Bernese Oberland (Canton of Bern)
Jungfraujoch - Top of Europe
How to do the Jungfraujoch from Interlaken: what the cogwheel-railway trip really costs, why you only go on a clear morning, and how to cut the fare with a rail pass.
Where
Interlaken, Switzerland
Opening hours
The Jungfraubahn runs all year. First train up from Interlaken Ost is around 07:30-08:00 with the last descent from the Jungfraujoch about 17:00-17:45; the station, Sphinx terrace and Ice Palace are open roughly 09:00-17:00. The Eiger Express gondola via Grindelwald Terminal shaves about 45 minutes off the journey when it is running but closes for spring and autumn maintenance, so check before you build your day around it.
Tickets
Standard return from Interlaken Ost is around CHF 210 (about ยฃ185) in second class. A Swiss Travel Pass or Half Fare Card cuts the high-altitude leg by about 25%, bringing it to roughly CHF 160 (about ยฃ141); a Berner Oberland Regional Pass works similarly. Children 6-15 travel on a Junior Travelcard with an accompanying adult. Seat reservations on the Eiger Express are free but advised in peak summer.
Time needed
A 5-7 hour round trip from Interlaken Ost - roughly 2 to 2.5 hours each way by train depending on the route, plus about 2 hours at the top for the Sphinx terrace, Ice Palace and Alpine Sensation walkway. Treat it as a half to full day, not a quick hop.
In short
Visiting Jungfraujoch - Top of Europe
The Jungfraujoch is the cogwheel-railway trip from Interlaken to Europe's highest station at 3,454m, where the Sphinx observatory terrace, the Ice Palace carved into the glacier and the view down the 22km Aletsch Glacier are the payoff. It is also the most expensive thing most people do in Switzerland, so two rules matter: only go on a genuinely clear morning, and buy a Swiss Travel Pass or Half Fare Card first, because either knocks roughly a quarter off the high-altitude fare. Book a timed slot at jungfrau.ch ahead in summer, take the first train up, and budget a 5-7 hour round trip from Interlaken Ost.
The two rules that decide the day
The Jungfraujoch is the cogwheel-railway climb from Interlaken Ost to Europeโs highest railway station at 3,454m, ending at the Sphinx observatory terrace, the Ice Palace tunnelled into the glacier, and the long view down the 22km Aletsch Glacier. It is also the single most expensive thing most people do in Switzerland, so two rules govern it. First, only go on a genuinely clear morning โ check the live Jungfraujoch webcam before you commit, because in cloud you pay about ยฃ185 for a whiteout and a chocolate shop. Second, buy your rail product before the ticket: a Swiss Travel Pass or Half Fare Card knocks roughly 25% off the high-altitude leg, bringing a standard CHF 210 (about ยฃ185) return down to around CHF 160 (about ยฃ141).
Take the first train up. The early departure from Interlaken Ost around 07:30โ08:00 puts you on the terrace before the mid-morning coach tours and gives the cleanest light over the Eiger, Mรถnch and Jungfrau. In July and August reserve a timed slot at jungfrau.ch ahead of travelling; out of peak you can usually buy at Interlaken Ost the night before, once youโve seen the forecast.
Getting up there, and what it actually costs
There are two routes up and they cost the same. The faster one runs via Grindelwald Terminal and the Eiger Express gondola to Eigergletscher, then the final cog tunnel to the Jungfraujoch โ about 45 minutes quicker, but the gondola shuts for spring and autumn maintenance, so confirm itโs running. The classic route goes via Lauterbrunnen, Wengen and Kleine Scheidegg on the Wengernalp cog railway: slower, around 2 to 2.5 hours, but the scenic one. Either way, budget a 5 to 7 hour round trip with roughly two hours at the top for the Sphinx terrace, the Ice Palace and the Alpine Sensation walkway.
On the maths: a standard second-class return from Interlaken Ost is around CHF 210 (about ยฃ185), and the Swiss Travel Pass or Half Fare Card discount is what makes it bearable. If youโre doing two or more mountain trips from Interlaken โ say this and the Schilthorn โ price up a Berner Oberland Regional Pass before you buy any single fares, as it can undercut the lot.
Is it worth it?
Honestly: only on a blue-sky morning. On a clear day the Aletsch Glacier, the glittering Sphinx terrace and the ring of 4,000m peaks earn the fare and then some. In cloud it is an expensive lesson โ you ride two hours through grey to stand in a snowstorm you canโt see past. So treat the weather as the deciding factor, not the diary: keep the day flexible, watch the webcam, and if the forecast turns marginal switch to the cheaper, often clearer Schilthorn instead. Pack a fleece and sunglasses whatever the date โ itโs below freezing at the top in midsummer, and the glare off the snow is fierce.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Interlaken city guide.
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