How to Book a Bernina Express Day Trip from Milan

Coming around a bend in the lower valley below Brusio, the Bernina Express does something that should not be possible — it loops back under the same track it just travelled. The train circles a 360-degree open spiral viaduct, descends through its own loop, and emerges on the other side moving in the same direction it was already going. You can see the carriages curving away ahead of you while the rear of the train is still on the upper section of the bridge. People in the panoramic carriages stop talking when this happens. It is the moment the trip earns its UNESCO World Heritage status.

Brusio spiral viaduct Bernina railway with red train
The Brusio Spiral Viaduct. The red train is on the upper section here — it loops down through itself to descend gently enough that the rest of the route can stay on a manageable gradient.

This guide covers how to book a Bernina Express day trip from Milan: which tour to choose, what the actual day on the train looks like (it is a long one, with a stop in St. Moritz), and the small but important difference between the panoramic carriages and the regular ones.

Red Bernina Express train curving through Swiss Alps
The Bernina Express on a typical Alpine section. The classic shot — bright red carriages snaking through green meadows with snow-capped peaks behind.

The Bernina Express is the highest scenic train route across the Alps that does not use a rack-and-pinion system. It runs from Tirano in Italy to Chur in Switzerland — about four hours one way through the Bernina Pass, crossing 196 bridges and 55 tunnels along the route. Most travellers do it as a Milan-based day trip: train from Milan to Tirano, the Bernina Express up through the pass to St. Moritz, free time in St. Moritz, then a coach back to Milan via the Italian valley. Total day is around 12 hours.

In a Hurry? The Three Tours Worth Booking

Which Tour to Book

The base $120-123 tours all run the same route on the same train with regular carriages. The premium $188 option adds the panoramic carriage — curved windows that wrap up over the side and into the roof — which is what most people actually picture when they imagine the Bernina Express. If you can absorb the price difference, the panoramic carriage is worth it. The route is the same; the windows are the difference.

1. From Milan: Bernina and St. Moritz Day Tour by Scenic Train — from $123

From Milan Bernina and St. Moritz Day Tour by Scenic Train
The headline tour. Coach pickup in Milan, transfer to Tirano, board the Bernina Express to St. Moritz, free time in town, coach back to Milan.

The most-booked of the Bernina options. You meet the coach in central Milan around 7am, drive 2.5 hours to Tirano on the Italian side of the border, board the Bernina Express train for the 2.5-hour climb up through the Bernina Pass to St. Moritz, get about 90 minutes of free time in St. Moritz, then take the coach back to Milan via Italy. Our full review walks through the actual day timing and what each leg is like.

2. From Milan: St. Moritz and Panoramic Bernina Express Tour — from $188

From Milan St Moritz Panoramic Bernina Express Tour
The premium panoramic version. The actual Bernina Express panoramic carriages — curved windows that extend up to the roofline — versus the standard regional train carriages.

The premium option, with the actual Bernina Express panoramic carriages instead of the standard regional train. The carriages have curved windows that wrap from waist height up over the side and into the ceiling — much better for photographing the mountains as you climb. Costs a noticeable premium but if the train is the point of the trip, this is the version to book. Our full review covers what the panoramic carriages are actually like and whether they earn the upcharge.

3. From Milan: Bernina Train, Swiss Alps & St. Moritz Day Trip — from $120

From Milan Bernina Train Swiss Alps St Moritz Day Trip
An alternative budget version of the same trip. Same route, same train, slightly cheaper because the operator runs leaner pickup and drop-off arrangements.

The third option is an alternative budget version of essentially the same trip — same route, same train. The marginal saving comes from the operator’s slightly leaner pickup and drop-off arrangements. Worth choosing if the timing fits your day better than the headline option, or if you have other Milan tours already booked through the same platform. Our full review covers the booking mechanics and any small differences from option 1.

What the Day Actually Feels Like

Bernina Express train passing village in valley
The valley sections of the Bernina route. The train moves slowly — about 35 km/h average — to give passengers time to take in the scenery and to handle the gradients on the climbing sections.

The coach picks you up in central Milan at around 7am — early but not brutal. The first leg is the drive north to Tirano on the Italian side of the border. This takes about 2.5 hours on a mix of motorway and provincial roads, ending in the small Italian town that serves as the southern terminus of the Bernina line. Tirano itself is unremarkable; you do not get free time there, just enough to walk from the coach park to the train platform.

Bernina Express through lush forests and snowy mountains
The lower forested section near Tirano. The train climbs through woodland and rural villages for the first 30 minutes before the elevation starts to thin out the trees.

The train itself is what most travellers are here for. Boarding is at the Tirano station around 10.30am. Standard regional carriages have normal train windows; the panoramic carriages (premium ticket) have the curved roof-line windows. Either way you get assigned seating with seat-back tables and a snack trolley that comes through about an hour into the ride. The journey to St. Moritz is 2.5 hours of continuous climbing, with the train pausing briefly at Brusio for the spiral viaduct moment and at Alp Grüm for a five-minute photo stop at the open-air platform.

Alp Grum mountain station Bernina Express viewpoint
The five-minute stop at Alp Grüm. Everyone gets out, takes the photograph of the train and the surrounding peaks, and re-boards before the conductor whistles. Worth it.

You arrive in St. Moritz around 1.30pm with about 90 minutes of free time before the coach back. This is enough to walk into central St. Moritz from the train station (10 minutes), buy a sandwich, sit by the lake for half an hour, and walk back. It is not enough to do anything resembling a “visit” to St. Moritz — the town is essentially a backdrop, not a destination on this particular day trip.

The Spiral Viaduct — Why It Exists

View from Bernina railway in Brusio spiral
The view from the train approaching the spiral. You can see the upper level of the loop ahead and the lower level of the loop behind you simultaneously — the geometry takes a moment to parse.

The Brusio Spiral Viaduct is the most photographed structure on the Bernina line and the most engineered solution to the route’s biggest problem: the descent into Italy is too steep for a normal railway. The southern end of the line drops from Cavaglia (around 1,700m) down to Tirano (430m) over a relatively short distance. To make this descent gentle enough for a regular adhesion railway (no rack-and-pinion), the engineers needed to add length without adding distance — and a spiral viaduct does exactly that.

The geometry: the train enters the spiral on the upper level, curves through 360 degrees, and exits on the lower level travelling in the same direction. The whole structure is open-air masonry, built between 1906 and 1908, and has been operating continuously since 1908. Most photographs of the Bernina Express show the train mid-loop, with one set of carriages on the upper section and the rest visible on the lower section.

Red Bernina Express crossing snow-covered bridge
One of the higher viaduct sections approaching the pass. The bridges across the route are built without nails, screws, or modern fastenings — pure 1900s masonry that engineers have been maintaining for over a century.

Standard vs Panoramic Carriages

Bernina Express Landwasser viaduct panoramic car
A Bernina Express panoramic carriage. The curved windows extend from below seat level up to the centre of the roof, giving you views of the mountains directly overhead as the train climbs.

The standard tour ($120-123) uses regular Rhätische Bahn regional train carriages — perfectly comfortable, normal-sized windows, side-facing seating. You see the scenery clearly but you have to crane your neck for the upper-mountain shots. The seats are not reserved, so if the train is full you might get pushed around for the better window seats.

The panoramic tour ($188) puts you in the actual Bernina Express panoramic carriages — they look like greenhouse trains from outside, with curved windows that arc from below seat-back up over the side and into the ceiling. From inside, you can see the mountains directly above the train as well as alongside. The seats are reserved and rotated so everyone faces forward. The windows are also tinted to reduce glare for photography.

Bernina Express train traversing snowy Swiss Alps
The train at full elevation. Around the Bernina Pass at 2,253 metres the route reaches its highest point — most of the panoramic shots come from this 30-minute section.

Honest assessment: if you are going to do this trip, do it in the panoramic carriage. The premium is real but the difference in experience is too. People who pay extra never regret it; people who go cheap sometimes wish they had upgraded. If you cannot absorb the panoramic price, the standard carriage is still good — but go in knowing the windows are the trade-off.

St. Moritz — What the 90 Minutes Shows You

Saint Moritz aerial view mountains and lakes
St. Moritz from above. The town sits in a high valley between two lakes — the famous one is the smaller upper lake (Lej da San Murezzan) that the town is named for.

St. Moritz is one of the wealthiest small towns in Switzerland, a winter sports resort that has been on the global map since 1864 when it hosted what is widely considered the first organised winter tourism. The town itself is small — a tight cluster of luxury hotels, watch shops, and restaurants centred on a single shopping street. Most of the famous skiing happens on the surrounding peaks, not in the town itself.

Lake St Moritz autumn with colorful trees
Lake St. Moritz in autumn. The lake is small enough to walk all the way around in 60 minutes — but not in the 90 minutes the day-trip leaves you, once you factor in the walk from and to the station.

What you can actually do in 90 minutes: walk from the station to the lakefront (10 minutes downhill), do a quick loop along the south shore (20-25 minutes), grab a coffee and pastry at one of the lakefront cafés (15 minutes), and walk back to the station (15 minutes uphill — easy to underestimate). That uses the time honestly. Anything more ambitious — the upper village, the Segantini Museum, the Olympic Bobsleigh Run — needs a full half-day.

Saint Moritz Lake mountains forest Graubunden
Saint Moritz lake at ground level. The waterfront walk south of the town centre is the obvious 30-minute stretch to do with limited time.

If St. Moritz interests you for its own sake, do not do the Bernina Express as a day trip — book a night here separately. The day trip uses St. Moritz as a turnaround point, not a destination. Real St. Moritz visits need at least an overnight to get any sense of the place.

When to Go

Bernina Express winter through snowy mountains
Winter on the Bernina Express. The contrast of the bright red train against fresh snow is the single most photographed scene on the entire route — and the route runs reliably even in deep winter.

The Bernina line runs year-round and the experience changes by season. Winter (December-March) gives you the iconic red-train-against-snow photographs. The route is reliable in winter because it has been running through these gradients for over a century — only extreme weather causes cancellations. The trade-off is shorter daylight, so the second half of the climb may happen in low light.

View of snow-covered Alps from Bernina Express
The view from the train in winter. Snow simplifies the landscape into white-on-grey-on-blue — a more graphic look than the green summer version.

Summer (June-September) gives the longest daylight, the greenest valleys, and the least chance of weather drama. The trade-off is crowds — the train can be near-capacity in July-August and the panoramic carriages sell out weeks ahead. If you want a summer panoramic ticket, book at least 3-4 weeks in advance.

Alpine winter mountain scene Switzerland
The autumn shoulder season catches the larch trees turning gold against the still-green meadows — a uniquely alpine combination that lasts only 2-3 weeks in late September.

Autumn (late September-October) is the photographer’s pick. The larch trees in the Bernina Pass turn gold for two-three weeks, the crowds drop sharply after the school summer break ends, and the light is softer than midsummer. Spring (April-May) is shoulder season with reliable scenery but unpredictable weather — possible snow at the pass even in May.

What to Bring on the Train

Bernina Express winter Chur viaduct in snow
The train moves slowly through these landscapes — bring something to drink and enough phone battery to last 4-5 hours of continuous photographs.

The train ride is 2.5 hours one way, the bus legs are 2.5 hours each, and the day total is around 12 hours. Pack accordingly. A water bottle is essential — the snack trolley sells drinks but at trolley prices ($5+ per bottle). A real camera with a polarising filter outperforms phones at the higher elevation; the snow glare washes out phone shots more than people expect.

Layered clothing matters because the train heating runs warm and the brief Alp Grüm photo stop puts you outside in alpine cold for five minutes. The St. Moritz lakefront in summer is around 18°C; in winter it can be -10°C. The pickup in Milan and the arrival in St. Moritz can be 25°C apart on the same day. A fleece you can put on and remove easily handles most situations.

Power: phone batteries drain fast at the elevation and from continuous photography. Bring a power bank. The standard carriages have no charging ports; the panoramic carriages have USB ports at most seats but they are slow.

Self-Guided as an Alternative

Bernina Express train traversing snowy Swiss Alps
If you have a Swiss Travel Pass already, the Bernina Express seat reservation is the only thing you need to pay for separately — making the trip significantly cheaper than the Milan bus tour.

If you have time and a Swiss Travel Pass, you can do the Bernina Express more cheaply by booking the train ticket directly with Rhätische Bahn. Take the train from Zurich or Lucerne to Chur (about 90 minutes), then board the Bernina Express northbound from Chur to Tirano (4 hours), or southbound. The day is longer but you control your own schedule and you can stop in St. Moritz for a real visit if you want.

The trade-off with self-guided versus the Milan day tour: you do the full 4-hour Chur-to-Tirano route rather than the abbreviated 2.5-hour Tirano-to-St.Moritz section, which means more train time and more scenery. The downside is you have to figure out your own onward transport and accommodation. For experienced rail travellers, this is the better Bernina experience. For first-time visitors, the Milan day tour is the easier introduction.

Pairing With the Rest of Your Italy or Switzerland Trip

Bernina Express at Lago Bianco
The Bernina Express at Lago Bianco near the highest point of the route. The lake takes its name from the milky glacial water that fills it from the surrounding peaks. Photo by Kabelleger / David Gubler / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)

The Bernina Express is unusual among Switzerland day trips because it is most logically based in Milan rather than a Swiss city. Most travellers do this as a single day during a Milan or Lake Como trip rather than as part of a wider Switzerland itinerary. The day pairs well with one or two days in Milan exploring the Duomo, the Galleria, and the Last Supper.

Bernina glacier water Engadin Piz Bernina
The glacier feeding Lago Bianco. The pale water comes from rock flour suspended in the meltwater — the glaciers are still active in this valley, though smaller every decade.

If you are doing the Bernina from a Switzerland base instead, the obvious pairing is a longer Graubünden trip with St. Moritz as a real overnight, plus the Mount Titlis and Mount Pilatus mountain days from a Lucerne base. Switzerland’s eastern canton of Graubünden has its own tourist infrastructure separate from the more famous central regions — the Bernina Express is the headline excursion that ties them together.

Train crossing Landwasser Viaduct Switzerland
The Landwasser Viaduct on the wider RhB network — not on the Bernina line but visible if you continue past St. Moritz to Chur on the longer Glacier Express route.

For travellers obsessed with Swiss trains, the Bernina Express connects to the equally famous Glacier Express at Chur — together the two routes form an 8-hour cross-Alpine train day that runs from St. Moritz all the way to Zermatt. This is a separate booking and a much longer commitment than the Milan day trip, but for railway enthusiasts it is the holy grail of Swiss scenic train travel.

Bernina Pass railway line through Graubunden
The Bernina line snakes through the high valley near the pass. The route was added to UNESCO’s World Heritage list in 2008, jointly with the Albula railway that connects to it from Chur.
Aerial view of Swiss Alps overlooking St Moritz valley
St. Moritz valley from above. If you do this trip and decide you want to come back, the upper Engadin valley around the town is one of Switzerland’s most beautiful and least visited regions.

If you do this trip and decide you want more, consider returning later for a multi-day Engadin trip — base in St. Moritz or nearby Pontresina for 3-4 nights, do the surrounding mountain hikes and lake walks, and use the Bernina railway as a local commuter train rather than a tourist excursion. It is a completely different experience from the Milan day trip and arguably better. Combine with a Mount Pilatus visit or a Mount Titlis day on the way back to make a complete eastern-Swiss week.

One last note. The day trip is long — count on 12 hours of total elapsed time including the Milan-Tirano coach legs. Most travellers underestimate the wear-and-tear of the bookend coach drives. If you have any flexibility, eat a real breakfast before the 7am pickup and a real dinner after you get back. The on-board snacks and the brief St. Moritz lunch will not sustain you through a full day on coaches and trains.

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