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Jet d'Eau & the lake promenade, Switzerland
Jet d'Eau & the lake promenade

Canton of Geneva (Lake Geneva region)

Jet d'Eau & the lake promenade

Geneva's free signature: a 140-metre water plume you can walk right up to on the Eaux-Vives jetty, then loop the Quai du Mont-Blanc for the Alps-and-lake view.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Geneva, Switzerland

Opening hours

Open access (always open) to view from the shore. The fountain itself runs daily on a seasonal schedule, longer in summer and switched off in high wind, freezing weather or for maintenance; it is lit after dark. The Eaux-Vives jetty is a public walkway. Check the current running schedule if you want to be sure it is on.

Tickets

Free โ€” no ticket needed to see the Jet d'Eau or walk the jetty and the lake promenade. There is nothing to pay; you only spend if you take a lake boat, hire a pedalo or stop at a cafe along the quays.

Time needed

Half an hour to walk out to the fountain and back; an hour or two if you loop both quays for the Alps view and stop for a coffee or a lake boat.

In short

Visiting Jet d'Eau & the lake promenade

The Jet d'Eau is Geneva's free signature: a 140-metre water plume shooting up from Lake Geneva. You can walk out along the Eaux-Vives jetty to stand right beside it (expect spray), then loop back along the Quai du Mont-Blanc for the classic view of the fountain, the lake and the Alps behind. The easiest landmark to fit into a Geneva day.

The fountain, up close and from afar

The Jet dโ€™Eau is Genevaโ€™s free signature โ€” a 140-metre column of water punched up out of Lake Geneva that you can see from half the city. There are two ways to take it in, and you should do both. For the postcard view, walk the Quai du Mont-Blanc along the northern shore: from there the plume lines up with the lake and, on a clear day, the Alps standing behind it, which is the single best frame Geneva offers for free.

Then walk out to it. A public jetty extends from the Eaux-Vives shore towards the base of the fountain, letting you stand right beside the column and feel its scale. Fair warning: the wind regularly carries the spray straight across the walkway, so on a breezy day you will get soaked and the stone turns slippery. On a hot afternoon thatโ€™s part of the fun; in cooler weather, judge the wind before you commit.

Working it into a Geneva day

It costs nothing and thereโ€™s nothing to book โ€” but the fountain isnโ€™t always running. It operates on a seasonal daily schedule, longer in summer, and gets switched off in high wind, freezing weather or for maintenance. After dark itโ€™s floodlit, which is its own quieter spectacle. If seeing it actually on matters to you, glance at the official running schedule for the day rather than trusting to luck.

Time-wise itโ€™s flexible. Half an hour does the out-and-back along the jetty; an hour or two lets you loop both quays for the Alps view, watch the lake boats and pedalos, and stop for a coffee on the waterfront. It pairs naturally with a Lake Geneva boat trip, a wander up into the Old Town, or a stroll through the lakeside Jardin Anglais with its famous flower clock. As a landmark itโ€™s honest about itself: a big, beautiful jet of water with a great backdrop โ€” not an attraction you spend hours on, but the easiest and most photogenic free thing in the city.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Geneva city guide.

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Jet d'Eau & the lake promenade FAQs

Can you walk right up to the Jet d'Eau?
Yes. A public jetty runs out from the Eaux-Vives shore towards the base of the fountain, so you can stand close to the 140-metre plume. Be warned that the wind regularly blows the spray across the walkway, so you can get soaked โ€” fun on a hot day, less so otherwise. Watch your footing as the stone gets slippery.
Is the Jet d'Eau always running?
No. It runs daily on a seasonal schedule, longer in summer, but it is switched off in strong wind, freezing conditions and for maintenance, and it is lit at night. If seeing it on is important to you, check the official running schedule for the day rather than assuming it will be going.
What is the best view of the Jet d'Eau?
For the classic postcard shot โ€” the plume against the lake with the Alps behind on a clear day โ€” walk the Quai du Mont-Blanc on the opposite shore, where you get the fountain, the water and the mountains in one frame. For the sheer scale of it, walk out along the Eaux-Vives jetty and stand at its base.