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Geneva, Switzerland
Geneva

Where to stay in Geneva

Lakeside Eaux-Vives suits a first trip; choose Pâquis for cheaper food-led evenings, the Old Town for cobbled atmosphere, and Cornavin only for early day-trip trains.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026
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In short

Where to stay in Geneva

For a first Geneva trip, stay in Eaux-Vives on the left bank unless you have a clear reason not to. It is lakeside, you walk to the Jet d'Eau jetty in minutes and climb up to the Old Town behind you, and it is quieter at night than the station side. Choose Pâquis on the right bank for better-value, food-led evenings, the Old Town (Vieille Ville) for cobbled atmosphere if you are happy to visit more than sleep there, and Cornavin only if you have early trains to Chamonix, Lausanne or Montreux.

The short version

  • Best all-rounder: Eaux-Vives, left bank by the Jet d'Eau jetty.
  • Best value and food: Pâquis, the right-bank eating quarter by the Bains des Pâquis pier.
  • Best atmosphere: Vieille Ville (Old Town), the cobbled hill around St Pierre Cathedral.
  • Best for early day-trip trains: around Gare Cornavin.
  • Wherever you stay, take the free Geneva Transport Card your hotel hands you rather than booking purely for walking distance — trams and buses cost a tourist nothing.

Best areas to book

Eaux-Vives

££ mid-range

The cleanest first-timer choice: a left-bank, lakeside quarter where you walk to the Jet d'Eau jetty in minutes and the Old Town climbs up behind you, with Geneva Plage and the Bains des Pâquis swims close. It is more residential and noticeably quieter at night than the station side, and the new Eaux-Vives marina and beach have lifted it. You pay a little more than Pâquis, but you trade that for a calmer base a short walk from the water.

Best for: First-timers, couples, lake walks

Browse hotels Left bank, lakeside, ~10 min walk to the Jet d'Eau

Pâquis

£ value

The right-bank district between Gare Cornavin and the lake, and the liveliest, most multicultural eating quarter in the city, with the Bains des Pâquis bathing pier and its cheap buvette at its tip. Food here is markedly cheaper than the Old Town, you are walkable to everything, and it is the value pick for a food-led trip. It is edgier after dark than Eaux-Vives, with a small red-light fringe near the station, so choose a street nearer the lake than the tracks.

Best for: Value, food-led trips, nightlife

Browse hotels Right bank, lakeside, ~8 min walk to the lake

Vieille Ville (Old Town)

£££ premium

Up the hill on the left bank: the Reformation cobbles, St Pierre Cathedral and its tower climb, the Place du Bourg-de-Four and the antique shops. It is the most atmospheric and central pocket in Geneva, but it is short on hotels, steep to reach with luggage, and the few rooms here run premium. Better to visit on foot than to sleep in unless an old-town boutique is the specific draw.

Best for: Atmosphere, history, sightseeing on foot

Browse hotels Left bank, hilltop, ~10 min uphill from the lake

Cornavin (around the station)

££ mid-range

The right-bank blocks around Gare Cornavin: functional, well-connected chain hotels and business traffic rather than charm. It is the least scenic base and a short tram or walk from the lake, but it is unbeatable for an early train to Chamonix on the Mont-Blanc Express, or to Lausanne and Montreux, and rooms are often cheaper midweek. Pick it for a day-trip-heavy stay or a one-night stopover, not a sightseeing trip.

Best for: Early trains, day-trip bases, stopovers

Browse hotels Right bank, by the station, ~10 min walk to the lake

Airport to centre options

Geneva airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Train to Gare Cornavin ~7 min free 80-min ticket from the arrivals machine The default — grab the free transit ticket before you reach the platform
Tram 18 to the centre ~20 min covered by the free transit ticket Slower than the train but stops near some lake hotels
Taxi to Eaux-Vives or the Old Town ~15-20 min usually CHF 35-45 Only worth it with heavy luggage or a late arrival

The simple choice

If you are booking in a hurry, filter for Eaux-Vives first, somewhere between the Jet d'Eau jetty and the Eaux-Vives marina, then compare Pâquis if prices look high. That single rule keeps most first-timers out of the two common traps: paying premium for a cramped Old Town room you reach by dragging luggage uphill, or booking out by Cornavin and walking back across the river for every lake view. From an Eaux-Vives base you walk to the Jet d'Eau, swim at the Bains des Pâquis across the harbour on a free Mouette water-taxi, and climb to St Pierre Cathedral in ten minutes.

Compare Eaux-Vives hotels

Safety and noise

Geneva is generally safe, and GOV.UK's main day-to-day flag for Switzerland is pickpocketing and bag theft around the station, the airport and busy tourist spots rather than anything area-specific. For accommodation that means a lake-side Eaux-Vives or Pâquis street usually beats a room backing onto the Gare Cornavin concourse or one on the small red-light fringe near the station in Pâquis. The Fêtes de Genève fireworks in August are the one date when the quais and central streets stay packed late, so book a side-street room if you come for them.

Whichever area you pick, your hotel must give you a free Geneva Transport Card at check-in covering trams, buses and the Mouettes harbour boats for your whole stay — so do not rule out a slightly farther base over a tram ride you will never pay for.

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Where to stay in Geneva FAQs

Eaux-Vives or Pâquis for a first trip?
Eaux-Vives for most people. It is the lakeside left-bank quarter a short walk from the Jet d'Eau jetty, quieter at night and an easy climb to the Old Town. Choose Pâquis on the right bank if better-value food is the priority and you accept a livelier, edgier evening near the station, with a small red-light fringe to steer around.
Is it worth staying near Gare Cornavin?
Only for day trips or a stopover. Cornavin is where the Mont-Blanc Express to Chamonix and the trains to Lausanne and Montreux leave, so it suits a day-trip-heavy stay or an early departure, and the chain hotels are reliable and often cheaper midweek. For a sightseeing trip it is the dullest base and a tram or walk from the lake, so stay in Eaux-Vives and ride in for the early train.
Where should I stay in Geneva on a budget?
Pâquis. The right-bank eating quarter by the Bains des Pâquis pier has the cheapest food in the centre, walkable rooms and a free harbour swim on the doorstep, and rooms here undercut the Old Town. It is livelier and edgier than Eaux-Vives after dark, so pick a street nearer the lake than the railway tracks. Either way, a sit-down restaurant main still runs CHF 28-45, so plan one nice meal and graze at the buvette for the rest.

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