Switzerland, Bordeaux, london

14-Day European Journey

Switzerland · Bordeaux · London

Alpine lakes and medieval cities, world-class wine châteaux, and London’s grand finale — all by scenic train.

🇨🇭 5 Swiss Cities 🍷 4 Days Wine Country 🇬🇧 London Finale 🚄 Train-Forward Travel Mid-Range Budget
🇨🇭 Zurich
Day 1
Lucerne
Days 2–3
Bern
Day 4
Basel
Day 5
Geneva
Days 6–7
✈→
🍷 Bordeaux
Days 8–12
🇬🇧 London
Days 13–14
Chapter One

Switzerland

Days 1–7
Begin in Zurich and loop through five of Switzerland’s great cities by train — each leg takes just one to two and a half hours and arrives in time for a leisurely afternoon. The Swiss Travel Pass covers all journeys and unlocks remarkable efficiency in one of Europe’s most beautiful countries.
Day1

Zurich — Altstadt, Grossmünster & Lake Promenades

  • Arrive and check into your hotel; drop bags and head straight into the Altstadt (Old Town) on both sides of the Limmat River
  • Grossmünster Cathedral — twin towers offer rooftop views over the old city; free entry to the church itself
  • Stroll Bahnhofstrasse, one of the world’s great shopping streets, then escape to the quieter cobbled lanes of the Niederdorf quarter
  • Evening walk along the Lake Zurich promenades — the sunset over the Alps is a fitting first Swiss impression
Day2

Zurich → Lucerne — Chapel Bridge, Lion Monument & Lake Cruise

  • Morning train to Lucerne (1 hr, covered by Swiss Travel Pass)
  • Chapel Bridge (Kapellbrücke) — Europe’s oldest covered wooden bridge, spanning the Reuss River since 1333; the interior paintings are remarkable
  • Lion Monument (Löwendenkmal) — Mark Twain called it “the most mournful and moving piece of stone in the world” — and he was right
  • Afternoon Lake Lucerne cruise — the steamship service offers breathtaking views of the surrounding Alps (Swiss Pass covers this too)
Day3

Lucerne — Day Trip to Mount Pilatus

  • Take the world’s steepest cogwheel railway (48° gradient) up to Pilatus Kulm at 2,132 metres — jaw-dropping Alpine panorama on a clear day
  • Return via the cable car and gondola for a circular “Golden Round Trip” — different views both ways
  • Afternoon back in Lucerne: explore the Musegg Wall medieval fortifications or browse the old town’s arcaded streets
  • Evening dinner at a lakeside restaurant — try Käseschnitten (Swiss cheese bread) and Luzerner Chügelipastete (the local pastry specialty)
💡 Swiss Travel Pass: Covers unlimited train, bus, and boat travel across Switzerland plus free entry to 500+ museums. A 7-day consecutive pass costs around CHF 500/person — worth every franc on this itinerary.
Day4

Lucerne → Bern — UNESCO Old Town, Zytglogge & Einstein House

  • Morning train to Bern, Switzerland’s federal capital (1 hr by train)
  • Walk the UNESCO-listed old town arcades — 6km of covered walkways make Bern one of Europe’s most walkable cities in any weather
  • Zytglogge Clock Tower — catch the animated figures at the top of each hour; climb up for views over the city
  • Einstein House — the apartment where Albert Einstein lived from 1902–1909 while working at the patent office (and developing Special Relativity)
  • Climb to the Rose Garden for the best panoramic view of Bern’s old town bend in the Aare River
Day5

Bern → Basel — Rhine Riverfront, Münster & Fondation Beyeler

  • Train to Basel (55 min) — Switzerland’s art capital straddling the Rhine
  • Walk the Rhine Riverfront — watch locals drift downstream in the current (a Basel summer tradition), and cross via the little wooden ferry boats
  • Basel Münster Cathedral — red sandstone Gothic cathedral with terrace views over the Rhine into Germany and France
  • Fondation Beyeler — one of Switzerland’s finest art museums, housing a world-class collection including Monet, Warhol, and Giacometti (15 min by tram)
Day6

Basel → Geneva — Jet d’Eau, St. Pierre Cathedral & UN Headquarters

  • Train via Lausanne to Geneva (2.5 hrs, scenic Lac Léman lakeside section)
  • Jet d’Eau — Geneva’s 140-metre water jet, one of the world’s tallest fountains, visible from across the city
  • St. Pierre Cathedral — climb the north tower for sweeping views; the archaeological site beneath is surprisingly fascinating
  • United Nations European HQ (Palais des Nations) — guided tours available in multiple languages; the Broken Chair sculpture outside is iconic
  • Evening in the Vieille-Ville (old town) — Geneva rewards slow evening wandering
Day7

Geneva — Lake Cruise or Chamonix Day Trip

  • Option A — Lake Geneva Cruise: Belle Époque steamship along Lac Léman to Montreux (1.5 hrs), visiting Château de Chillon — the most visited historic building in Switzerland
  • Option B — Chamonix, France: Cross the border by bus or train (~1.5 hrs) for staggering Mont Blanc views — take the Aiguille du Midi cable car to 3,842m for views across the Alps
  • Evening: farewell Swiss dinner — fondue or raclette is obligatory before departure tomorrow
🚄 Day 8 Morning: Geneva → Paris (TGV Lyria, ~3.5 hrs) → Bordeaux-Saint-Jean (TGV, ~2 hrs) · Book via SNCF Connect app · Total ~5–6 hrs with connection
Chapter Two

Bordeaux Wine Region

Days 8–12
Five days in the world’s most prestigious wine region — from UNESCO-listed Saint-Émilion to the grand châteaux of the Médoc. Base yourself in Bordeaux city and venture out daily. Pre-book château visits well in advance; the top estates fill up months ahead.
Day8

Arrive Bordeaux — Garonne River & Place de la Bourse

  • Arrive midday; check into your hotel in the city centre (stay near the Triangle d’Or or the old town for best access)
  • Place de la Bourse and its famous Miroir d’Eau (Water Mirror) — the world’s largest reflecting pool, stunning at dusk
  • Stroll the Garonne River quays — the 18th-century stone facades have earned Bordeaux a UNESCO listing all of its own
  • Dinner in the Saint-Pierre quarter — Bordeaux’s restaurant heartland. Try entrecôte à la bordelaise (steak with Bordeaux wine sauce)
Day9

Saint-Émilion — Guided Tasting at UNESCO Châteaux

  • Saint-Émilion village (45 min drive or organised tour) — perched on limestone hills, this perfectly preserved medieval wine village is a UNESCO World Heritage Site
  • Guided tasting at two or three châteaux — look for Premier Grand Cru Classé estates like Château Pavie, Canon, or Angélus
  • The dominant grape here is Merlot, creating rich, velvety reds with plum and chocolate notes very different from the Médoc
  • Don’t miss a visit to the monolithic church carved entirely from limestone beneath the village — underground cave tour included
Day10

Médoc Peninsula — Château Margaux & Cabernet Sauvignon Country

  • Private driver or bike tour north along the Médoc wine route — the D2 “Route des Châteaux” passes estates continuously for 80km
  • Château Margaux (Premier Cru Classé) — one of the world’s most famous wine estates; book the visit months ahead
  • Also worth: Château Pichon Baron, Château Léoville-Barton, or a tasting at Pauillac village cooperative for more accessible access
  • The Médoc is Cabernet Sauvignon country — powerful, tannic wines built for ageing; barrel samples give insight into the winemaking process
Day11

Graves & Pessac-Léognan — Château Haut-Brion & Food Pairings

  • Château Haut-Brion — the only non-Médoc estate in the original 1855 classification as a Premier Cru; located just 10 minutes from central Bordeaux (book ahead)
  • The Graves/Pessac-Léognan appellation produces the region’s finest dry whites — a revelation compared to the red-focused Médoc
  • Request a seated food pairing lunch at your château visit — oysters from Arcachon Bay with a Graves blanc is a combination that defines the region
  • Afternoon: visit Château Smith Haut Lafitte for their outstanding spa and tasting experience (the Les Sources de Caudalie hotel here is exceptional)
💡 Booking wine tours: Pre-book château visits directly via estate websites or through platforms like Viator, Bordeaux Wine Tours, or My Vitilife. Top estates in the Médoc require 4–8 weeks’ advance booking. Hiring a private chauffeur-guide (~€300–400 for a full day) allows 4–6 châteaux in one day comfortably.
Day12

Bordeaux City — Cité du Vin & Market Lunch

  • Cité du Vin — the extraordinary wine civilisation museum; the building itself is a sculptural landmark. Interactive galleries explore wine across world cultures (€22 entry, includes a tasting in the belvedere with city views)
  • Marché des Capucins (open until 2PM) — Bordeaux’s covered market; pick up oysters, charcuterie, and local cheese for a market lunch at the communal tables
  • Afternoon: browse the Saint-Pierre antique district or the galleries along Rue du Pas Saint-Georges
  • Final dinner: splurge on a proper Bordelaise meal — the city has multiple Michelin-starred options worth the occasion
🚄 Day 13 Morning: Bordeaux → Paris Montparnasse (TGV, ~2 hrs) → Paris Gare du Nord → London St Pancras (Eurostar, ~2.5 hrs) · Total ~5–6 hrs · Luggage-friendly · Book via Eurostar.com
Chapter Three

London

Days 13–14
Two days in London is a greatest-hits tour — but London rewards it. Arrive at St Pancras International in the early afternoon and hit the ground running. Use the Underground (Oyster card or contactless payment) to move efficiently between neighbourhoods.
Day13

Westminster Abbey · Big Ben · Thames Cruise · Covent Garden

  • Arrive at St Pancras International midday; check in and head south to Westminster immediately
  • Westminster Abbey — 1,000 years of royal coronations and burials; the Gothic nave is genuinely awe-inspiring (£27 entry — book online to skip queues)
  • Big Ben and Parliament Square — the Elizabeth Tower is best viewed from Westminster Bridge at golden hour
  • Board a Thames Clipper eastward — the river view of the city from the water is unlike anything else; alight at Tower Pier for St Paul’s views
  • Evening in Covent Garden — street performers, excellent restaurants, and the covered market piazza
Day14

British Museum · Tower of London · Borough Market · Depart

  • Early morning at the British Museum — the Great Court is astonishing and free; the Rosetta Stone, Elgin Marbles, and Egyptian mummies are the anchors (free entry)
  • Tower of London — 900 years of royal history, the Crown Jewels, and the Beefeater guards; allow 2–3 hours (£34.80 entry — book ahead)
  • Borough Market — London’s greatest food market on the South Bank; a final European food crawl of sourdough, artisan cheese, and street food from around the world
  • Transfer to Heathrow (Tube, 50 min), Gatwick (Thameslink, 30 min), or London City Airport (DLR, 20 min) depending on your departure
💡 London transport: Tap any contactless bank card or phone directly on the yellow Tube readers — no Oyster card needed. Daily caps apply automatically (~£8.10 within zones 1–2). Far faster than buying tickets at the machine.
Mar–Apr
Spring blooms in Switzerland; quieter wine region
May–Jun ★
Ideal weather, pre-crowds, vineyard flowering season
Sep–Oct ★
Harvest season in Bordeaux; golden Alps; best wine tours
Jul–Aug
Peak crowds & prices; book everything months ahead

Travel Logistics

All key connections, passes, and practical details in one place.

Segment Mode Duration Key Tips
Switzerland (all cities) Swiss Travel Pass 1–2.5 hrs each 7-day pass ~CHF 500; covers trains, boats, buses + 500 museums
Geneva → Bordeaux TGV Lyria + TGV ~5–6 hrs Book via SNCF Connect app; 2 months ahead for best fares
Bordeaux → London TGV + Eurostar ~5–6 hrs Via Paris; book Eurostar direct at eurostar.com; luggage-friendly
Wine region day tours Private driver / chauffeur Full day €300–400/day for private driver; covers 4–6 châteaux. Book via Viator or estate websites
London city travel Underground (Tube) 20–50 min Tap contactless card directly; daily cap ~£8.10 in zones 1–2
Hotels
€150–250
Per night, mid-range
Daily Meals
€50–80
Per person, per day
Swiss Pass
CHF 500
7-day consecutive pass
Wine Tours
€300–400
Per day, private driver
Eurostar
€80–150
Paris → London, booked early
Best Season
May–Oct
Sep–Oct for harvest

Fourteen Days Across Europe’s Finest.

From the snow-capped reflections of Lake Lucerne to the golden afternoon light across the Bordeaux vineyards at harvest — and ending with two days in one of the world’s great cities — this route earns its place as one of Europe’s truly elegant journeys. Travel slowly, taste deliberately, and let the trains do the work.

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