How to Pack for Switzerland
Switzerland's Alpine terrain, dramatic altitude changes, and unique Type J power sockets
Scott's Packing Philosophy: Pack for 5 Days, Not 3 Weeks
We pack for 5 days on every trip, whether we're gone for a week or three weeks. The logic is simple: laundry is available in Swiss cities and towns — and a lighter bag changes everything about how you travel, especially in mountain terrain.
Coin laundries in cities cost CHF 5–8 per load. Airbnbs often have washing machines. Mountain huts have guest laundry in some cases. Pack for 5 days and wash every 4–5 days.
Avoid hotel laundry services. Switzerland's hotels charge premium rates for laundry — often CHF 10–20 per item. The local laundromat a few minutes' walk away is always worth finding.
Must have 6+ months validity from your travel date — airlines and immigration will turn you away without it.
Check requirements for your passport — many countries have visa-on-arrival or eVisa options.
Print a copy AND have it on your phone. Include the emergency phone number.
Printed + digital copies of flights, hotels, and any pre-booked tours.
Some visa-on-arrival counters still require physical photos. Print at CVS, Walgreens, or any pharmacy before you go — takes 10 minutes.
Have some local cash before leaving the airport — not everywhere accepts cards.
Charles Schwab, Wise, or a travel card — foreign transaction fees add up fast.
Laminated card: embassy number, insurance hotline, family contacts. Keep separate from wallet.
Schedule at usps.com/manage/hold-mail.htm — free, takes 2 minutes, holds mail up to 30 days. Overflowing mailbox is a visible signal your home is empty.
Lightweight, broken-in before you go. Your feet will thank you after 15,000 steps on cobblestones.
Lightweight. You'll want it in air-conditioned rooms which can be arctic.
Merino wool is worth it — warm, odor-resistant, and packs small.
Under pants for extreme cold or inside sleeping bags on cold nights.
Packable down jacket as mid-layer. Essential for cold mornings even in temperate climates.
Beanie + lightweight glove liners. More useful than you'd think even in shoulder season.
Hard shell over insulated layer for rain + cold combo. Non-negotiable in alpine and subarctic.
Merino wool socks keep feet warm even when damp. Pack 1 pair per 2 days.
Bring 2x what you need plus copies of prescriptions. Some medications are controlled or unavailable abroad.
Band-aids, antiseptic wipes, gauze, medical tape, pain relievers. Compact kits fit in a zip-lock.
💡 Available at pharmacies — assemble your own or buy compact kits
Before every meal, after every market, after every tuk-tuk. Non-negotiable.
💡 Available everywhere — buy on arrival
Travel-size toothpaste goes fast. Pack 2 tubes for longer trips.
💡 Available everywhere locally
Solid shampoo bars are great for travel — no liquids restriction, last longer.
💡 Most hotels provide basics — buy locally for longer stays
Get a solid stick or crystal deodorant — gels count as liquids at security.
💡 Available locally but familiar brands may not be found
Pack more solution than you think you need. Daily disposables eliminate solution hassle.
Lips burn too — especially on boats and beaches at altitude.
Imodium + ORS packets. The ones who don't pack these are the ones who need them most.
💡 Available at pharmacies everywhere
Your navigation, translation, offline maps, and camera all in one. Pack the cable AND a wall adapter.
Big enough to charge your phone 4–5x. Non-negotiable on long travel days and remote islands.
Check the plug type for your destination. A universal adapter works everywhere.
For long flights, buses, and drowning out snoring hostel roommates.
If you want shots better than your phone. Even a compact point-and-shoot is a step up for landscapes.
Kindle Paperwhite is the standard. Hundreds of books, weeks of battery, beach-readable in sunlight.
Separate from your main luggage for daily exploring. Packable ones fold to nothing.
Insulated bottle keeps water cold for hours in tropical heat. Reduces plastic waste too.
Beach resorts provide towels. Island-hopping boats, waterfalls, and homestays don't.
Game-changer for organization. Your bag stays tidy even after 3 weeks of living out of it.
For checked baggage and hostel lockers. TSA-approved so security can open without cutting it.
Worth it for anything over 6 hours. Memory foam compressible ones are far better than inflatable.
Markets, beach trips, random purchases. Many countries now charge for plastic bags.
Wet clothes, snacks, liquids for carry-on, sand-proofing electronics. Pack 5–10.
Swiss Alpine trails are the world standard for mountain hiking — and they're serious. Grindelwald, the Eiger trail, Lauterbrunnen valley — ankle-supporting waterproof boots are not optional for anything beyond a village walk.
Switzerland's altitude means weather changes fast. Sunny valley at 65°F, 10 minutes up a gondola and it's 40°F and windy. Merino wool base + fleece mid + waterproof shell is the Swiss formula.
Switzerland uses Type J — a 3-pin plug found almost nowhere else. It's not the same as standard European Type C/F. Universal adapters sometimes don't include it. Check before you pack.
Snow and glacier reflection doubles UV exposure. Altitude amplifies it further. SPF 50+ and UV-blocking sunglasses with wrap coverage at any elevation above 5,000 feet.
Switzerland is expensive and not all places accept EUR. Mountain huts, cable cars, and rural restaurants often prefer cash in CHF. Have CHF on hand — credit cards work in cities but cash is expected outside them.
💡 ATMs at Swiss Post and UBS accept international cards
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Gear We Recommend for Switzerland
These are the items that make the biggest difference on a Switzerland trip. Each pick is chosen for a specific reason — not just "bring hiking boots" but why they matter here, specifically.
Waterproof Alpine Hiking Boots
Swiss mountain trails require ankle support on scree, waterproofing for morning dew and rain, and a sole rated for mountain terrain. The difference between enjoying Grindelwald and being evacuated.
Merino Wool Base Layer
Altitude means temperature swings. Merino wool regulates your body temperature, stays warm when wet, and doesn't smell on multi-day Alpine hut-to-hut treks. The Swiss standard for a reason.
Type J Adapter (Switzerland-specific)
Switzerland's Type J plug is unique — not compatible with standard European Type C/F adapters. Verify your universal adapter includes Type J before departure. Hotels often have C sockets too, but not always.
Glacier Sunscreen (SPF 50+)
Snow and ice reflect up to 80% of UV radiation. At 10,000 feet above Zermatt, you're getting double the UV of sea level from two directions simultaneously. SPF 50+ is not vanity — it's prevention.
Waterproof Shell Jacket
Alpine weather changes in minutes. The forecast says sunny — by the time you're on the Eiger trail, clouds arrive. A waterproof shell that packs small is the one item you never leave at the hotel.
For the full story on what to buy, what to skip, and why — see our Switzerland Travel Tips packing guide.
Switzerland Packing — Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
The Alpine essentials: waterproof hiking boots with ankle support, a merino wool layering system (weather changes in minutes at altitude), a Type J adapter (unique to Switzerland), and glacier sunscreen (snow reflection doubles UV). Switzerland rewards those who dress for the mountains, not just the Instagram shot.
Switzerland uses Type J plugs — a 3-pin format found almost nowhere else in the world. Standard European Type C/F adapters don't fit most Swiss sockets. Get a universal adapter that specifically includes Type J before departure. Voltage is 230V/50Hz. Hotels often have Type C sockets as well.
Swiss valley towns (Interlaken, Lucerne, Zurich) are pleasant in summer at 65–75°F. Take a gondola up and you're at 9,000+ feet — temperatures drop 3°F per 1,000 feet of elevation. Jungfraujoch (11,300 feet) averages 23°F in July. Always carry layers regardless of the valley forecast.
Waterproof boots with ankle support (minimum for any trail above 3,000 feet), trekking poles for steep descents, a waterproof shell jacket, and sunscreen are the baseline. For multi-day hut-to-hut treks: merino base layers, a fleece mid-layer, and a 30–40L pack. Swiss trails are well-marked but genuinely demanding.
Swiss Francs (CHF) are preferred everywhere. EUR is accepted at major tourist sites and some restaurants in border regions, but often at poor exchange rates. Mountain huts, cable car top stations, and rural restaurants expect CHF cash. Get CHF at Swiss Post or UBS ATMs — better rates than airport exchange.
Skip fashion footwear for mountain areas (trail runners at minimum, boots preferred), cotton base layers (deadly when wet at altitude — cotton kills), and minimal luggage for multi-day hut treks (carry only what you need). Don't underestimate the sun at altitude — glacier sunscreen is not optional.