How to Book a Lake Geneva Cruise

Stepping onto the deck of a Lake Geneva sightseeing boat in summer, the wind off the water hits you about 5°C colder than the city you just left, even on a bright day. That temperature drop is part of the appeal — Geneva in July gets uncomfortably hot, the lake stays glacier-cold, and a 50-minute cruise gives you the city’s headline sights from the water plus a ventilated escape from the heat. For $24 it is the cheapest tourist experience in Geneva and the easiest way to say you have seen the place.

Jet d Eau fountain with rainbow over Lake Geneva Switzerland
The Jet d’Eau on a clear day. The fountain shoots 500 litres of water per second to a height of 140 metres — when sunlight hits the spray at the right angle you get rainbows across the cityscape behind it.

This guide covers how to book a Lake Geneva cruise: which length to pick, when the cheap 50-minute trip beats the longer wine-and-snacks version, and what you actually see between Pâquis and Eaux-Vives.

Historic paddle steamer with Swiss flag on Lake Geneva
One of the heritage paddle steamers that still operates on Lake Geneva. The CGN fleet runs eight Belle Époque vessels — built between 1904 and 1927, restored to full working order, painted in classic black-and-white.

The Geneva sightseeing cruises sail from the south side of the lake, near the Jardin Anglais and the giant flower clock that everyone photographs without quite knowing why. The boats are smaller than the lake’s working ferries — purpose-built for tourists, with open upper decks and enclosed lower lounges. Sailings run every 30-45 minutes from late March through October, with reduced winter schedules.

In a Hurry? The Three Cruises Worth Booking

Which Cruise to Book

The 50-minute cruise covers everything worth seeing from the water and costs the least — it is the right default for almost everyone. Upgrade to the wine-and-snacks version if you want a slower evening sail with a glass of Swiss white in your hand. Take the audioguided version if you specifically want commentary and the live guide on the cheap version is not your thing.

1. Geneva 50-Minute Lake Geneva Cruise — from $24

Geneva 50-Minute Lake Geneva Cruise
The standard sightseeing cruise. Departs from the Pâquis side, loops around the inner basin past the Jet d’Eau, returns to the same dock.

The most-booked cruise on the lake by some distance — over 4,000 reviews. The route covers the Geneva inner basin: out from Pâquis, around the Jet d’Eau, past the Mont-Blanc Bridge, along the Eaux-Vives waterfront, and back. Live commentary in English, French, and German. Departures every 30-45 minutes. Our full review covers the actual route and what each landmark looks like from the water.

2. Geneva Scenic Lake Cruise with Snacks and Wine — from $37

Geneva Scenic Lake Cruise with Snacks and Wine
The evening upgrade. One hour on the water with a glass of Swiss white and a small charcuterie board. Better at sunset than midday.

The version that adds wine and a charcuterie board to the standard route. Slightly longer (1 hour) and slightly slower-paced. The wine is a regional white from the Lavaux vineyards on the lake’s eastern shore — appropriate, drinkable, not life-changing. The cruise is more relaxing than the cheap version because the boat is less full and the captain takes things slowly. Our full review covers the wine pairing and how it differs from the standard cruise.

3. Audioguided Sightseeing Cruise of Geneva — from $25

Audioguided sightseeing cruise of Geneva
The audio-guide version of the standard tour. Useful if you want to listen at your own pace rather than catching the live guide’s commentary.

Same route as option 1 but with audio commentary delivered through headphones in 7 languages. Useful if you do not want to deal with a live guide who is alternating between three languages, or if you want to hear the commentary at your own pace. The boat itself is similar but typically smaller and quieter. Our full review compares the audio-guide experience to the live commentary version.

What You Actually See in 50 Minutes

Geneva port boats on Lake Geneva lakeside
The departure dock at Pâquis. The cheap cruise boats are the smaller white-and-red ones — the larger black-and-white paddle steamers run longer routes to Lausanne and Évian.

The boat leaves the Pâquis dock heading east into the inner basin of Lake Geneva. The first thing you see in detail is the Jet d’Eau itself, from below. Up close the fountain is much more impressive than from the shore — you can hear it as a low rumble, see the spray cloud forming above the cone, and on a windy day the boat passes through some of the spray drift. The captain usually slows down for a minute here so people can photograph it.

Lake Geneva with Jet d Eau fountain and Ferris wheel
The Jet d’Eau in summer with the seasonal Ferris wheel on the south shore. The fountain runs from March through October — winter visitors see only the cone where the water comes out, which is much less dramatic.

Past the fountain, the boat tracks east along the Eaux-Vives waterfront, where you see the Bains des Pâquis baths complex on your left (a swimming spot for locals) and the chain of luxury hotels along the quai on your right — Beau-Rivage, Hotel d’Angleterre, the Four Seasons. These are the hotels diplomats and minor royalty have used for over a century. From the water you see the lake-facing facades, which are more beautiful than the street side.

Mont Blanc Bridge Geneva Switzerland with flags
The Mont-Blanc Bridge — the main bridge across the Rhône where it leaves Lake Geneva. The flags along the railings represent each of the 26 Swiss cantons; they are changed seasonally.

The boat then turns and runs back along the southern shore — past the Jardin Anglais (and its famous flower clock, which is harder to see from the water than from land), the Mont-Blanc Bridge, the city’s old town climbing up the hill behind, and St. Pierre’s Cathedral at the top of the old town. On a clear day Mont Blanc itself is visible 80 km to the south, dominating the horizon. On a hazy day you see haze.

Geneva Lake Geneva Mont Blanc mountain panorama
Mont Blanc on a clear day, viewed from Geneva. The mountain is in France but it is essentially Geneva’s defining backdrop — the city is named “Geneva” but everything in it feels like it is named after Mont Blanc.

The Jet d’Eau — More Interesting Than It Looks

Jet d Eau aerial view Geneva fountain
The Jet d’Eau from above. The fountain consists of a single high-pressure pump on the lake bed shooting water through a 16-cm nozzle — there is no reservoir, no recirculation, just lake water back into the lake. Photo by Graymo86 / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

The Jet d’Eau started life in 1886 as an industrial pressure release for the city’s water network. Engineers needed somewhere for surplus pressure to escape when factories closed at the end of each shift. They built a vertical pipe at the end of the Rhône, surplus water shot 30 metres into the air, and people started photographing it. By 1891 the city had moved the pipe to its current location and re-engineered it as a tourist feature. The fountain has been running ever since.

Aerial view of Lake Geneva with Jet d Eau and cityscape
The aerial view shows how the fountain sits in the middle of the inner basin — far enough from the shore to be visible from the whole city, close enough that the cruise boats can sail right past it.

The current fountain is much bigger than the original — 140 metres high, 500 litres per second, requiring two specially-designed pumps that each draw 500 kilowatts when operating. The plume is illuminated at night with white floodlights. On Swiss national holidays they change the lights to red. The fountain shuts off automatically in winds over 60 km/h to prevent the spray from falling onto the city, but otherwise runs daily from March through October.

Geneva Jet d Eau with tourist boat passing
The cruise boat passing the Jet d’Eau. This is the closest most tourists get — the fountain is on a small jetty connected to the shore by a footbridge, but the bridge is usually closed when the fountain is operating because of the spray. Photo by Julia Lukmanova / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0 de)

Geneva from the Water vs Geneva from Land

Geneva skyline with Swiss Alps backdrop
Geneva from the lake. From the water you see the city as a horizontal strip of buildings with the Alps behind — the same view that has been on Swiss postcards for 150 years.

Worth being honest: Geneva is more interesting from the water than from the streets. The city itself is wealthy, clean, walkable, but not particularly beautiful at street level — the architecture is mostly 19th-century banking-era heavy stone, the shopping is expensive, the old town is small. The lakefront is what gives Geneva its identity, and you only see the lakefront properly from a boat.

Geneva waterfront with historic architecture at sunset
The waterfront at sunset. The lake side of Geneva is essentially the entire south face of the city — every major hotel, restaurant, and landmark fronts the water.

This is also why the cheap 50-minute cruise is enough for most travellers. You see Geneva’s actual face. You do not need to do it twice. If you want more lake time, the longer routes from CGN go to Yvoire, Lausanne, or Montreux — proper day trips by boat that actually take you somewhere different. The sightseeing cruises are not those routes; they are city tours.

Lake Geneva shoreline summer day
The summer shoreline. Geneva sits at the southwestern tip of the lake — to do the full Lake Geneva loop by boat takes about 12 hours of sailing.

Sunset Cruise vs Daytime Cruise

Geneva Jet d Eau fountain at sunset
The Jet d’Eau at sunset. Between roughly 7pm and 9pm in summer, the angle of the light through the spray turns the whole fountain pink-gold for 20-30 minutes — the best photographic window of the day.

If you can pick the time, take an evening cruise rather than a midday one. Reasons: cooler temperature on deck, better light for photographs (especially of the Jet d’Eau and the old town facing west), often less crowded, and the lake itself flattens as the wind drops at sunset, giving cleaner reflections. The standard cheap cruise has 6pm and 7pm departures in summer that are noticeably better than the 11am or 2pm ones.

Geneva waterfront sunset historic buildings boats
The waterfront at full sunset. The cruise boats are designed to be on the water during these light conditions — most of them have outdoor upper decks specifically for the photographs.

The wine-and-snacks cruise is built around evening departures. The standard cruise also runs evening slots but does not bundle anything with them. If you want the wine experience specifically because it is sunset, take the wine cruise. If you want the cheaper option but at sunset, take a 7pm standard departure. Both work.

Yachts moored at sunset Lake Geneva marina
The marinas at sunset. Geneva’s lakefront is heavy on private yachts — much of the marina capacity is permanent moorings for residents rather than transient boat traffic.

What to Combine With the Cruise

Geneva cityscape architecture and river
The Old Town climbing up the hill from the lake. Geneva’s Vieille Ville is small but worth a 90-minute walk after the cruise — the cathedral, the cobbled streets, and the place where the world’s oldest watchmaking tradition still lives.

A 50-minute lake cruise is short enough to be one part of a half-day in Geneva. The natural pairing is a walk through the Old Town (Vieille Ville) afterwards — the cathedral of St. Pierre at the top has a tower you can climb for $7, with the best free city view in Geneva. Allow 60-90 minutes to walk up, climb the tower, and walk back down through the cobbled side streets.

Telescope facing Jet d Eau fountain Geneva
One of the public telescopes on the south side of the lake. There are several free coin-operated ones along the Quai du Mont-Blanc — they let you read text on the back of the Jet d’Eau jetty from a kilometre away.

If you have a full day in Geneva, add a morning museum visit before the afternoon cruise. The Patek Philippe Museum (watchmaking history) is the unique-to-Geneva pick. The International Red Cross Museum is the heavier emotional pick. The Reformation Wall in Bastions Park is free and takes 20 minutes. The Botanical Gardens are pleasant if the weather is good.

Chillon Castle Montreux Lake Geneva Switzerland
Chillon Castle near Montreux on the eastern end of Lake Geneva. The CGN ferry from Geneva to Lausanne takes about 4 hours each way — too long for a day trip from Geneva, but doable if you are based in Montreux or Lausanne.

If you have multiple Geneva days, take the longer CGN ferry routes east toward Lausanne and Montreux. The day-pass for the CGN paddle steamers is about $80 and lets you hop on and off at any of the lake’s 30+ stops. Pair with a vineyard visit in the Lavaux UNESCO terraces between Lausanne and Montreux for a long, unhurried day.

Lake Geneva at sunset Vevey Switzerland
Vevey at the eastern end of the lake — a smaller alternative to Montreux for the lakeside-village experience. Reachable by CGN ferry from Geneva but more typically as part of a Lausanne-based day.

Practical Stuff — Tickets, Departures, Weather

Geneva Jet d Eau against blue sky and mountains
Tickets are sold both online and at the dock — online is the easier option in summer when walk-up sales sometimes fill up.

Booking: buy your ticket online before you arrive at the dock. The 50-minute cruise is sold by both Swissboat and CGN, and both have online booking systems that hold your seat for the next available departure. In peak summer (July-August) the most popular timeslots — sunset and the 11am post-breakfast slot — sell out 2-3 hours in advance. Off-season you can almost always walk up.

Departure point: most cruises leave from the Quai du Mont-Blanc on the north side of the lake, near Pâquis. The dock is a 5-minute walk from the Cornavin train station. If you are coming from the south side of the city (Old Town, Plainpalais), the Mont-Blanc Bridge brings you straight to the dock area. There is no public parking immediately at the dock — drivers should park at one of the central garages and walk in.

Weather contingency: cruises run year-round, with reduced winter schedules. The fountain shuts off in heavy wind (60 km/h+), which means a peak-summer storm day is the only time the cruise is materially worse than usual — you still see Geneva but you do not see the Jet d’Eau in operation. If your trip is short and the wind is forecast above 50 km/h on your only Geneva day, push the cruise to a different time slot if you can.

Pairing With the Rest of Your Switzerland Trip

Red boat on Lake Geneva with alpine backdrop
If you are doing the full Switzerland loop, Geneva typically sits at the start or the end of the trip — the airport is a major hub for flights into Switzerland.

Geneva is most often the first or last stop on a Switzerland trip because the airport is one of the country’s main international gateways. A natural pattern: arrive Geneva, take the cruise the same evening to orient yourself, train east the next day to Lucerne for Mount Titlis, then on to Interlaken for Jungfraujoch and Grindelwald, finishing in Zurich. Or the same loop in reverse.

Lake Geneva shoreline
The lakeside walks in Geneva are the city’s best free attraction. From Pâquis you can walk east along the lake for about 5 km without crossing a major road.

If your trip is shorter and you only have Geneva, build a 2-day plan. Day one: arrive, walk the Old Town, take the late afternoon cruise, dinner on the lakefront. Day two: morning museum (Patek Philippe or Red Cross), afternoon trip to Chamonix for Mont Blanc views (a separate day-trip — covered in our Chamonix guide), evening flight out.

The CGN Heritage Steamers

Worth knowing about even if you do not book one: the CGN paddle steamer fleet on Lake Geneva is the largest collection of working Belle Époque vessels in the world. Eight ships built between 1904 and 1927, all still in service, all running on regular ferry routes between Geneva, Lausanne, Évian, Yvoire, Nyon, and Montreux. They are real historic working boats, not floating museums — they carry commuters and tourists on the same schedules.

If you want a longer day-on-the-water experience than the 50-minute sightseeing cruise gives you, take a CGN day-pass and ride a paddle steamer to Yvoire (a medieval village on the French side, 90 minutes each way) or to Nyon (the next big Swiss town east, 75 minutes each way). The day-pass costs about $80 in second class, $120 in first class, and includes unlimited hop-on hop-off across the whole fleet for the day.

The paddle steamers themselves are beautifully preserved — original brass fittings, restored salons, working steam engines you can see through glass panels in the engine room. The contrast with the small modern sightseeing boats is stark; both are valid Lake Geneva experiences, but they are completely different days out. The steamers are also the only practical way to reach some of the smaller lakeside villages, since the road system on the lake’s northern French shore is patchier than the Swiss side.

One last note. The cruise boats run rain or shine — they only cancel for genuinely dangerous weather like extreme wind. A rainy Geneva day is not a reason to skip the cruise; the boats have covered lower decks and the Jet d’Eau looks more dramatic against grey clouds anyway. If anything, an overcast day gives you better photographs of the fountain because the spray reads more clearly without harsh shadows.

This article contains affiliate links. If you book through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps us keep producing detailed travel guides.