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Bern, Switzerland
Bern

Bernese Mittelland

Bern

Switzerland's quiet federal capital works either as a half-day train stop from Zurich or Geneva or a calm two-night base, with arcades to wander and the bear park by the river.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Best length

Half-day stop, or 1-2 nights

Airport

Most arrive by train; nearest hubs Zurich (ZRH) and Geneva (GVA)

Airport to centre

Direct train ZRH ~1h10; GVA ~1h45; tiny Bern airport (BRN) has few routes

Best base

The Old Town (Altstadt) for the arcades; near the station for early trains

In short

Bern at a glance

Bern is Switzerland's federal capital but it travels small: the entire UNESCO old town sits on a sandstone peninsula inside a loop of the River Aare, and you can walk its 6km of covered arcades end to end in an afternoon. Most UK visitors do it as a half-day stop on a rail trip between Zurich and Geneva rather than a stay; if you do overnight, two nights is plenty, and the move that separates a good visit from a flat one is timing your arrival for the Zytglogge clock and walking down to the Aare loop rather than just doing the shops.

The short version

  • Bern is a half-day to two-night stop, not a week-long base โ€” the old town is small and walkable, with the station five minutes from the arcades.
  • It sits dead centre on the Zurichโ€“Geneva main line (about 1h to each), so it slots into a rail trip with zero detour.
  • Time your visit for a few minutes before the hour to catch the Zytglogge clock figures, then walk the arcades downhill to the bear park.
  • The 6km of covered arcades (the Lauben) mean Bern works in rain โ€” shopping, cafรฉs and museums are all under cover.
  • Skip the hire car entirely: the old town is largely pedestrianised and parking on the peninsula is scarce and dear.

Bern is the rare European capital that travels smaller than its status: the entire old town fits on a sandstone tongue of land inside a loop of the River Aare, and the federal parliament sits a two-minute walk from a medieval clock tower and the cityโ€™s resident bears. The mistake first-timers make is over-committing โ€” Bern gets booked as a multi-night base when its whole UNESCO core is a half-dayโ€™s walk, or it gets dismissed and skipped entirely when it sits dead centre on the Zurich-Geneva line and costs nothing in detour. The right read is somewhere between: a deliberate half-day stop, or a calm one or two nights that youโ€™ll remember for the arcades and the river rather than a checklist of sights.

The thing to get right is the rhythm. Arrive a few minutes before the hour so the Zytglogge clock figures perform, walk the 6km of covered arcades downhill โ€” they keep you dry, which is why Bern survives a wet day better than most Swiss cities โ€” and finish at the bear park and the Aare bridge for the view back up over the rooftops. Below, the structured planning picks up from there: where to stay if you do overnight, the train links in and out, and a realistic budget in pounds for a city that carries Switzerlandโ€™s prices without its mountain-excursion bills.

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Bern

BรคrenPark (Bear Park)

Bern's name means bear, and the city has kept them since the 1500s. The modern BรคrenPark replaced the old pits with an open riverside enclosure beside the Aare, where you can watch the bears for free. It pairs naturally with the walk down from the old town and the view back up over the rooftops from the bridge. Free, and best in the cooler hours.

About 30โ€“45 minuteโ€ฆ
No tickets required Read the guide

Zytglogge

The medieval clock tower at the heart of Bern's old town. Its astronomical clock's figures โ€” a jester, a rooster and a parade of bears โ€” perform for about four minutes before each hour, so stand on the east side a few minutes early rather than dead on the hour. Watching from the street is free; a guided tour up the tower costs around CHF 20.

Ten minutes to catโ€ฆ
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Old Town (Altstadt)

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The sandstone peninsula inside the Aare loop, with the arcades, the Zytglogge and the Minster. Staying here puts everything on foot and gives you the old town to yourself after the day-trippers leave on the evening trains. Rooms are limited and not cheap, so book ahead.

Best for: First visits, short stays, atmosphere

Browse hotels Central peninsula

Near the station (Bahnhof)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The streets around the main station put you five minutes from the arcades and on top of the rail links โ€” the sensible base if Bern is a stopover and you've an early onward train to Interlaken or Geneva. Less characterful than the peninsula but more practical.

Best for: Stopovers, early trains, value

Browse hotels 5 min walk to old town

Lรคnggasse

ยฃ value

The university quarter north-west of the station, with cheaper rooms, student cafรฉs and an easy tram into the centre. Good value for a city where central rooms run dear, and a more local evening than the old town's tourist core.

Best for: Budget, longer stays, local feel

Browse hotels 10-15 min by tram

Airport to city centre

Bern airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Direct train from Zurich Airport (ZRH) ~1h10 about CHF 50 / ยฃ44 single, 2nd class Best entry point; trains roughly twice an hour
Direct train from Geneva Airport (GVA) ~1h45 about CHF 50 / ยฃ44 single, 2nd class For arrivals into the French-speaking west
Bern Airport (BRN) bus/train into the city ~20-30 min about CHF 5 / ยฃ4 Only a handful of seasonal routes use BRN
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: Late May to September for terrace weather and swimming in the Aare with the locals, or December for the old-town Christmas market under the arcades. The arcades make Bern one of the few Swiss cities that works in rain, so a wet shoulder-season day is no disaster here.

Summer is the liveliest stretch โ€” Bernese leap into the fast, cold Aare and float down through the city, and cafรฉ terraces fill the squares. Winter is quiet and can be grey, but the covered arcades and the December market keep it pleasant; many visitors simply pass through year-round on the Zurich-Geneva line, so Bern rarely feels overrun the way Lucerne or Interlaken do in July-August.

What it costs

There are very few direct UK flights to tiny Bern Airport, so the realistic route is a budget-carrier or BA flight into Zurich or Geneva (off-peak returns from about ยฃ50-ยฃ90) and a direct train on. Build the train fare into your budget rather than treating Bern as a standalone fly-in city.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A UK couple doing two nights in Bern, mid-range and out of peak, spends roughly ยฃ620-ยฃ780 before flights: about ยฃ300-ยฃ420 on a central double room, ยฃ180-ยฃ240 on food and drink (Switzerland is dear โ€” a restaurant main runs CHF 25-40 / ยฃ22-ยฃ35), and ยฃ40-ยฃ60 on a Minster climb, a Zytglogge tour and trams. Flights into Zurich and the return trains add ยฃ150-ยฃ260 on top.

Bern carries Switzerland's general expense without the mountain-excursion costs, so the saver is the same as elsewhere: eat a Coop or Migros meal-deal at lunch (CHF 6-12), drink the free fountain water the old town is famous for, and keep sit-down restaurants for one evening.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Switzerland

See the full Switzerland guide

Bern FAQs

Is Bern worth visiting, or just a stopover?
Both work. The whole UNESCO old town is small enough to see properly in half a day, which is why many UK travellers treat it as a stop on the Zurich-Geneva rail line. It rewards an overnight if you want the arcades and the Aare loop to yourself after the day-trippers leave, but one to two nights is the ceiling โ€” it's a half-day city, not a week's base.
How do you get to Bern from the airport?
By train. Bern's own airport has almost no UK flights, so fly into Zurich (a direct train of about 1h10) or Geneva (about 1h45) and ride straight in โ€” Bern sits dead centre on the main line, so it's no detour. The station is a five-minute walk from the arcades.
Do you need a car in Bern?
No. The old town is largely pedestrianised, everything is within a kilometre on foot, and parking on the peninsula is scarce and expensive. Walk, use the occasional BERNMOBIL tram for the Paul Klee centre or an outlying hotel, and keep the car for nowhere on this trip.

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