Lausanne

How many days in Lausanne?

Plan 2-4 days for Lausanne. 2 days hits the must-sees; 4 lets you eat well, walk neighbourhoods you've never heard of, and take one day trip.

The minimum

2 days

2 days fits the top sights, one good food walk, and one neighbourhood deep-dive — no day trips.

The sweet spot

4 days

4 days adds one day trip, two more neighbourhoods, and three more sit-down meals you'll actually remember.

Slow travel

6 days

6 days is when you leave the to-do list at home and actually live in the city for a week.

The headline things to do in Lausanne

From the Lausanne guide — these are the items that anchor a 2-day visit. For the full breakdown, read the Lausanne travel guide.

  1. Olympic Museum (Musée Olympique)Ouchy waterfront, lake level

    The flagship museum of the International Olympic Committee on the lake shore at Ouchy. Three floors trace the Olympic movement from Coubertin's 1894 founding through to recent Games — Owens's 1936 Berlin spikes, Bolt's 2008 Beijing shoes, the original Athens 1896 medals, and torches from every modern Games. The 1.5-hour visit is genuinely moving even for non-sport fans. CHF 20 entry, closed Mondays. The lakeside Olympic Park outside is free and full of athlete sculptures.

  2. Notre-Dame CathedralUpper Old Town (Cité), top of the hill

    The finest Gothic cathedral in Switzerland, begun 1170 and consecrated by Pope Gregory X in 1275 in the presence of the Holy Roman Emperor. Climb the 232 steps of the south tower for sweeping views of the city, Lake Geneva, and the French Alps across the water. The 13th-century rose window is one of the largest in Europe. A medieval night watchman still calls the hours from the cathedral tower from 10 pm to 2 am every night, a 600-year tradition. Cathedral free; tower CHF 5.

  3. Ouchy Waterfront PromenadeOuchy waterfront, lake level

    A 4 km lakefront promenade running from Vidy in the west past the Olympic Museum and Château d'Ouchy to Lutry in the east. Lined with palm trees (Lausanne's lake-warmed microclimate supports them), waterfront restaurants, and the small Ouchy harbour where the historic CGN paddle steamers depart for cross-lake France. The 16th-century Château d'Ouchy is now a hotel; the small public beach at Vidy is free and lively in summer.

  4. Place de la Palud & Old TownOld Town, central Lausanne

    The medieval lower town centred on Place de la Palud with the painted town hall, the Justice Fountain (1585), and the famous Lausanne Mechanical Clock that performs an animated history of the city every hour from 9 am to 7 pm. Nearby Rue du Bourg and the covered Escaliers du Marché wooden steps climbing to the cathedral are pleasant for walking and lined with cafés.

  5. Lavaux Vineyard Terraces (UNESCO)15 minutes east of Lausanne by train

    A UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2007, the Lavaux is 800 hectares of stone-walled terraced vineyards stretching 30 km along the lake from Lutry east toward Vevey. Take the train to Cully or Lutry (10-15 min from Lausanne) and walk the marked vineyard trails — the classic Saint-Saphorin to Lutry route is 11 km of constant lake and Alps views. Stop at any winery for tastings of local Chasselas and Pinot Noir. The Lavaux Express tourist train runs vineyard loops in season.

  6. Sauvabelin Tower & ForestSauvabelin forest, north Lausanne

    A 35 m wooden spiral tower in the Sauvabelin forest above the city, built entirely without nails or metal fasteners. The 151-step climb gives a panorama over Lausanne, Lake Geneva, and the French Alps on clear days. The surrounding forest park has a small lake with rowing boats, deer enclosures, and the Bois-Mermet hiking trails. Free, open all hours. Bus 16 from Bel-Air takes 12 minutes from city centre.

  7. Collection de l'Art BrutBeaulieu, north of the centre

    Founded by the painter Jean Dubuffet in 1976 in the 18th-century Château de Beaulieu, this is the world's first and largest museum dedicated to outsider art — works by self-taught artists, psychiatric patients, prisoners, and visionaries outside the conventional art world. 70,000 works in the collection, with rotating exhibitions of about 700 at a time. Genuinely strange and moving. CHF 12 entry, closed Mondays.

  8. M2 Metro Ride (Ouchy to Croisettes)M2 line — runs north-south

    Lausanne's automatic metro is itself a sight — the M2 line climbs 339 m in 5.9 km from the Ouchy lake shore to the Croisettes hilltop with a 12 percent maximum gradient, the steepest fully-automatic metro in the world. Sit at the front of the driverless train for the Funicular-meets-Metro experience. CHF 3.70 single covers any direction. The Flon district at the midpoint is a converted warehouse area now full of restaurants and bars.

Frequently asked

Is 2 days enough in Lausanne?

2 days is the minimum for a satisfying visit — you'll see the headline sights but won't have flex time. If you can stretch to 4, you unlock a day trip and the food walks that make the trip memorable.

Is 6 days too long in Lausanne?

6 days is for travellers who want to slow down — eat at neighbourhood spots tourists don't reach, take repeat day trips, and live in the city. If you're a tick-the-list traveller, 4 is enough.

What's the ideal trip length for first-time visitors to Lausanne?

4 days is the sweet spot for a first visit — long enough to cover the must-sees, eat at three good spots, take one day trip, and not feel like you're racing a checklist. Less than 2 usually feels rushed; more than 6 is into slow-travel territory.

Should I add Lausanne to a longer regional trip?

Yes — Lausanne works well as a 2-4-day stop on a longer regional itinerary. Pair it with a nearby destination via the trip planner so the transit days don't compress your time on the ground.

Plan your Lausanne trip