Bern, Switzerland

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Bern is Switzerland's federal city and the country's quietest world capital — a sandstone medieval old town wrapped in a horseshoe bend of the emerald Aare river, with 6 km of covered arcades, the highest cathedral spire in Switzerland, and a parliament building you can tour for free. UNESCO World Heritage since 1983.

UNESCO Old Town & the Lauben

6 km of covered sandstone arcades, the Zytglogge clock tower with its hourly mechanical-figure show, the eleven Renaissance fountains, and the medieval street plan from 1191 — the longest weather-protected shopping system in Europe.

Federal Palace & Bundesplatz

Free guided tours of the Bundeshaus when parliament is not in session, the Bundesplatz with its Tuesday-and-Saturday market and seasonal events, the late-Gothic Bern Münster with the tallest spire in Switzerland.

Aare River Swimming

Marzili public baths, the Aareschwimmen floating tradition from late May to early September, the BärenPark on the river bend, the rose garden viewpoint above the Old Town.

Einstein, Museums & Klee

Einsteinhaus on Kramgasse 49, the larger Einstein Museum at the Bernisches Historisches Museum on Helvetiaplatz, the Kunstmuseum Bern, and the Zentrum Paul Klee in Renzo Piano's wave-roof building.

Bärner Platte, Toblerone & Beer Culture

Bärner Platte at the historic Old Town cellars, Berner Rösti, Toblerone (invented in Bern 1908), and Switzerland's most committed beer scene around Felsenau and the artisan breweries.

Diplomatic Quarter & Federal Capital

Embassies clustered in Kirchenfeld and along Helvetiastrasse, the Universal Postal Union headquarters, the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs at the Bernerhof, the Bundesgericht in Lausanne (federal supreme court relocated outside the capital).

History

Bern was founded in 1191 by Berchtold V of Zähringen on the loop of the Aare river, became a free imperial city in 1218, and joined the Swiss Confederation in 1353 as the eighth canton. Bernese expansion in the 14th–18th centuries made it the largest city-state north of the Alps, reaching from Aargau in the east to Vaud in the west; Bernese rule of Vaud and Aargau ended with the 1798 French invasion. The 1848 Federal Constitution made Bern the seat of the Federal Council, the National Council, and the Council of States — the de facto capital, although the constitution carefully avoids using the word. The Old Town survives intact because Bern was never bombed in either World War; the 1983 UNESCO inscription recognised the medieval town centre as one of Europe's most complete. Today's metropolitan area holds 423,000 people across the city and the surrounding agglomeration into the Bernese Mittelland.

Culture

Bärner Platte is the city's signature winter dish (smoked meats, sauerkraut, beans), best at the Old Town cellars Della Casa, Brasserie Bärengraben, and Klötzlikeller. Berner Rösti is the canton-specific take on Switzerland's potato dish. Toblerone was invented in Bern in 1908. The Bundesplatz market runs Tuesday and Saturday mornings April through October. Beer is more serious here than elsewhere in Switzerland — Felsenau Brewery in Lorraine, the seasonal artisan beers at Reitschule, and the Egger Bier from nearby Worb anchor the scene that earns Bern its 'Switzerland's beer capital' tag. Festivals: Buskers Bern (street music, August), Hello Cheese (autumn cheese fair on Bundesplatz), Rendez-vous Bundesplatz (winter light show on the Federal Palace, October–November), Gurtenfestival (rock and pop, July, Gurten hill), Zibelemärit (onion market, fourth Monday of November). Museums: Bernisches Historisches Museum (incl. Einstein Museum), Zentrum Paul Klee, Kunstmuseum Bern, Naturhistorisches Museum, Alpines Museum der Schweiz, Einsteinhaus on Kramgasse.

Practical Info

Safety: Bern is exceptionally safe — consistently among the lowest-crime major cities in Europe. Standard urban precautions at the train station and busy tourist sites are sufficient. Aare swimming carries a real risk: the current is strong, the water is 15–17 °C even in summer, and exiting at the marked steps is essential. Emergency: 112 (general), 117 (police), 118 (fire), 144 (ambulance). Language: German (Bernese German dialect, distinct from standard German). French and Italian are also Swiss national languages but Bern is in the German-speaking region. English is universally spoken in tourism, the embassy quarter, the railway, and most retail. 'Grüessech' is the Bernese German greeting (more common than 'Guten Tag'). Currency: Swiss franc (CHF). Switzerland is NOT in the eurozone — euros are accepted at major hotels and large stores at unfavourable rates, but local cash and cards are universally preferred. Card payment including contactless is universal in retail; some traditional Beizen (corner pubs) and Sunday markets remain cash-only.
Travel Overview

Bern is the Swiss federal city — the de facto capital, although the Federal Constitution carefully avoids using the word — and one of the few European capitals where the medieval town centre survives intact. The Old Town (Altstadt), wrapped inside a horseshoe bend of the emerald-green Aare river, was inscribed as UNESCO World Heritage in 1983 and preserves 6 km of covered sandstone arcades (Lauben) — the longest weather-protected shopping street network in Europe — plus the Zytglogge clock tower (the city's eastern gate from the early 1200s, with its mechanical-figure show every hour), the Rathaus, the Käfigturm, and the Bern Münster cathedral whose 101-metre spire is the tallest in Switzerland. The Aare itself is the city's lived-in centrepiece: from May to September, Berners commute to work or lunch by floating downstream from the Marzili public baths past the Bundeshaus terrace and the Lorraine bridge, climbing out at one of the marked exit-points. The Federal Palace (Bundeshaus) on the Bundesplatz is open for free guided tours when parliament is not in session, with advance online booking; the Bundesplatz itself hosts a Tuesday-and-Saturday market and the summer outdoor opera and the autumn international cheese fair. Einstein lived at Kramgasse 49 from 1903 to 1905 and wrote his Annus Mirabilis papers — including the special theory of relativity — at his apartment desk; the Einsteinhaus museum preserves the rooms. The diplomatic quarter clusters in Kirchenfeld and along Helvetiastrasse and Thunstrasse, on the south side of the Aare bend, where most foreign embassies operate. Bern's food culture is a quiet pleasure: Toblerone was invented here in 1908 by Theodor Tobler, the Bärner Platte (smoked meats and sauerkraut) is the city's signature winter dish, and the historic brewery scene — Felsenau, the original Felsenburg beer hall, the smaller artisan breweries — anchors a beer culture that gives Bern its 'Switzerland's beer capital' tag. Trams and trolley buses (Bernmobil) cover the centre; the main station Bern HB is one of Europe's busiest hubs by volume per capita; the Aare bend makes the city eminently walkable.

Discover Bern

Bern's Old Town (Altstadt) is one of the most intact medieval city cores in Europe and was inscribed as UNESCO World Heritage in 1983. The horseshoe shape — bound on three sides by the Aare river — preserves the 12th-century street plan laid out by Berchtold V of Zähringen when he founded the city in 1191. The defining feature is the Lauben: 6 km of covered sandstone arcades along the main streets (Marktgasse, Kramgasse, Gerechtigkeitsgasse, Postgasse), built into the ground-floor structure of every Old Town building so that the entire shopping street network is weather-protected — the longest such system in Europe. The Zytglogge clock tower, originally the western city gate built around 1218 and rebuilt as a clock tower after 1405, stands at the centre of the Old Town and runs a four-minute mechanical-figure animation on the four-minutes-before-the-hour each hour: bears, jester, knight, golden cock, plus the astronomical dial that shows the day, the month, the zodiac, and the moon phase. The Käfigturm at the western edge of the Old Town houses the political-history exhibition centre. The Old Town's eleven Renaissance fountains (Brunnen) — the Kindlifresserbrunnen with its child-eating ogre, the Justice Fountain on the Rathausgasse, the Moses Fountain on the Münsterplatz, the Zähringer Fountain — are themselves a tour. The street pattern is entirely walkable in 90 minutes; the arcades let you do it in any weather.

Diplomatic missions in Bern

59 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.