
The Matterhorn & Zermatt
The Matterhorn (4,478m, on the Swiss-Italian border) is best seen from Zermatt, a car-free resort town reached only by train or cable car — no roads lead in, which is part of its charm. The Gornergrat cogwheel railway is the classic viewpoint (round trip roughly CHF 100–120, $125–150), with the mountain visible from the town itself on a clear day at no cost at all. Plan a full day for Zermatt, or 2–3 if skiing or hiking is part of the trip.
The Matterhorn is one of those landmarks that's been photographed so many times it almost feels fake in person — until you're standing in Zermatt's car-free main street with genuine mountain air and the peak looming at the end of it, and it very quickly stops feeling like a postcard.
Why Zermatt has no cars
Zermatt banned combustion-engine vehicles from the town over a century ago, long before it was a trend — visitors arrive by train (there's no road in at all) and get around town by foot, electric taxi, or horse-drawn carriage. It's a genuinely different atmosphere from most alpine resorts, quiet in a way that's easy to underestimate until you're there.
Best ways to see the Matterhorn
| Option | What you get | Approx. cost |
|---|---|---|
| Free — just walk the town | A clear view of the peak from the main street and several viewpoints, weather permitting | Free |
| Gornergrat Railway | Europe's highest open-air cogwheel railway, a head-on Matterhorn panorama | CHF 100–120 ($125–150) round-trip |
| Matterhorn Glacier Paradise | Europe's highest cable car station (3,883m), views into Italy | CHF 110–130 ($135–160) round-trip |
| Rothorn cable car | A quieter alternative panorama, fewer crowds | CHF 90–105 ($110–130) round-trip |
The Matterhorn is famously shy about clouds — it's not unusual for the peak to be wrapped in cloud for part of a day even when the valley below is sunny. Check the live Zermatt webcam before committing to a pricey cable car ride; mornings tend to be clearer than afternoons.
Skiing and summer hiking

Zermatt is one of the few resorts in the Alps with genuine year-round skiing on the glacier, plus one of the best-connected ski areas in Europe (it links across the border to Cervinia, Italy, on the same lift pass). In summer, the same lift network opens up serious high-alpine hiking, including routes with direct Matterhorn views the whole way.
Getting to Zermatt
You can't drive in — park in Täsch (the last car-accessible town) and take a 12-minute shuttle train, or arrive directly by train from Zurich (about 3.5 hours) or Geneva (about 4 hours) via a change in Visp. Book the scenic Glacier Express from Zermatt as an onward leg toward St. Moritz if you have the extra day (see our Jungfraujoch & Glacier Express guide).
Common mistakes
- Booking a cable car ticket for the same afternoon without checking the summit webcam first — clouds roll in fast, and there are no refunds for weather.
- Trying to see the Matterhorn as a rushed half-day from Interlaken or Lucerne — the train transfer alone eats a big chunk of the day; stay at least one night in Zermatt if you can.
- Skipping travel insurance that covers high-altitude activity — standard policies sometimes exclude glacier travel or via ferrata above a certain altitude; check the fine print if you're hiking beyond the cable-car stations.












































