Bernese Mittelland
Zytglogge
Bern's medieval clock tower, whose astronomical clock sends a jester, a rooster and a parade of bears into motion for a few minutes before each hour โ free to watch from the street.
Where
Bern, Switzerland
Opening hours
Open access (always open) to watch the clock from the street; the figures move shortly before each hour. The interior tower tour runs at set times, usually seasonal and booked ahead. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.
Tickets
Free to watch the clock from the street. The guided tower tour costs around CHF 20 per adult and must usually be booked. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.
Time needed
Ten minutes to catch the figures move; add about an hour if you take the guided tower tour.
In short
Visiting Zytglogge
The medieval clock tower at the heart of Bern's old town. Its astronomical clock's figures โ a jester, a rooster and a parade of bears โ perform for about four minutes before each hour, so stand on the east side a few minutes early rather than dead on the hour. Watching from the street is free; a guided tour up the tower costs around CHF 20.
Where to stand, and when
The Zytglogge is the old stone clock tower planted right in the middle of Bernโs UNESCO-listed old town, and itโs been keeping time here for centuries. The thing everyone comes to see is the astronomical clock on its eastern face, where a small cast of mechanical figures โ a crowing rooster, a sceptre-waving jester and a slow parade of bears (Bernโs emblem) โ creak into motion.
Hereโs the bit that catches people out: the show starts about four minutes before each hour, not on the hour itself. So position yourself on the east side of the tower a few minutes early, look up at the painted clock face, and youโll catch the whole routine. Turn up dead on the hour and youโll have missed most of it. Watching all of this from the street costs nothing.
Worth your time?
For a free sight in the heart of the old town, the Zytglogge is an easy yes โ itโs right on your route between the station and the bear park, the arcaded Kramgasse runs straight off it, and the figures are a genuinely charming couple of minutes. Manage expectations, though: itโs brief and a touch subtle, more a delightful pause than a jaw-dropping spectacle.
If the mechanism itself intrigues you, thereโs a guided tour up inside the tower for around CHF 20, usually at set times and worth booking ahead, especially in the busy season. You get the workings of the clock up close and a view over the rooftops. Itโs a pleasant add-on rather than a must โ the real attraction is standing in the street with everyone else, waiting for the rooster to crow. Treat the clock as a fixed point in a wider old-town wander and youโll get the most out of it.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Bern city guide.