Bernese Oberland (Canton of Bern)
Harder Kulm
How to do Harder Kulm from Interlaken: what the funicular costs, why you go at sunset, and how the Half Fare Card halves the fare on the one viewpoint worth your time in the town itself.
Where
Interlaken, Switzerland
Opening hours
The Harderbahn funicular runs from around mid-April to late November only - it closes completely for the winter, so check jungfrau.ch before you plan a December-to-March visit. In season the first car up is roughly 09:00-10:00 and the last car down is around 21:00-22:00 in high summer (earlier, near 18:00-19:30, in spring and autumn), so an evening ascent for sunset is the whole point. The ascent takes about 10 minutes. The Panorama Restaurant at the top keeps similar hours to the last funicular.
Tickets
A standard return on the funicular is around CHF 38 (about ยฃ34) for an adult; a single up or down is roughly CHF 19 (about ยฃ17), handy if you plan to walk one leg. A Half Fare Card or Swiss Travel Pass takes 50% off, bringing the return to about CHF 19 (about ยฃ17), and the Berner Oberland Regional Pass covers it outright. Children 6-15 are about half the adult fare. Buy at the Harderbahn valley station next to Interlaken Ost or online at jungfrau.ch.
Time needed
Budget 1.5 to 2 hours from Interlaken Ost: about 10 minutes up on the funicular, 45 minutes to an hour at the top for the Zwei-Seen-Steg platform and a drink on the restaurant terrace, then the ride or walk down. Allow longer if you eat at the Panorama Restaurant or hike the roughly 2.5-hour forest trail back to town instead of riding down.
In short
Visiting Harder Kulm
Harder Kulm is the funicular up to a 1,322m viewpoint directly above Interlaken, where the Zwei-Seen-Steg viewing platform juts out for the postcard shot looking straight down Lake Thun and Lake Brienz with the Eiger, Monch and Jungfrau behind. It is the one thing genuinely worth doing in the town itself rather than up the valleys, and at around CHF 38 return it is cheap by Swiss-mountain standards. Two things matter: the funicular only runs from spring to late November, so it is shut in deep winter, and a Half Fare Card or Swiss Travel Pass takes 50% off the fare. Go up for the last departure before sunset, eat at the Panorama Restaurant, and walk back down through the forest if your knees allow.
How to do it without overpaying
The thing you are paying for is the Harderbahn funicular, the red car that hauls you from the valley station next to Interlaken Ost up to the 1,322m viewpoint in about ten minutes. A standard adult return is around CHF 38 (about ยฃ34), which is cheap for a Swiss mountain, but if you already hold a Half Fare Card or Swiss Travel Pass it drops by half to roughly CHF 19 (about ยฃ17), and a Berner Oberland Regional Pass covers it outright. Buy at the valley station or online at jungfrau.ch.
The single decision that makes or breaks the trip is timing. Go up for the last departure before sunset: in high summer the last car down is around 21:00-22:00, so you can stand on the platform as the light turns gold on the peaks and still ride back. The funicular only runs from about mid-April to late November and shuts completely for winter, so a December-to-March visit is not an option โ check the current timetable before you build an evening around it.
What you actually came for
At the top, walk out onto the Zwei-Seen-Steg โ the โtwo-lakes bridgeโ, a cantilevered viewing platform that hangs out over the drop. This is the postcard: you look straight down between Lake Thun and Lake Brienz, with Interlaken on the flat strip of land between them and the Eiger, Monch and Jungfrau lined up on the horizon behind. It is the only spot in Interlaken itself where the famous three-peak panorama and both lakes land in one frame.
The Panorama Restaurant sits right beside the platform in a turreted timber building, with a terrace for a drink or a plate of rosti while you wait for the light. It keeps roughly the same hours as the last funicular, so an early-evening meal up here pairs naturally with the sunset shot rather than rushing back down for dinner in town.
The honest take on the fare
Go on a clear evening, not a hazy midday. The whole value is the view, so a flat grey sky turns CHF 38 into money spent on cloud โ on a dull day, save it. If your knees are willing, ride up on the funicular and walk down the signed forest trail (about 2 hours, dropping roughly 700m through woodland) on a single fare instead of a return; it is steep and switchbacking, so wear proper shoes and skip it in the wet.
Harder Kulm is the rare Interlaken attraction that is genuinely worth it. It is a fraction of the Jungfraujoch fare, the funicular does all the climbing, and the Zwei-Seen-Steg gives you the defining Interlaken view in about an hour and a half door to door. Time it for a clear sunset and it is the best CHF 38 you will spend in the town.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Interlaken city guide.
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