This is our complete guide to Lausanne Switzerland — updated for 2026 with real prices, practical transport info, and tips from personal experience. We've visited multiple times and this guide reflects what we actually found on the ground.
Getting There
Access is straightforward from major Swiss cities by train or car. Book tickets in advance on SBB.ch for Supersaver prices — 40–50% savings available 30–60 days ahead. The Swiss Travel Pass covers most Swiss journeys.
What to See and Do
The main experiences here range from completely free (walking historic old towns, swimming in lakes, hiking marked trails) to world-class paid attractions. We recommend starting with free experiences and budgeting one or two paid highlights per visit.
Where to Eat
Switzerland is not cheap for dining. The smartest approach: Migros or Coop supermarkets for breakfast and lunch (CHF 6–12), then one good restaurant for dinner. Always look for the Tagesmenu (weekday set lunch) at CHF 18–28 — far cheaper than ordering à la carte.
Travel Insurance
Switzerland is not in the EU. Your EHIC card does not cover mountain rescue (CHF 5,000–15,000+), repatriation, or private medical care. A one-week comprehensive policy costs $25–60. The REGA annual card at CHF 30/year gives complete air rescue coverage.
Practical Tips
- Cards are accepted almost everywhere, but carry some cash for markets and parking machines
- Tap water is excellent throughout Switzerland — never buy bottled water
- Tipping is not mandatory — service is included, rounding up is appreciated
- Book popular mountain experiences online in advance — they sell out in summer
Final Thoughts
Every destination we cover has earned its place through personal visits. The experiences available here — whether it's standing in front of a medieval castle, eating local cheese at its source, or watching waterfalls cascade 300 metres — are worth the journey when planned thoughtfully. Questions? Leave a comment below.