Swiss Travel Pass 2026: Prices, Benefits, Coverage Map & Is It Worth It?

Swiss Travel Pass 2026: Prices, Benefits, Coverage Map & Is It Worth It? | Swiss Living Guide
Zurich Hauptbahnhof main train station , one of the busiest stations in Europe, fully covered by the Swiss Travel Pass
The Swiss Travel System network spans over 29,000 km of train, bus and boat routes across Switzerland.

Quick Answer: Swiss Travel Pass 2026

  • Starts from CHF 254 / USD 339 (3 days, 2nd class)
  • Unlimited trains, buses, boats & city transport
  • Free entry to 500+ Swiss museums
  • 50% off most mountain railways & cable cars
  • Worth it for 3+ travel days with multiple journeys
  • Best alternative: Half Fare Card for CHF 150
  • Prices rose ~5% from January 2026

What Is the Swiss Travel Pass?

The Swiss Travel Pass is an all-in-one travel pass for tourists visiting Switzerland, issued by the Swiss Travel System (a partnership between Swiss Federal Railways SBB, PostBus, and lake shipping companies). It grants unlimited travel on the nationwide train, bus, and boat network for a set number of consecutive days, plus free museum entry and discounts on mountain excursions.

Unlike regular tickets where you pay per journey, the pass works like a flat-rate subscription — show it to the conductor, and travel freely across the country without buying individual tickets. This is exactly why so many first-time visitors to Switzerland prefer it: it removes the mental load of ticket machines, price comparisons, and lost time at station windows.

What Does the Swiss Travel Pass Include?

  • Unlimited travel on all SBB intercity and regional trains
  • Unlimited travel on PostBus routes across the country
  • Unlimited travel on lake boats (Lucerne, Geneva, Thun, Brienz, Zurich, and more)
  • Free unlimited use of public transport in 90+ Swiss cities & towns (trams, city buses)
  • Free entry to 500+ Swiss museums
  • Free travel on scenic panoramic trains (reservation fees may apply)
  • 50% discount on most cable cars, cogwheel railways, and funiculars
  • Free Swiss Family Card (children 6–15 travel free with a pass-holding parent)
⚠️ Important Distinction Swiss Travel Pass ≠ SwissPass. The SwissPass is a domestic chip card used by Swiss residents for their annual GA Travelcard or Half Fare Travelcard. The Swiss Travel Pass is a separate tourist product issued in digital/PDF form. Don’t get confused when searching for one or the other.

Who Can Buy the Swiss Travel Pass?

The Swiss Travel Pass is available exclusively to tourists and non-residents of Switzerland. Swiss residents and nationals are not eligible. Adults, youths (16–24), and children are all catered for, with pricing tiers accordingly. Families benefit from the free Swiss Family Card.

90+ Swiss cities with free public transport included
500+ Museums with free entry for pass holders
50% Discount on most mountain railways & cable cars
CHF 150 Value of the annual Swiss Museum Pass — included free
Zurich Hauptbahnhof main train station — one of the busiest stations in Europe, fully covered by the Swiss Travel Pass
Zurich Hauptbahnhof — all intercity trains here are fully included in the Swiss Travel Pass. No ticket needed.

Swiss Travel Pass Types Explained

🚆

Swiss Travel Pass (Consecutive)

Unlimited travel on 3, 4, 6, 8, or 15 consecutive calendar days. Best for fast-paced city-hopping itineraries.

From CHF 254
📅

Swiss Travel Pass Flex

Choose any 3, 4, 6, 8, or 15 travel days freely within one month. Ideal if you plan to hike, rest, or drive on some days.

From CHF 289
🎓

Swiss Travel Pass Youth

The same pass at a 30% discount for travelers aged 16 to 24 (inclusive). Valid for both consecutive and Flex versions.

From CHF 178
👨‍👩‍👧

Swiss Family Card

Free add-on for parents holding any Swiss Travel Pass. Children aged 6–15 travel completely free when accompanied.

Free

Swiss Travel Pass vs Swiss Travel Pass Flex — Which Should You Choose?

FeatureConsecutive PassFlex Pass
Travel DaysConsecutiveAny days within 1 month
Price PremiumStandard (base price)~15% more expensive
Museum Entry✓ All travel days✓ Selected days only
Mountain Discounts✓ All travel days✓ Selected days only
Best ForCity-hopping, scenic train tripsHikers, mixed transport
FlexibilityLow — days are fixedHigh — pick as you go
💡 Pro Tip If you plan to spend even one full day hiking or resting without using public transport, the Flex pass will likely save you money versus paying for a “wasted” consecutive day.

Swiss Travel Pass Prices 2026

Prices increased by approximately 5% from January 2026. The Half Fare Card also rose from CHF 120 to CHF 150 in the same period. All prices below are the official Swiss Travel System rates; they are the same worldwide regardless of where you buy.

2nd Class Prices (Adult) — 2026

DurationConsecutive (CHF)Consecutive (USD approx.)Flex (CHF)Youth 2nd Class (CHF)
3 DaysCHF 254~USD 339CHF 289CHF 178
4 DaysCHF 309~USD 412CHF 355CHF 216
6 DaysCHF 399~USD 532CHF 459CHF 279
8 DaysCHF 439~USD 586CHF 505CHF 307
15 DaysCHF 499~USD 666CHF 519CHF 349

1st Class Prices (Adult) — 2026

DurationConsecutive (CHF)Consecutive (USD approx.)
3 DaysCHF 405~USD 540
4 DaysCHF 492~USD 656
6 DaysCHF 634~USD 845
8 DaysCHF 697~USD 929
15 DaysCHF 787~USD 1,049

USD amounts are approximate and based on exchange rates at time of writing. Your bank’s conversion rate may vary slightly. Youth discount (30%) applies to travelers aged 16–24. Children under 6 always travel free. Children 6–15 travel free with the Swiss Family Card when a parent holds a valid pass.

Price Per Day Breakdown

Here’s a useful way to think about value — the cost per travel day drops significantly with longer passes:

DurationTotal 2nd ClassCost Per Day
3 DaysCHF 254CHF 84.70 / day
4 DaysCHF 309CHF 77.25 / day
6 DaysCHF 399CHF 66.50 / day
8 DaysCHF 439CHF 54.88 / day
15 DaysCHF 499CHF 33.27 / day
📈 2026 Price Change Swiss Travel Pass prices rose by approximately 5% from 1 January 2026, and the Half Fare Card increased from CHF 120 to CHF 150. There are no seasonal sales or promotional prices on the Swiss Travel Pass — official pricing is fixed worldwide.

What Does the Swiss Travel Pass Cover?

The Swiss Travel Pass covers the entire Swiss Travel System network — which includes the vast majority of trains, PostBus routes, and lake boats operating across Switzerland. Here is a detailed breakdown of exactly what is and is not included.

Trains Included

All SBB intercity (IC), intercity express (ICE), interregio (IR), and regional (RE/S) trains are fully covered. This includes:

  • Zurich ↔ Geneva, Bern, Basel, Lucerne, Interlaken, Lugano
  • Bern ↔ Zermatt (via Visp), Interlaken, Geneva
  • Lucerne ↔ Lugano, Zurich, Basel
  • All regional and S-Bahn trains within cantons
  • Rhaetian Railway trains (including Landquart–Davos, St. Moritz routes)

Buses Included

All PostBus routes across Switzerland are covered — including the famous scenic mountain routes. City buses operated by municipal transport companies (e.g., ZVV in Zurich, TPG in Geneva) are also included within the 90+ towns and cities covered.

Boats & Lake Cruises Included

Scheduled lake boat services on all major Swiss lakes are fully included. This is one of the most underrated benefits of the pass:

LakeCovered?Notable Routes
Lake Lucerne✓ FullyLucerne – Flüelen, Lucerne – Beckenried
Lake Geneva✓ FullyGeneva – Lausanne – Montreux
Lake Thun✓ FullyThun – Interlaken West
Lake Brienz✓ FullyInterlaken Ost – Brienz
Lake Zurich✓ FullyZurich – Rapperswil
Lake ConstancePartialSwiss side vessels only
💡 Hidden Gem The Lake Lucerne boat cruise from Lucerne to Flüelen (3.5 hours) rivals the Glacier Express for scenery — and unlike the Glacier Express, there is no reservation fee. Pass holders simply walk on board.
Paddlesteamer boat cruise on Lake Lucerne with Swiss Alps in the background — fully included in the Swiss Travel Pass at no extra cost
Lake Lucerne boat cruises are fully included with the Swiss Travel Pass — no reservation needed, just step aboard.

What Is NOT Covered?

  • Mandatory seat reservations on scenic trains (Glacier Express, Bernina Express)
  • Jungfraujoch full fare (pass gives ~27% discount only)
  • Gornergrat Railway (50% discount, not free)
  • Matterhorn Glacier Paradise cable car (50% discount)
  • Cross-border trains to France, Italy, Germany (Swiss portion may be covered, check per route)
  • Private mountain railways not in the Swiss Travel System

Scenic Trains Covered by the Swiss Travel Pass

All four of Switzerland’s famous panoramic train routes include the base fare for Swiss Travel Pass holders. However, most require a mandatory seat reservation — this fee is not included in the pass and must be paid separately regardless of whether you hold a pass or buy a regular ticket.

Scenic TrainBase Fare Included?Reservation Required?Reservation Cost
Glacier Express✓ Yes✓ Mandatory~CHF 39 (winter) / CHF 49 (summer)
Bernina Express✓ Yes✓ Mandatory~CHF 13–33 depending on season
GoldenPass Express✓ Yes✓ Mandatory~CHF 10–22
Gotthard Panorama Express✓ Yes✓ Mandatory~CHF 29
Luzern–Interlaken Express✓ Yes✗ Not requiredFree to board
Centovalli Railway✓ Yes✗ Not requiredFree to board

Glacier Express — Is It Worth Booking with the Swiss Travel Pass?

The Glacier Express runs between Zermatt and St. Moritz (or Davos), covering 291 km of some of the most dramatic Alpine scenery in Europe. The base fare is fully covered by your Swiss Travel Pass — but you cannot board without a pre-booked seat reservation. Budget around CHF 49 per person in summer. Given that a standard point-to-point ticket on this route can cost over CHF 150, the pass delivers significant savings even after the reservation fee.

The iconic red Glacier Express train winding through a dramatic Swiss Alpine valley — base fare covered by the Swiss Travel Pass
The Glacier Express between Zermatt and St. Moritz — base fare covered, mandatory reservation ~CHF 49 in summer.

Bernina Express — The Alternative Worth Considering

The Bernina Express from Chur or Davos to Tirano (Italy) is a UNESCO World Heritage railway that many travellers rate more highly than the Glacier Express for views per Swiss franc. The reservation fee is lower, and the scenery — including the iconic Landwasser Viaduct and the Bernina Pass at 2,253m — is genuinely spectacular. If budget is a concern, take the regular Rhaetian Railway train on the same route without reservation (covered by the pass) rather than the panoramic coach.

Bernina Express train crossing the famous Landwasser Viaduct on the UNESCO World Heritage Rhaetian Railway route in Switzerland
The Bernina Express crossing the Landwasser Viaduct — one of Switzerland’s most photographed railway moments.

Swiss Travel Pass and Jungfraujoch

Jungfraujoch — the “Top of Europe” at 3,454m — is Switzerland’s most visited mountain attraction, and one of the most frequently misunderstood in terms of pass coverage.

⚠️ Important The Swiss Travel Pass does not fully cover Jungfraujoch. You receive approximately a 27% discount on the full fare. This means you still pay around CHF 189 out of pocket on top of your pass cost, even for the route from Interlaken Ost.
Jungfraujoch Top of Europe at 3454m altitude in Switzerland — Swiss Travel Pass gives a 27% discount, not full coverage
Jungfraujoch at 3,454m — spectacular, but the Swiss Travel Pass only covers about 27% of the fare. Budget ~CHF 189 extra.

Mountain Excursion Discounts Table

Mountain / AttractionCovered?DiscountApprox. Cost with Pass
JungfraujochPartial~27% off~CHF 189
Gornergrat (Zermatt)Partial50% off~CHF 66 return (summer)
Matterhorn Glacier ParadisePartial50% off~CHF 86
Schilthorn (Piz Gloria)Partial50% off~CHF 60
Grindelwald FirstPartial50% off~CHF 35
Mount Pilatus (cable car)Partial50% off~CHF 44
Mount Rigi✓ Free100%CHF 0
Stanserhorn✓ Free100%CHF 0
Harder Kulm (Interlaken)✓ Free100%CHF 0
Cable car ascending through the Swiss Alps in summer — most mountain cable cars offer 50% discount with the Swiss Travel Pass
Most Swiss cable cars and funiculars offer a 50% discount with the Swiss Travel Pass. A handful — like Mount Rigi — are completely free.

For a detailed breakdown of planning your trip to Interlaken and the Jungfrau region, see our guide to the best places to visit in Switzerland.

Museums Included with the Swiss Travel Pass

Free entry to over 500 Swiss museums is one of the most underutilised benefits of the Swiss Travel Pass. The annual Swiss Museum Pass costs CHF 147 on its own — so if you plan to visit even three or four museums during your trip, this benefit alone adds significant value.

Top Museums Included (Selection)

MuseumCityEntry Price Without Pass
Swiss National MuseumZurichCHF 10
Transport Museum (Verkehrshaus)LucerneCHF 30
Olympic MuseumLausanneCHF 20
FIFA MuseumZurichCHF 24
Chillon CastleMontreuxCHF 15
Ballenberg Open Air MuseumBrienzCHF 30
Swiss Chocolate AdventureZurichCHF 16
ALIMENTARIUM (Food Museum)VeveyCHF 14

Visit three of these museums and you’ve recovered CHF 55–80 in value — without using a single train or bus.

Interior of the Swiss National Museum in Zurich — free entry included with the Swiss Travel Pass for all 500+ Swiss museums
The Swiss National Museum in Zurich — free entry with the Swiss Travel Pass. An annual Swiss Museum Pass alone costs CHF 147.

Swiss Travel Pass vs Half Fare Card

This is the most important comparison for most visitors to Switzerland. The Half Fare Card (CHF 150 for one month) gives you 50% off all standard tickets — trains, buses, boats, and most mountain railways — without offering unlimited travel. Here is how the two compare:

FeatureSwiss Travel PassHalf Fare Card
PriceFrom CHF 254 (3 days)CHF 150 (1 month)
Validity3 / 4 / 6 / 8 / 15 days1 month
Train TravelUnlimited50% off each ticket
Bus TravelUnlimited50% off each ticket
Boat TravelUnlimited50% off each ticket
City TransportFree in 90+ citiesNot included
Museum EntryFree (500+ museums)Not included
Mountain Railways50% off most50% off most
Ticket BuyingNone neededBuy every ticket
Best ForFast-paced multi-city travelLonger stays, fewer trains

Which Is Better for Budget Travellers?

If you plan to take fewer than two or three long-distance journeys per day, the Half Fare Card is almost always the better value. A Zurich–Lucerne return (CHF 54 with Half Fare Card, vs CHF 107 full price) is a good example — a handful of those journeys and you’ve already covered the CHF 150 cost of the card, while still having flexibility to drive or rest on other days.

Which Is Better for Families?

The Swiss Travel Pass wins for families with children 6–15 because the free Swiss Family Card allows all children to travel completely free. With the Half Fare Card, children still require tickets (albeit at 50% off).

Which Is Better for Long Stays?

For stays of 10+ days where you won’t be taking trains every single day, the Half Fare Card offers one full month of validity for CHF 150. The 15-day Swiss Travel Pass at CHF 499 only covers 15 travel days and costs more than three times as much.

To understand how Switzerland’s transport costs fit into your overall budget, check our detailed cost of living in Switzerland guide.

Is the Swiss Travel Pass Worth It? (Real Cost Examples)

The only honest way to answer this question is with real numbers. Below are four different traveller scenarios with actual cost breakdowns.

Example 1: 3-Day Fast-Paced Tourist (Zurich → Lucerne → Interlaken → Zermatt)

Without the Pass (point-to-point tickets, full price)

  • Zurich → Lucerne return (day trip)CHF 50
  • Lucerne → InterlakenCHF 68
  • Interlaken city bus (2 days)CHF 10
  • Interlaken → ZermattCHF 85
  • Lucerne boat cruiseCHF 38
  • 3× Lucerne tram/bus daysCHF 14
  • Swiss National MuseumCHF 10
Total without passCHF 275

The 3-day Swiss Travel Pass costs CHF 254 — saving around CHF 21 while also giving freedom to add extra journeys without cost anxiety.

Example 2: 8-Day Switzerland Itinerary (Scenic Train Enthusiast)

Without the Pass (8 days, major routes)

  • Zurich → St. Moritz (Glacier Express base)CHF 155
  • Glacier Express reservationCHF 49
  • St. Moritz → Tirano (Bernina Express)CHF 60
  • Bernina Express reservationCHF 33
  • Multiple city legs (est. 6 journeys)CHF 180
  • 3× museum entriesCHF 70
  • City transport (8 days)CHF 45
  • Lake Geneva cruiseCHF 55
Total without passCHF 647

The 8-day Swiss Travel Pass costs CHF 439 + CHF 82 in reservation fees = CHF 521 total. You save approximately CHF 126 — and can add spontaneous journeys for free.

Example 3: Family of 4 (2 Adults + 2 Children, 6 Days)

With the Swiss Travel Pass (6 days, 2nd class)

  • 2× Adult 6-day pass (CHF 399 each)CHF 798
  • Swiss Family Card (children 6–15 travel free)CHF 0
  • Scenic train reservations (approx.)CHF 80
Total family costCHF 878

Without the pass and Family Card, two children’s tickets alone would cost CHF 200–350 across 6 days of travel. The free Family Card is the single biggest reason families should choose the Swiss Travel Pass.

When the Swiss Travel Pass Is Worth It

✓ Buy the Pass If You Are…

  • Taking 3+ long-distance trains in a short stay
  • Travelling with children aged 6–15
  • Planning to visit multiple cities (Zurich, Lucerne, Bern, Zermatt)
  • Boarding scenic trains (Glacier Express, Bernina Express)
  • Visiting 3+ museums
  • Wanting stress-free travel without buying tickets
  • On a 4–8 day trip with daily transit use

For a quick estimate of whether it’s financially worth buying the pass for your specific route, try our Switzerland savings calculator and use our 3-day Switzerland itinerary as a planning reference.

How to Buy and Activate the Swiss Travel Pass

Where to Buy

The best place to buy the Swiss Travel Pass is the official SBB tourist webshop at swissrailways.com. This is the authorised online sales channel run by the Switzerland Travel Centre on behalf of SBB Swiss Federal Railways. You receive a PDF e-ticket by email within minutes of purchase.

You can also buy at major Swiss train station ticket windows (Zurich HB, Geneva Cornavin, Bern, Basel SBB, Lucerne, Zurich Airport) — though queues can be long, especially in summer. There is no price difference between channels, as rates are set centrally by the Swiss Travel System.

How to Activate

The digital (PDF) pass is activated on your first travel day — there is no need to validate at a machine. Simply show the pass on your phone or print it, and the conductor will check it. For the Flex pass, you select each travel day on the day you intend to travel, either via the SBB Mobile app or by noting the date on your printed pass before departure.

1st Class vs 2nd Class — Is First Class Worth It?

First class costs approximately 60% more than second class. On most Swiss trains, second class is clean, comfortable, and uncrowded outside of morning and evening commuter peaks. For tourists, second class on scenic trains offers essentially the same views. The main advantages of first class are: quieter carriages, wider seats, slightly more luggage space, and a higher chance of getting a window seat on busy tourist routes. For most travellers, second class represents the better value — but for a romantic trip or a long overnight journey, the upgrade is a genuine luxury.

💡 Insider Tip Even with a 2nd class Swiss Travel Pass, you can upgrade to 1st class on a specific journey by paying the fare difference at any station or onboard. This is ideal if you want to splurge on the Glacier Express without buying a full 1st class pass.

To understand how transport costs compare to broader living and travel costs in Switzerland, our Switzerland cost of living guide has a full breakdown. And if you want salary benchmarks to know how much a Swiss train trip costs relative to local wages, the Switzerland salary and tax calculator is a useful reference.

For an authoritative overview of Switzerland’s public transport pricing structure, the SBB official Swiss Travel Pass page is the definitive source.

Where Should You Actually Go in Switzerland?

From Zermatt and Lucerne to hidden Alpine villages most tourists never find — our destination guide covers the best places to visit, ranked by experience and value.

See the Best Places to Visit in Switzerland →

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does the Swiss Travel Pass cost in 2026? +
The Swiss Travel Pass 2026 starts at CHF 254 (approximately USD 339) for a 3-day adult 2nd class pass. Prices go up to CHF 787 for a 15-day 1st class adult pass. Youth travelers under 25 receive a 30% discount. Children under 16 travel free with the Swiss Family Card when accompanied by a parent holding a valid pass. Prices increased by around 5% from January 2026.
Is the Swiss Travel Pass worth it in 2026? +
The Swiss Travel Pass is worth it if you are taking three or more long-distance train journeys per travel day, visiting multiple Swiss cities, or travelling with children. For solo travellers or those taking fewer journeys, the Half Fare Card at CHF 150 is often better value. The break-even point for a 3-day pass typically sits at around CHF 250 worth of individual tickets — roughly three major intercity journeys plus city transport.
Does the Swiss Travel Pass cover Jungfraujoch? +
No, the Swiss Travel Pass does not fully cover Jungfraujoch. Pass holders receive approximately a 27% discount on the full round-trip fare. This means you still pay around CHF 189 out of pocket for the journey from Interlaken Ost, compared to the standard adult price of around CHF 260. The Jungfraujoch discount is lower than most mountain discounts offered by the pass.
Does the Swiss Travel Pass cover the Glacier Express? +
Yes, the base fare on the Glacier Express is fully covered by the Swiss Travel Pass. However, a mandatory seat reservation fee applies — approximately CHF 39 in winter and CHF 49 in summer. You cannot board the Glacier Express without a pre-booked reservation, regardless of whether you hold a travel pass or a standard ticket.
What is the Swiss Travel Pass Flex? +
The Swiss Travel Pass Flex lets you choose any 3, 4, 6, 8, or 15 non-consecutive travel days within a one-month validity window. You activate each day individually before departure. It costs approximately 15% more than the equivalent consecutive-day pass but is ideal if you plan to hike, rent a car, or rest on some days. Museum entry and mountain discounts only apply on the days you activate.
Do children travel free with the Swiss Travel Pass? +
Children aged 6 to 15 travel completely free when accompanied by at least one parent holding a valid Swiss Travel Pass, using the free Swiss Family Card. Children under 6 always travel free on Swiss public transport, regardless of any pass. The Family Card is available at no extra cost and covers stepchildren and foster children in the same age range.
What is the difference between the Swiss Travel Pass and the Half Fare Card? +
The Swiss Travel Pass gives unlimited travel on all included trains, buses, and boats plus free museum entry, starting at CHF 254 for 3 days. The Half Fare Card (CHF 150 for one month) gives a 50% discount on all tickets but requires you to buy each one individually. The Half Fare Card does not include free museum entry or unlimited city transport. For short, intense trips, the Swiss Travel Pass wins; for longer, slower stays, the Half Fare Card is usually better value.
Where is the best place to buy the Swiss Travel Pass? +
The best place to buy the Swiss Travel Pass is the official SBB tourist webshop at swissrailways.com, which delivers a PDF e-ticket to your email within minutes. Prices are fixed worldwide — you will not find it cheaper elsewhere. You can also purchase at major Swiss train station counters (Zurich HB, Geneva, Bern, Lucerne) and at Zurich Airport, though queues in summer can be long.
Does the Swiss Travel Pass cover buses and trams? +
Yes. The Swiss Travel Pass covers all PostBus routes across Switzerland, and provides free unlimited use of public transport (trams, city buses, urban boats) in over 90 Swiss towns and cities including Zurich, Geneva, Bern, Lucerne, and Basel. This is one of the most practical day-to-day benefits of the pass for city visitors.
Is there a youth discount on the Swiss Travel Pass? +
Yes. Travelers aged 16 to 24 (inclusive, up to their 25th birthday) receive a 30% discount on both the consecutive and Flex Swiss Travel Pass. This applies to both 1st and 2nd class. Children under 16 traveling alone receive a 50% discount, and children under 6 always travel free.

Final Verdict: Should You Buy the Swiss Travel Pass in 2026?

For most first-time visitors to Switzerland planning a multi-city trip of 4–8 days, the Swiss Travel Pass remains the smartest and most convenient way to travel. It removes the daily friction of buying tickets, unlocks free entry to hundreds of museums, covers the base fare on all four scenic panoramic railways, and delivers genuine savings over point-to-point tickets — especially for families.

However, the 5% price increase in 2026 has narrowed the margin slightly. If you’re planning a longer stay with rest days, base yourself in one city, or primarily want to visit Jungfraujoch, the Half Fare Card at CHF 150 is a more flexible and often cheaper alternative.

Our recommendation: run the numbers against your own itinerary. Add up your expected train journeys, city transport costs, and any museums you plan to visit — then compare to the pass price. For most active 4–8 day itineraries, the Swiss Travel Pass comes out ahead.

For more inspiration on building your perfect Switzerland trip, explore our full 3 days in Switzerland itinerary and the best places to visit in Switzerland.

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