Bern, Switzerland

State guide with cities, regions, and key information.

Introduction
The canton of Bern (Kanton Bern) is Switzerland's second-largest canton by area, stretching from the Jura mountains in the north across the Mittelland farming plain through the city of Bern to the high Bernese Alps in the south. The canton is bilingual at its administrative northern edge — the Jura bernois region around Moutier, Saint-Imier and Tavannes is French-speaking, distinct from the Swiss German Mittelland and the Bernese Oberland — and includes some of Switzerland's most-visited Alpine landscapes: the Jungfrau-Aletsch UNESCO World Heritage area with its Jungfrau, Mönch and Eiger summits, the Interlaken-Thun-Brienz lake corridor, the Emmental cheese-making valleys, and the Seeland three-lakes region around Lake Biel. The state-level read of Bern is the wider regional landscape: the city of Bern as the federal capital and demographic core, the Bernese Oberland as the country's premier Alpine destination, the Emmental and the Seeland as the rural hinterland, the Bernese Jura as the canton's francophone minority. The canton's transport network is unusually dense — the BLS regional railway and lake-shipping operator covers the entire canton from the Lötschberg-Simplon corridor through Bern HB to the Berner Oberland, while SBB long-distance services reach Bern HB from every corner of Switzerland and the Jungfraubahnen mountain railway carries visitors to the highest railway station in Europe at the Jungfraujoch.

Discover Bern

The Bernese Oberland (Berner Oberland) is the canton's southern Alpine third and Switzerland's flagship mountain region. Inscribed as UNESCO World Heritage in 2001, the Jungfrau-Aletsch area covers 824 square kilometres of glaciers and high peaks: the Jungfrau (4,158 m) named for the 'maiden' on the eastern Alpine ridge, the Mönch (4,107 m) the 'monk', and the Eiger (3,967 m) the 'ogre' whose 1,800-metre north face is one of the great climbing challenges of the Alps (first climbed in 1938). The Aletsch Glacier — Europe's longest glacier at 23 km — flows south from the Jungfraujoch saddle. Interlaken sits at the centre between Lake Thun and Lake Brienz, with the Höhematte parade ground in the town centre giving the unbroken Eiger-Mönch-Jungfrau view. The Jungfraubahnen mountain railway network carries visitors from Interlaken Ost or Grindelwald-Terminal through Kleine Scheidegg, Eigergletscher, and the seven-kilometre tunnel inside the Eiger to the Jungfraujoch (3,454 m) — the 'Top of Europe' viewing platform with the Sphinx Observatory, the Aletsch Glacier panorama, and the Ice Palace ice tunnels. The Lauterbrunnen valley to the south of Interlaken — a U-shaped glacial valley enclosed by 1,000-metre cliffs — has 72 waterfalls including the 297-metre Staubbach Falls and the underground Trümmelbach Falls inside the cliff, plus the cliff-clinging villages of Wengen and Mürren reachable only by mountain railway and cable car.

Travel Types

Bernese Oberland & Jungfrau-Aletsch UNESCO

Jungfrau, Mönch and Eiger summits, the Aletsch Glacier (Europe's longest at 23 km), the Jungfraujoch 'Top of Europe' at 3,454 m, the Lauterbrunnen valley with 72 waterfalls, the cliff-clinging car-free villages of Wengen and Mürren, the Schilthorn-Piz Gloria revolving restaurant.

Lake Thun, Lake Brienz & Aare Corridor

Two emerald-glacial lakes framing Interlaken, the medieval Schloss Thun, Spiez's lakeside vineyard, the Brienzer Rothorn steam mountain railway, the Giessbach Falls, and BLS lake shipping with the historic paddle steamers Blümlisalp (1906) and Lötschberg (1914).

Emmental — Cheese, Farmhouses & Hornussen

Emmentaler AOP cheese region with the Schaukäserei Affoltern open dairy, the Bernese farmhouse architecture across the Emme valley, Burgdorf's Zähringer castle, Langnau as Hornussen-tradition centre, rolling pre-Alpine pastures.

Seeland, Three Lakes & Biel-Bienne Watchmaking

Lake Biel with the Chasselas-vineyard northern shore, Switzerland's largest bilingual city Biel/Bienne with Rolex, Omega and Swatch headquarters and the Cité du Temps museum, the medieval lakeside town of Murten/Morat, and the navigable Three Lakes corridor through the Aare-Hagneck canal.

Bernese Jura — Francophone Switzerland in Canton Bern

The French-speaking northern districts of the canton — Moutier, Saint-Imier, Tavannes, La Neuveville — with Longines and other watchmaking heritage, the Vallon de Saint-Imier, Burgundian-period La Neuveville, and the cantonal-bilingual administrative tradition.

Skiing, Mountaineering & Resort Villages

Wengen-Grindelwald-Mürren on the Jungfrau Ski Pass with the Lauberhorn World Cup downhill, Adelboden-Lenk for the family alternative, Gstaad-Saanenmöser-Schönried-Saanen as the luxury circuit, plus the Eiger north face and the Schilthorn-Piz Gloria revolving restaurant.

Canton Bern — Practical Travel Notes
  • The canton of Bern is bilingual: German across most of the territory, French in the Bernese Jura (Moutier, Saint-Imier, Tavannes, La Neuveville). Cantonal documents and signage in those districts are French; visa applicants from the Jura bernois travelling to embassies in Bern city use German or French interchangeably.
  • Currency is the Swiss franc (CHF). Switzerland is NOT in the eurozone — euros are accepted at major hotels and large stores at unfavourable rates, but Swiss francs are universally preferred. Card payment including contactless is universal; some traditional Beizen and small mountain restaurants remain cash-only.
  • The Swiss Travel Pass covers all SBB, BLS, Bernmobil, lake-shipping (BLS lakes), most cable cars and mountain railways at a 50% reduction (Jungfraubahnen, Schilthornbahn, Pilatusbahn at half price). The Berner Oberland Pass is the regional alternative for those staying in the Oberland for several days.
  • Bern HB is one of Switzerland's two busiest train stations by volume per capita, but unlike Zurich HB it has a single concentrated layout — all platforms accessible within 90 seconds' walk of the central concourse. Zurich Airport is reachable in 75 minutes by direct ICE; Geneva Airport in 1h50 by IC.
  • The Jungfraujoch ('Top of Europe') is the canton's most-visited Alpine attraction — the cogwheel railway from Interlaken Ost or Grindelwald-Terminal takes 2 to 2.5 hours one-way, the Sphinx Observatory and Ice Palace are at the top, total visit time should be 6–8 hours from Interlaken or 8–10 hours from Bern. Tickets are expensive (CHF 200+); the early-bird ticket gives a discount before 09:30 departure.
  • Aare swimming in Bern city is universal in summer (late May to early September), but the current is strong and the water is glacial-cold (15–17 °C even in August). Use the Marzili public baths as entry, exit at the marked steps before the river accelerates, and use an Aaresack (waterproof swim bag) as flotation.
  • Sunday is a quiet day across the canton — most non-tourist shops close, restaurants and tourist attractions stay open, public transport runs on the standard Sunday timetable. Plan grocery shopping for Saturday.
  • Mountain weather changes rapidly. The Bernese Oberland summits can be in cloud at noon and clear at 3 pm; check the weather radar and the Swiss Alpine Club hut-status pages before multi-day routes. The Jungfraujoch viewing platform is at 3,454 m — altitude effects (mild headache, breathlessness) are normal.
  • Skiing season runs from December through April in most of the Bernese Oberland; the high-altitude Jungfraujoch and the Klein Matterhorn (technically Valais but accessed from canton Bern) ski year-round. The car-free villages of Wengen, Mürren, and parts of Saas-Fee require leaving the car at the valley station.
  • Tipping in Switzerland is direct — round up to the nearest franc for drinks, add 5 to 10 percent at restaurants, paid directly to the server when stating the total. Service is theoretically included; a small tip is expected and signals satisfaction.
  • Bern Belp Airport (BRN) is the canton's small airport, mainly business jets and limited seasonal commercial service. Most international travellers arrive via Zurich Airport (ZRH) or Geneva Airport (GVA) and continue by direct SBB intercity. Both airports have direct trains every 30 minutes to Bern HB.
  • The federal-capital function is concentrated in Bern city — the cantonal government uses the Rathaus on the Rathausplatz in the Old Town, distinct from the federal Bundeshaus on the Bundesplatz. The Universal Postal Union HQ (Weltpoststrasse 4 near Bern HB) is the canton's other significant international institution; the major UN-system organisations are in Geneva, not Bern.
Cities in Bern

1 city with detailed travel information