St. Gallen
St. Gallen traces its origins to the Irish monk Saint Gall, who founded a hermitage on the site around 612 AD. That hermitage grew into the Abbey of St. Gall, a Benedictine monastery that became one of the most important centers of learning, book production, and manuscript preservation in medieval Europe.
By the 18th century, the abbey precinct had been rebuilt in the sweeping Baroque style you see today, with twin cathedral towers and the ornate Rococo library hall completed in 1767. When the Abbey was secularized in 1805, the city of St. Gallen absorbed its buildings and archives, preserving them largely intact.
Parallel to its religious history, St. Gallen built a second identity as a textile powerhouse. From the 19th century through the early 20th century, “St. Gallen embroidery” (St. Galler Stickerei) was exported worldwide and dressed European royalty, and later, Hollywood costume designers. The wealth from textiles funded much of the city’s elegant architecture, and that legacy is preserved today at the Textile Museum, just steps from the Abbey District.
Editorial note: Historical details in this section are sourced from UNESCO’s official World Heritage listing and the Abbey Library’s own archives rather than paraphrased from other travel sites.
Best Time to Visit St. Gallen
Festival Calendar
- OLMA
- Switzerland’s largest agricultural and lifestyle fair, held every October.
- OpenAir St. Gallen
- A major open-air music festival held in late June on the Sittertobel bridge grounds.
- St. Gallen Christmas Market
- Runs through December in the Old Town’s illuminated alleys.
Top Things to Do in St. Gallen
Abbey District (Stiftsbezirk)
The Abbey District is the historical and spiritual heart of St. Gallen and the reason the city holds UNESCO World Heritage status. The walled precinct contains the Cathedral, the Abbey Library, and the former monastic buildings, all connected by open lawns that locals use for picnics and events.
Local tip: Enter from Klosterhof in the early morning before tour groups arrive for the best unobstructed photos of the twin towers.
Abbey Library (Stiftsbibliothek)
Widely considered one of the most beautiful historic libraries in the world, the Abbey Library houses an extraordinary collection of medieval manuscripts inside a dazzling Rococo hall of carved wood, painted ceilings, and inlaid parquet floors.
Highlights include an Egyptian mummy on display, illuminated manuscripts dating back over a thousand years, and the famous 9th-century Plan of St. Gall, the oldest surviving architectural plan in the Western world.
Local tip: Felt slippers are required over your shoes to protect the wooden floor, part of the charm, not an inconvenience.
St. Gallen Cathedral
Consecrated in 1767, the Baroque cathedral sits at the center of the Abbey District, its interior awash in soft pastel frescoes and ceiling paintings that rival the library for sheer visual drama.
St. Lawrence Church (Laurenzenkirche)
Climb the tower of this Gothic Reformed church for one of the best rooftop panoramas over the Old Town’s red rooftops and the Abbey towers beyond.
Gallusplatz (Gallus Square)
A lively square just outside the Abbey walls where locals gather for coffee, markets, and evening drinks, a good spot to watch everyday St. Gallen life unfold.
Oriel Windows (Erker) of the Old Town
St. Gallen’s Old Town is famous for over 100 ornately carved and painted bay windows dating from the 16th–18th centuries, funded by wealthy textile merchants who wanted to display their status. Spielwiese, Kugelgasse, and Marktgasse have some of the finest examples.
Textile Museum
A compact but rich museum tracing St. Gallen’s embroidery empire, from hand looms to the couture pieces the city once supplied to Paris fashion houses
Kunstmuseum St. Gallen
The city’s principal art museum, housed in a grand neoclassical building on Museumstrasse, with rotating contemporary exhibitions alongside a permanent collection.
City Lounge (Red Square)
An unmissable piece of public art: an entire plaza, including benches, phone booths, and cars, painted glossy red by artists Pipilotti Rist and Carlos Martinez. It’s playful, photogenic, and completely unlike anywhere else in Switzerland.
Botanical Garden (Botanischer Garten)
A peaceful escape from the Old Town with themed greenhouses and seasonal flower displays, free entry and popular with locals for a quiet stroll.
Drei Weieren
Three historic ponds on a hillside above the city, originally built for the textile industry and now a beloved summer swimming spot with sweeping views over St. Gallen’s rooftops toward the Alpstein mountains.
Local tip: Come at sunset for the best light over the skyline, even outside swimming season.
Mühleggbahn
Switzerland’s shortest funicular railway connects the Old Town to the Drei Weieren hillside in under a minute, a quick, quirky ride that saves you the steep uphill walk.
Peter and Paul Wildlife Park
A free hillside wildlife park near Drei Weieren with deer, ibex, and marmots, a favorite with families and an easy add-on to a Drei Weieren visit.
Weekly Markets
Local produce, cheese, and flower markets fill Marktplatz and Bohl on selected mornings, a great way to sample regional food without a restaurant markup.
The Binary Clock
A quirky public installation near the train station that displays the time in binary code, a small but often-photographed curiosity.
City Walls & Hidden Alleys
Wander beyond the main squares into the quieter lanes around Spisergasse and Museumstrasse to find surviving fragments of the medieval city walls and quiet courtyards most visitors miss entirely.
Local Fountains
St. Gallen’s Old Town is dotted with historic stone fountains, many still fed by natural spring water, a small architectural detail worth slowing down for.
Hidden Gems: What Only Locals Know
- Quiet courtyard cafés tucked off Spisergasse, away from the main tourist path around the Abbey.
- Sunrise at Drei Weieren before the swimmers arrive, the calmest version of the city’s best viewpoint.
- The University of St. Gallen campus, whose modern architecture and sculpture garden are open to the public and rarely visited by tourists.
- Secret photo spot: the small bridge over the Sitter gorge near the OpenAir festival grounds, especially dramatic in autumn fog.
One-Day St. Gallen Itinerary
Morning · 9:00 AM
Start at the Abbey District, then tour the Abbey Library before it fills up.
Late Morning
Walk the Old Town’s oriel-window streets: Spielwiese, Kugelgasse, Marktgasse.
Lunch · 12:30 PM
Try a St. Gallen Bratwurst from a stand near Marktplatz, the classic local lunch.
Afternoon
Visit the City Lounge (Red Square), then ride the Mühleggbahn up to Drei Weieren.
Sunset
Take in the skyline view from Drei Weieren or the St. Lawrence Church tower.
Dinner · 7:00 PM
Sit down at a traditional restaurant in the Old Town for regional Swiss cuisine.
Two-Day St. Gallen Itinerary
Three-Day St. Gallen Itinerary
Add a full day trip on day three. The Appenzell region is the natural extension of a St. Gallen visit, reachable in under an hour and worlds apart in scenery, with rolling green hills, traditional painted farmhouses, and the dramatic Säntis cable car.
Best Food to Try in St. Gallen
Best Restaurants in St. Gallen
| Category | What to Expect | Approx. Price |
|---|---|---|
| Luxury | Fine dining with regional tasting menus | CHF 90–160 per person |
| Traditional | Swiss classics: bratwurst, rösti, cheese dishes | CHF 25–45 per person |
| Budget | Bratwurst stands, bakeries, university cafeterias (Mensa) | CHF 8–20 per person |
| Family-Friendly | Casual Old Town restaurants with kids’ menus | CHF 20–40 per person |
| Vegetarian | Growing number of plant-based cafés near the university | CHF 18–35 per person |
Where to Stay in St. Gallen
| Category | Best For | Approx. Nightly Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Luxury | Full-service hotels near the Old Town | CHF 280+ |
| Boutique | Design-forward hotels in historic buildings | CHF 180–280 |
| Mid-Range | Comfortable 3–4 star hotels near the station | CHF 120–180 |
| Budget | Simple guesthouses and chain hotels | CHF 80–120 |
| Hostels | Backpackers and solo travelers | CHF 35–60 |
| Family Stays | Apartment-style rentals near Drei Weieren | CHF 150–250 |
Where to base yourself: Stay within walking distance of the train station and Old Town, nearly everything worth seeing is reachable on foot, so location matters more than amenities in St. Gallen.
How to Get to St. Gallen
By Train
The easiest option by far. St. Gallen sits on a direct SBB line from Zurich (~55 minutes) with frequent hourly departures, and connects well to Lucerne, Bern, and international routes from Munich and Austria.
By Car
St. Gallen is reachable via the A1 motorway from Zurich in roughly an hour, though parking in the Old Town is limited, a park-and-walk approach works best.
By Air
The nearest major airport is Zurich Airport (ZRH), about an hour away by direct train. St. Gallen–Altenrhein Airport handles limited regional flights.
By Bus
PostBus connections link St. Gallen with smaller towns in Appenzell and the surrounding countryside not directly served by rail.
Getting Around St. Gallen
- Walking: the best and only method you’ll need for the Old Town and Abbey District.
- Bus: VBSG city buses cover Drei Weieren, the university, and outer neighborhoods.
- Bike: bike rentals are available near the station for exploring further afield.
- Parking: several paid garages ring the Old Town; street parking is limited and metered.
- Swiss Travel Pass: covers city buses and regional trains, plus discounted or free museum entry.
Day Trips from St. Gallen
Shopping Guide for St. Gallen
- Markets: weekly produce and flower markets on Marktplatz and Bohl.
- Swiss souvenirs: look for quality items rather than mass-produced trinkets near the station.
- Chocolate: independent chocolatiers in the Old Town offer handmade options.
- Textiles: St. Gallen embroidery and lace remain a genuine local specialty; the Textile Museum shop is a good starting point.
- Cheese: Appenzeller and other regional cheeses sold fresh at markets and delis.
- Swiss Army knives: widely available, though prices are similar nationwide.
Local Culture & Etiquette
- Festivals: OLMA and OpenAir St. Gallen are the two cultural anchors of the year.
- Customs: Swiss punctuality applies strictly to trains, appointments, and restaurant reservations.
- Etiquette: greet shopkeepers with “Grüezi” (Swiss German hello); quiet voices are appreciated on public transport.
- Language: Swiss German is spoken locally, though standard German, English, and often French are understood in tourist areas.
- Traditional clothing: folk costumes (Tracht) appear at OLMA and other regional festivals, particularly in nearby Appenzell.
St. Gallen with Kids
- Peter and Paul Wildlife Park: free, easy, and full of animals kids love.
- Drei Weieren: safe, shallow swimming ponds in summer.
- Mühleggbahn funicular: a genuinely fun short ride for younger children.
- Museums: the Textile Museum and Kunstmuseum both offer family-friendly exhibits.
- Playgrounds: several well-equipped playgrounds are scattered around the Botanical Garden and Drei Weieren area.
Budget Guide
| Expense | Budget | Mid-Range | Luxury |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hotel (per night) | CHF 35–80 | CHF 120–180 | CHF 280+ |
| Meals (per day) | CHF 25–40 | CHF 60–90 | CHF 120+ |
| Local transport | CHF 5–10 | CHF 10–15 | CHF 15–25 |
| Museums / attractions | CHF 0–15 | CHF 15–30 | CHF 30+ |
| Coffee | CHF 4–5 | CHF 5–6 | CHF 6–8 |
| Total per day | CHF 90–120 | CHF 200–280 | CHF 400+ |
Safety Tips
- Emergency numbers: 112 (general emergency), 117 (police), 144 (ambulance).
- Walking alone is generally very safe, even at night in the Old Town.
- Scams are rare, though standard vigilance around the train station is sensible.
- Weather: check forecasts before hillside walks to Drei Weieren, as conditions can shift quickly.
Accessibility
St. Gallen’s train station and main streets are largely wheelchair accessible, though the Old Town’s cobblestones and some Abbey District paths can be uneven. Public buses are low-floor and accessible. Families with strollers will find the Old Town manageable but should expect occasional cobblestone sections.
Digital Nomad Guide
- Internet: Reliable high-speed Wi-Fi in most cafés and hotels; Switzerland’s mobile network coverage is excellent.
- Coworking: Several coworking spaces have opened near the university and train station in recent years.
- SIM cards: Swisscom, Sunrise, and Salt all offer prepaid tourist SIM options at the train station.
- Cafés for working: University-adjacent cafés tend to be laptop-friendly with longer opening hours.
- Power outlets: Standard Swiss (Type J) sockets, bring an adapter.
University of St. Gallen (HSG)
The University of St. Gallen is one of Europe’s most prestigious business schools, consistently ranked among the top institutions globally for economics and management. Its modern campus, set slightly uphill from the Old Town, is known for striking architecture and an outdoor sculpture collection that includes works by internationally recognized artists.
Visitors are welcome to walk the open campus grounds, and the university’s presence is a large part of why St. Gallen feels more youthful and international than its small-city size would suggest.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, St. Gallen is one of Switzerland’s most underrated cities, home to the UNESCO-listed Abbey District, the ornate Abbey Library, colorful oriel-window Old Town streets, and easy rail access to Appenzell and Lake Constance, making it an ideal one- to two-day stop.
St. Gallen is famous for its UNESCO World Heritage Abbey District, the Abbey Library (one of the world’s oldest libraries), its centuries-old textile and embroidery industry, and the University of St. Gallen (HSG), one of Europe’s top business schools.
St. Gallen is moderately priced by Swiss standards, generally cheaper than Zurich or Geneva. Budget travelers can manage on roughly CHF 90–120 per day, while mid-range visitors should budget CHF 200–280 per day including hotels.
Yes. The Old Town, Abbey District, and most major sights sit within a compact, pedestrian-friendly core that can be crossed entirely on foot in under 20 minutes end to end.
St. Gallen is very safe, consistent with Switzerland’s low overall crime rate. Normal city precautions apply, such as watching belongings at the train station and markets.
Swiss German is the everyday spoken language, while standard German is used in writing and tourism. English is widely understood in hotels, restaurants, and shops.
OLMA is Switzerland’s largest agricultural and lifestyle fair, held annually in St. Gallen every October, drawing hundreds of thousands of visitors for food, farming exhibits, and entertainment.