TripPick Switzerland Switzerland

Geneva + Lake Geneva 5-Day — City, Mont Blanc, Lausanne & Annecy

Geneva's core + a Mont Blanc / Chamonix day + Lausanne & the Lavaux vineyards + the French alpine town of Annecy

Five days links Geneva with the best of Lake Geneva and the nearby French Alps. Days 1-2 cover the city (Jet d'Eau, Old Town and St. Pierre, the UN and Red Cross Museum, Patek Philippe). Day 3 is the Mont Blanc / Chamonix day trip. Day 4 is Lausanne — the Olympic Museum, the old town, and the Lavaux UNESCO terraced vineyards — best by a 35-45 minute SBB train. Day 5 is Annecy, the canal-laced 'Venice of the Alps' in France (about 1h15). The efficient trains and the free Geneva Transport Card make day trips easy. Book the UN tour and Mont Blanc ahead.

Five days hits the sweet spot for Geneva — three days for the major districts, plus two days for nearby destinations that show a different side of the country. The pace stays relaxed, you get more variety in your photo album, and the day trips break up the urban intensity nicely.

5-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$530

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$1,140

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$2,620

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Jet d'Eau + lakefront + Old Town & St. Pierre + fondue

Jet d'Eau - Jardin Anglais flower clock - lakefront promenade - Old Town (Vieille Ville) - St. Pierre Cathedral - fondue dinner

Activities

  1. 09:30 Jet d'Eau + lakefront promenade 1h30

    Start at Geneva's symbol — the Jet d'Eau, the 140m water fountain on Lake Geneva (running since the 1890s), visible from across the city. Walk out along the pier for the spray-and-rainbow shot, then stroll the lakefront quays with Mont Blanc on the horizon in clear weather.

    Cost: Free TIP: The fountain runs in mild months (roughly Mar-Oct) and on calm days; it's switched off in high wind or hard frost. Best photographed from the Quai Gustave-Ador or the Mont-Blanc bridge. Go early for fewer crowds and good light.
  2. 11:00 Jardin Anglais + the flower clock (l'horloge fleurie) 30 min

    Just back from the Jet d'Eau, the Jardin Anglais is the lakefront garden home to Geneva's famous flower clock — a working clock planted with thousands of seasonal flowers, a nod to the city's watchmaking heritage. A quick, classic photo stop on the left bank.

    Cost: Free TIP: The flower clock's planting changes with the seasons, so it looks different through the year. It's a 2-minute walk from the Jet d'Eau, so combine the two. A good spot to start a lakefront walk toward the Old Town.
  3. 12:30 Lunch — lakeside or supermarket picnic 1h30

    Eat by the water — a lakefront brasserie for filets de perche, or, to save money in pricey Geneva, grab a Coop/Migros picnic and sit on the quay or in a park. The Bains des Pâquis jetty across the harbor is a great-value, atmospheric option (cash-only).

    Cost: $15-40 per person TIP: Filets de perche (lake perch) are the local lunch in summer — order 'du Léman' for the real local fish. A supermarket picnic by the lake is the budget move. The Bains des Pâquis buvette is cash-only and very Genevan.
  4. 14:30 Old Town (Vieille Ville) + St. Pierre Cathedral 2h30

    Climb into the Vieille Ville — Switzerland's largest old town — with cobbled lanes, antique shops, and the Place du Bourg-de-Four, Geneva's oldest square. At its heart is St. Pierre Cathedral, where John Calvin preached from 1536. Climb the tower for sweeping lake-and-rooftop views and see the archaeological site beneath.

    Cost: Cathedral free; tower ~CHF 7; archaeology ~CHF 8 TIP: The tower climb is steep but the view over the lake and old roofs is the best in the city. See Calvin's chair inside and the Reformation Wall in the nearby Parc des Bastions. The Maison Tavel (Geneva's oldest house, free museum) is close by.
  5. 19:30 Dinner — Swiss fondue 2h

    End the day with cheese fondue — the moitié-moitié Gruyère-Vacherin classic. Café du Soleil in Petit-Saconnex is the local legend, Les Armures the atmospheric Old Town choice, and L'Edelweiss the chalet-with-folk-music experience.

    Cost: $28-55 per person TIP: Fondue is a cooler-weather dish — best in spring, autumn, and winter. Pair it with a Fendant or Chasselas white and a kirsch digestif. Book ahead on weekends. Café du Soleil is loved by locals; Les Armures is central and historic.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café or hotel breakfast

Center / lakefront · $6-15

Coffee and a pastry — Boréal Coffee Shop for good specialty coffee.

Lunch

Lakeside perch or supermarket picnic

Lakefront / Pâquis jetty · $15-40

Filets de perche by the water, or a budget Coop/Migros picnic on the quay.

Dinner

Café du Soleil or Les Armures

Petit-Saconnex / Old Town · $28-55

Classic Swiss cheese fondue with a Chasselas white.

Transit:

Almost entirely on foot — the Jet d'Eau, Jardin Anglais, lakefront, and Old Town are all within walking distance. Use the free Mouettes lake boats and trams (covered by your Geneva Transport Card) for Petit-Saconnex.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $95 Mid $220 Luxury $530
DAY 2

The UN + Red Cross Museum + Patek Philippe + lake cruise

Palais des Nations (UN) - Broken Chair - Red Cross & Red Crescent Museum - Patek Philippe Museum - Lake Geneva cruise

Activities

  1. 09:30 Palais des Nations — UN European HQ tour 1h30

    Tour the Palais des Nations, the United Nations' European headquarters and former League of Nations seat. The guided tour walks through assembly halls and historic chambers and explains how the UN works, with audio guides in many languages. On the Place des Nations outside stands the giant Broken Chair sculpture.

    Cost: ~CHF 16 (book online, bring passport) TIP: Pre-book on the UN visitor site — it's security-controlled and walk-up slots are limited; tours can pause during major conferences. Bring your passport. Allow time for the security check. Tram 15 reaches the Place des Nations.
  2. 11:30 Red Cross & Red Crescent Museum 1h30

    Directly across from the UN, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum is one of Geneva's most powerful experiences — three immersive spaces on defending human dignity, restoring family links, and reducing natural risks. Moving and modern rather than a dry archive.

    Cost: ~CHF 15 (closed Mondays) TIP: It pairs perfectly with the UN, right across the road. Allow 1.5-2 hours; it's emotionally heavy, so pace yourself. Closed Mondays — plan day 2 around that. A strong highlight for many visitors.
  3. 14:00 Lunch + Patek Philippe Museum (or CERN) 2h30

    Lunch near the center, then either the Patek Philippe Museum (five centuries of watchmaking, the must for watch lovers) or, if you're science-minded, CERN's free Science Gateway (home of the Large Hadron Collider and the birthplace of the Web).

    Cost: Patek Philippe ~CHF 10; CERN free TIP: Patek Philippe is closed Sun-Mon. CERN's Science Gateway is free and reached by tram 18; deep guided tours of CERN must be booked well ahead and fill fast. Pick one based on your interests — watches or physics.
  4. 17:30 Lake Geneva cruise 1h30

    Finish with a Lake Geneva boat trip — a short CGN harbor cruise or one of the free Mouettes crossings for a low-cost taste, both giving the classic Jet d'Eau-and-Mont-Blanc view from the water. Longer CGN cruises run to lake towns if you have time.

    Cost: Mouettes free with card; CGN cruise ~CHF 15-30 TIP: The little yellow Mouettes lake taxis are free with your transport card — a budget mini-cruise across the harbor. CGN runs longer scenic cruises. Late afternoon light over the lake and fountain is lovely.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café or hotel breakfast

Center · $6-15

A quick coffee and pastry before the UN tour.

Lunch

Center café or brasserie

Center / international district · $15-35

A casual brasserie lunch between the museums.

Dinner

Bistrot du Boeuf Rouge or Pâquis eats

Pâquis · $15-65

Léman perch and Lyon bistro classics, or affordable Pâquis international food.

Transit:

Tram 15 to the Place des Nations for the UN and Red Cross Museum; tram 18 for CERN. The free Geneva Transport Card covers all trams, buses, and the Mouettes lake boats.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $90 Mid $210 Luxury $510
DAY 3

Mont Blanc / Chamonix day trip (France)

Coach to Chamonix - Aiguille du Midi cable car (3,842m) - Mont Blanc views - Mer de Glace (optional) - return to Geneva

Activities

  1. 07:30 Geneva → Chamonix (France) 1h30

    Travel about 90 minutes south into France to Chamonix, the alpine resort at the foot of Mont Blanc (4,809m, the highest peak in the Alps). Organized day tours include pickup and the cable car; independently, take a direct coach or train+bus. It's all within Schengen, so no border checks.

    Cost: Tour CHF 150-220 / independent coach varies TIP: A guided tour (CHF 150-220) bundles transport and the cable car and is the simplest. Independently, book the Aiguille du Midi cable car ahead in summer — it sells out. Bring your passport and warm layers; it's freezing at altitude year-round.
  2. 10:00 Aiguille du Midi cable car — 3,842m 2h30

    Ride one of Europe's highest cable cars from Chamonix up to the Aiguille du Midi at 3,842m, with panoramic Mont Blanc views and the glass 'Step into the Void' platform suspended over a 1,000m drop. Genuine high-Alps scenery you can't get from the city.

    Cost: ~CHF 70-75 (if independent) TIP: The summit is below freezing all year and the air is thin — dress warmly and go slowly. The cable car can close in bad weather, so check the forecast. The 'Step into the Void' glass box is the signature photo (free with the cable car).
  3. 13:00 Lunch in Chamonix + town stroll 1h30

    Back down in Chamonix, lunch on Savoyard/French food (raclette, tartiflette, fondue savoyarde) and wander the alpine town — mountaineering history, shops, and the river, with Mont Blanc looming above.

    Cost: €20-35 per person TIP: Chamonix uses euros, not francs (you're in France) — cards work everywhere. Savoyard cheese dishes are the local specialty. A relaxed lunch suits the pace before the optional glacier train.
  4. 15:00 Mer de Glace glacier (optional) 2h

    If time allows, take the Montenvers rack railway up to the Mer de Glace, France's largest glacier, with an ice cave and viewpoints. A scenic add-on, though the receding glacier is a stark climate-change sight.

    Cost: ~€38 (Montenvers train) TIP: Skip this if your tour timing is tight — the Aiguille du Midi is the priority. The Montenvers train and ice cave are a separate ticket. Guided tours may or may not include it; check before booking.
  5. 18:00 Return to Geneva 1h30

    Travel back to Geneva (about 90 minutes), arriving in the evening for a final lakeside dinner or a relaxed last stroll along the quays.

    Cost: Included in tour / coach TIP: Guided tours drop you back in central Geneva by early evening. Confirm the return time if traveling independently — last coaches can be early. A final lakefront walk with the lit Jet d'Eau is a good send-off.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early café or hotel breakfast

Geneva · $6-15

An early coffee and pastry before the coach to Chamonix.

Lunch

Chamonix Savoyard restaurant

Chamonix (France) · €20-35

Tartiflette or fondue savoyarde with a Mont Blanc view (euros).

Dinner

Lakeside dinner back in Geneva

Lakefront / Old Town · $20-60

A final Genevan meal — lake fish or a relaxed brasserie.

Transit:

Geneva ↔ Chamonix about 90 minutes each way by guided coach, direct coach, or train+bus. All within Schengen (no border checks), but France uses euros, not francs. Bring your passport and warm clothing.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $130 Mid $260 Luxury $560
DAY 4

Lausanne + the Lavaux vineyards

SBB train to Lausanne - Olympic Museum - Lausanne old town & cathedral - Lavaux UNESCO terraced vineyards - return to Geneva

Activities

  1. 09:00 Geneva → Lausanne (SBB train) 45 min

    Take the direct SBB train along the lake to Lausanne in 35-45 minutes — a hilly, lakeside university city and the Olympic capital. Trains run several times an hour from Cornavin.

    Cost: ~CHF 27-50 round trip TIP: Trains are frequent and punctual; second-class is fine. Lausanne is steep — wear good shoes or use its little metro (the M2, Switzerland's only metro). Buy tickets via the SBB app for convenience.
  2. 10:00 Olympic Museum (Musée Olympique) 2h

    Lausanne is the home of the International Olympic Committee, and the lakeside Olympic Museum is its excellent, interactive flagship — torches, medals, and the history of the Games, set in a sculpture park above Lake Geneva.

    Cost: ~CHF 20 TIP: It's in Ouchy, the lakefront district below the city — combine with a lake stroll. Interactive and family-friendly. Allow about two hours. The metro M2 connects Ouchy to the upper town and station.
  3. 13:00 Lunch + Lausanne old town & cathedral 2h

    Lunch in the old town, then explore Lausanne's medieval upper town and its Gothic cathedral, one of Switzerland's finest, with views over the lake and a centuries-old night-watch tradition.

    Cost: CHF 20-40 per person TIP: The old town's steep lanes and the cathedral are the highlights up top. The M2 metro saves the climb. A relaxed lunch before heading to the vineyards.
  4. 15:30 Lavaux UNESCO terraced vineyards 2h30

    Just east of Lausanne, the Lavaux is a UNESCO World Heritage landscape of steep terraced vineyards tumbling down to Lake Geneva — walk a stretch of the vineyard paths (e.g., around Lutry, Saint-Saphorin, or the little train) for sweeping lake-and-Alps views and a glass of local Chasselas.

    Cost: Train/walk; wine tasting CHF 10-25 TIP: The Lavaux Express little tourist train or a short SBB hop reaches the vineyard villages. Stop at a caveau (wine cellar) for a Chasselas tasting. Best in good weather for the views. A gentle, scenic afternoon.
  5. 19:30 Return to Geneva 45 min

    Take the train back to Geneva (35-45 min), arriving for a relaxed evening in the city.

    Cost: Round trip included TIP: Trains run late and frequently. Back in Geneva, the lakefront is lovely in the evening. Confirm the last convenient train if you linger in the vineyards.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Geneva café breakfast

Geneva · $6-15

Coffee and a pastry before the train to Lausanne.

Lunch

Lausanne old town restaurant

Lausanne · CHF 20-40

A Swiss-French lunch in the medieval upper town.

Dinner

Lavaux caveau or Geneva dinner

Lavaux / Geneva · CHF 25-55

Chasselas and local plates among the vines, or dinner back in Geneva.

Transit:

Geneva ↔ Lausanne 35-45 minutes by frequent direct SBB train (~CHF 27-50 round trip). Lausanne's M2 metro and short trains/walks reach Ouchy and the Lavaux vineyard villages.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $110 Mid $230 Luxury $520
DAY 5

Annecy day trip (France) — the 'Venice of the Alps'

Coach/train to Annecy - old town canals & Palais de l'Île - lake promenade - boat or bike - return to Geneva

Activities

  1. 08:30 Geneva → Annecy (France) 1h15

    Travel about 1h15 south into France to Annecy, the canal-laced alpine town on a famously clear lake, often called the 'Venice of the Alps.' Direct buses and trains run from Geneva; it's all within Schengen.

    Cost: Bus/train ~€15-30 round trip TIP: Annecy is in France, so it uses euros. Direct coaches (e.g., FlixBus) and trains both work — book ahead for the cheapest fares. A passport is wise though there's no routine border check.
  2. 10:00 Old town canals + Palais de l'Île 2h

    Wander Annecy's pastel old town threaded with canals and flower-lined bridges, centered on the Palais de l'Île — a 12th-century stone building marooned mid-canal that's the town's iconic image.

    Cost: Old town free; Palais small fee TIP: The Palais de l'Île is the postcard shot, especially from the bridges. The arcaded lanes are full of shops and cafés. Mornings are quieter before day-trippers arrive.
  3. 12:30 Lunch + lake promenade 2h

    Lunch on Savoyard cuisine (tartiflette, raclette, lake fish), then walk the lakefront gardens (Jardins de l'Europe) and the Pont des Amours over one of Europe's cleanest lakes, ringed by mountains.

    Cost: €18-35 per person TIP: Savoyard cheese dishes and lake fish (féra, omble chevalier) are the local specialties. The lakeside Jardins de l'Europe and Pont des Amours are lovely for a post-lunch stroll. Cards work everywhere (euros).
  4. 15:00 Lake boat cruise or bike along the lake 2h

    Take a scenic boat cruise on Lake Annecy or rent a bike for the flat lakeside path — turquoise water, mountain backdrops, and pretty villages make it one of the prettiest lakes in the Alps.

    Cost: Cruise ~€16-20 / bike rental €15-20 TIP: The boat cruise is the easy scenic option; cyclists love the lakeside greenway. In summer there are small beaches for a swim. Pick based on energy and weather.
  5. 18:00 Return to Geneva 1h15

    Travel back to Geneva (about 1h15), arriving in the evening for a final lakeside dinner.

    Cost: Round trip included TIP: Confirm the last convenient coach/train. Back in Geneva, end with a relaxed dinner and a last look at the lit Jet d'Eau along the quays.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Geneva café breakfast

Geneva · $6-15

An early coffee before the trip to Annecy.

Lunch

Annecy Savoyard restaurant

Annecy (France) · €18-35

Tartiflette or lake fish by the canals (euros).

Dinner

Farewell Geneva dinner

Lakefront / Old Town · $20-60

A final Genevan meal along the lake.

Transit:

Geneva ↔ Annecy about 1h15 each way by direct coach or train (~€15-30 round trip). Annecy is in France (euro zone), within Schengen so no routine border check.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $105 Mid $220 Luxury $500

Book Geneva Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Geneva 5-Day Itinerary FAQ

Can I day-trip to Lausanne and Annecy from Geneva?
Easily. Lausanne is 35-45 minutes by frequent direct SBB train (Olympic Museum, old town, and the Lavaux vineyards). Annecy, in France, is about 1h15 by direct coach or train. Both make comfortable full-day trips from a Geneva base. The free Geneva Transport Card covers city transit, but you buy separate tickets for these inter-city journeys.
What's the difference between Lausanne and Montreux for a day trip?
Lausanne (35-45 min) is the Olympic capital with a museum, a steep old town, and the nearby Lavaux vineyards. Montreux (about 1 hour) is the lakeside resort town for the Château de Chillon, the Freddie Mercury statue, and the summer jazz festival. Both are easy by train; Lausanne suits museums and wine, Montreux suits the castle and lakefront. The 7-day itinerary fits both.
Do I need euros as well as francs?
Yes if you're doing France day trips. Switzerland (Geneva, Lausanne, the Lavaux) uses the Swiss franc; France (Annecy, Mont Blanc/Chamonix) uses the euro. Cards work in both, but carry some of each for cash-only spots. It's all within Schengen, so there are no passport checks crossing into France, just a currency change.
Is the Lavaux vineyard trip worth it?
If you enjoy scenery and wine, very — the Lavaux is a UNESCO landscape of steep terraced vineyards dropping to Lake Geneva, with sweeping lake-and-Alps views and local Chasselas to taste. Walk a stretch of the vineyard paths or ride the little tourist train from near Lausanne. Best in good weather; it pairs naturally with a Lausanne day.

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Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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