The Swiss Travel Pass is worth it if you're travelling between 2–3 different Swiss cities per day for 3+ consecutive days. If you're staying 2+ nights in each city and making day trips, individual tickets are almost always cheaper.
Swiss Travel Pass Prices 2026
Current prices for all pass durations — 2nd class (most popular).
First class passes cost approximately 55% more. Swiss second class trains are extremely comfortable, clean, and fast — there is almost no reason to pay for first class unless you specifically want the extra space or quieter carriages. For most travellers, 2nd class is the right choice.
What the Pass Includes
The Real Maths — Does It Actually Pay Off?
We ran the numbers on three real Switzerland itineraries.
Itinerary A — Fast Mover (Pass Worth It ✓)
7 days, moving between cities every 1–2 nights: Zurich → Lucerne → Interlaken → Grindelwald → Bern → Geneva → Lausanne.
Itinerary B — Slow Traveller (Pass Not Worth It ✗)
7 days, Geneva-based: 3 nights in Geneva, day trips to Lausanne, Montreux, Gruyères, and Annecy (France).
The pass only covers travel within Switzerland. Day trips to France (Annecy, Chamonix) are not included. If a big part of your itinerary involves French destinations from Geneva, the pass value decreases significantly. Always add up your actual Swiss-only travel before deciding.
Should You Buy the Swiss Travel Pass? Honest Verdict
Two scenarios. Which one are you?
- You're moving cities every 1–2 nights
- Your itinerary includes Zurich, Bern, Lucerne, Interlaken, and Geneva
- You plan to use city trams and buses daily
- You want to visit multiple mountain railways (50% off adds up fast)
- You value the convenience of not buying tickets constantly
- You're travelling with children (Family Card: kids under 16 travel free)
- You want access to 500+ museums free
- You're staying in one city for most of the trip
- You're doing day trips mainly from Geneva or Zurich
- Several of your trips are to France (Annecy, Chamonix)
- You're willing to book Supersaver tickets in advance on SBB.ch
- Your itinerary includes only 2–3 train journeys total
- You have a Half-Fare Card already
- You're renting a car for most of the trip
Cheaper Alternatives to the Swiss Travel Pass
The pass is not the only option — and sometimes not the best one.
Supersaver tickets are great — but they're non-refundable and non-changeable. If your travel plans are flexible or you're not sure of your exact itinerary, the pass offers more freedom. The savings from Supersavers only exist if you stick exactly to your plan.
Scenic Train Routes Included with the Pass
This is where the pass gets genuinely exciting — Switzerland's scenic railways are extraordinary.
The Swiss Travel Pass includes travel on some of the most famous scenic railways in the world. These routes alone can justify the pass price for many travellers, especially when combined with regular city-to-city travel.
- Buy the pass before you arrive in Switzerland — it's often cheaper from official resellers abroad than at Swiss stations
- Activate the pass on your first day of travel, not when you buy it — it's valid from the day you first use it
- Use the SBB app to plan journeys and check timetables — it works perfectly with the travel pass
- For the Glacier Express and Bernina Express, book your seat reservation in advance even with the pass — they sell out
- The Family Card is free with any adult pass — children under 16 travel free with a parent, which makes the pass far better value for families
- The pass covers Zurich, Geneva, and Basel airport train connections — this alone saves CHF 12–30 depending on the airport
- Mountain railways discount (50%) works even for big-ticket rides like Mt. Pilatus and Schilthorn — always ask at the counter
Is the Swiss Travel Pass Worth It in 2026?
After years of living near Geneva and travelling across Switzerland constantly, our honest verdict: the pass is excellent for the right itinerary and unnecessary for the wrong one.
If you're doing a classic Switzerland circuit — flying into Zurich, working your way through Lucerne, Interlaken, Bern, and Geneva before flying out — the pass pays for itself and gives you the enormous convenience of just boarding any train without thinking about tickets. Add the family card if you have children and the value becomes exceptional.
If you're spending most of your time in one area, doing day trips from a fixed base, or making side trips into France, calculate your individual ticket costs first. You may find that booking Supersaver tickets in advance on SBB.ch saves you CHF 50–100 compared to the pass — money that can go toward a fondue dinner instead.
Have questions about your specific Switzerland itinerary? Leave a comment below with your plans and we'll help you work out whether the pass makes sense for you.