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Money, Safety, the Swiss Travel Pass & eSIM in Switzerland

Money, Safety, the Swiss Travel Pass & eSIM in Switzerland

Home Switzerland Practical InfoMoney, Safety, the Swiss Travel Pass & eSIM in Switzerland
Gate8 Global Team

Switzerland's currency is the Swiss franc (CHF, roughly $1.20–1.25 as of mid-2026 — the franc trades slightly above the dollar, not at flat parity). It's consistently one of the two or three most expensive countries in the world for travelers: expect $150–250/day mid-range per person including hotels and food. The Swiss Travel Pass (from CHF 254 / roughly $315 for 3 days) covers trains, buses, and lake boats nationwide plus free or discounted museum and mountain-excursion entry — it's usually worth it if you're taking more than 2–3 long train journeys or one mountain excursion during your trip. Switzerland is extremely safe; crime is not a real concern for tourists.

Here's the section that keeps Switzerland's biggest reputation risk — the cost — from turning into an actual budgeting disaster. The currency, the real day-to-day numbers, whether that famous rail pass is worth buying, and how to stay connected without a shock roaming bill.

Currency: Swiss franc, not euro

The Swiss franc (CHF, symbol Fr. or CHF) is the currency — remember Switzerland is Schengen but not EU, so euros are sometimes accepted informally in border towns and tourist spots but at a poor exchange rate, and you'll always get better value paying in francs. As of mid-2026, the franc trades at roughly $1.20–1.25, meaning it's worth noticeably more than a dollar, not the flat 1:1 'parity' some older guides still repeat — check a live rate before your trip since this moves.

Is the Swiss Travel Pass worth it?

Pass length2nd class priceRoughly worth it if you're...
3 consecutive daysCHF 254 (~$315)Doing the classic Zurich–Lucerne–Interlaken loop with one mountain excursion
4 consecutive daysCHF 309 (~$385)Adding Zermatt or Bern to the loop above
8 consecutive daysCHF 439 (~$545)A longer, multi-region trip with several long train legs
15 consecutive daysCHF 499 (~$620)An extended trip covering most of the country
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The pass includes unlimited trains, buses, and lake boats nationwide, free entry to 500+ museums, and a discount (typically 25–50%, not free) on most mountain cable cars and cogwheel trains, including Jungfraujoch and Pilatus. Do rough math first: add up your planned point-to-point train fares plus museum entries — if that total is close to or above the pass price, buy it; if you're mostly staying in one city, skip it and buy single tickets.

The Swiss Travel Pass
A Swiss Travel Pass ticket alongside a Swiss train

What things really cost

ItemApprox. cost (USD)
Budget hotel/hostel, per night$60–110
Mid-range hotel, per night$180–280
Casual restaurant meal$30–50
Coffee, standing at a café counter$5–6
One-way city tram/bus ticket$4–5

Is Switzerland safe?

ℹ️

Yes, consistently — Switzerland ranks among the safest countries in the world for travelers. Violent crime against tourists is very rare. The most common real-world issue is pickpocketing in crowded train stations and tourist sites (Zurich's Hauptbahnhof and Lucerne's Chapel Bridge among them) — completely standard big-city caution applies, nothing Switzerland-specific.

eSIM and staying connected

eSIM works well if your phone supports it — Airalo and Holafly both sell data-only Switzerland or Europe-wide plans from around $10–20 for a week, activated before you land. A physical local SIM (Swisscom, Sunrise, or Salt, sold at any train-station kiosk or supermarket) costs a bit more than in most of Europe — budget $25–40 for a week of decent data — but coverage is excellent even in mountain valleys.

Questions people actually ask

Is the Swiss Travel Pass worth buying?
Usually yes if your trip involves the classic multi-city loop (Zurich, Lucerne, Interlaken or similar) plus at least one mountain excursion — add up your planned train fares and museum entries and compare to the pass price. If you're staying mostly in one city, skip it.
How much does a trip to Switzerland cost per day?
Budget travelers can get by on $100–130/day with hostels and supermarket meals; mid-range comfort runs $150–250/day per person including a hotel and restaurant meals. It's genuinely one of the most expensive countries in the world to travel in — budget accordingly rather than comparing to other European trips.
Is Switzerland safe for tourists?
Yes, extremely — it consistently ranks among the world's safest countries. The main real-world risk is pickpocketing in crowded train stations and tourist hotspots, the same everyday caution you'd use in any busy city.

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