The Swiss Travel Pass is one of Switzerland's most marketed travel products β and one of the most misunderstood. For some itineraries it's excellent value. For others it's a waste of money. We use Swiss trains constantly and this is our honest take.
Prices 2026
2nd class: 3 days CHF 244 (~$265), 4 days CHF 289 (~$315), 6 days CHF 339 (~$368), 8 days CHF 389 (~$423). First class costs approximately 55% more β stick with second class, Swiss trains are extremely comfortable.
What's Included
Unlimited trains (all SBB routes), PostBus network, city trams and buses, lake boats (Lake Geneva, Lucerne, Zurich). 50% discount on most mountain railways, 25% off Jungfraujoch. Free entry to 500+ Swiss museums. Family Card: children under 16 travel free with a parent.
When It Pays Off
Geneva β Lausanne β Montreux β Interlaken β Bern β Zurich itinerary over 7 days: individual tickets cost ~CHF 380, 8-day pass costs CHF 389. Add 50% off Mt. Pilatus (saving CHF 36) and free lake boats (saving CHF 30+) and the pass wins clearly.
When to Skip It
If you're staying in one area and making day trips from a single base β like Geneva with excursions to Annecy, Yvoire, and GruyΓ¨res β individual Supersaver tickets on SBB.ch are usually cheaper. Day trips into France (Annecy, Chamonix) are NOT covered by the pass.
Alternatives
Supersaver tickets (SBB.ch, 30β60 days ahead): 40β50% off. Half-Fare Card CHF 120/month: 50% off everything. Regional day passes: CHF 35β55 if staying in one area.
Our Verdict
Buy the pass if you're moving cities every 1β2 days across Switzerland. Skip it if you're staying in one area or doing day trips mainly into France. Always calculate before you buy.