Zurich has a quiet confidence about it. Clean trams, safe streets, world-class museums, outdoor swimming in summer, ice skating in winter, and enough chocolate to keep even the most restless child cheerful for an entire weekend.
Whether you live here and are always hunting for the next outing idea, or you're visiting Switzerland with children for the first time, this is the list that cuts through the noise. Real prices, honest tips, age recommendations, and everything you need to make the day actually work.
1. Lake Zurich Swimming (The Badis) — Do What the Locals Do
Best for: All ages | Duration: Half day | Season: May to September
On a warm summer day in Zurich, the locals do not go to a water park. They go to the lake. The Badis — Zurich's traditional outdoor bathing facilities dotted along both shores of the Zürichsee — are some of the most beloved institutions in the city, and they are genuinely excellent for families.
The water in Lake Zurich is remarkably clean, regularly tested, and warm enough for comfortable swimming from June through September (typically 20–23°C at peak summer). Most Badis offer changing rooms, lockers, showers, sundecks, a kiosk or simple restaurant, and lifeguards. Many have paddling pools or shallow sections specifically for small children.
Regentage in Zürich und Luzern können für Tweens und Teens trotzdem voller Spass sein, dank spannender Indoor-Aktivitäten wie Escape Rooms, Trampolinparks und interaktiven Museen.
Zürich ist eine grosse Stadt, liegt aber direkt neben der ländlichen Gegend, und es gibt viele Bauernhöfe in der Nähe, die Sie mit Ihren Kindern besuchen können, um der Natur näherzukommen. Im Sommer, Frühling und Herbst ist das Wetter besser denn je, und Sie können Ihre Freunde einladen, einen besonderen Tag, Geburtstag oder ein Jubiläum mit einer grossen Feier auf einem der Zürcher Bauernhöfe zu feiern.
Dieser Guide bietet für jede Familie etwas Passendes
Roubini Charitou
Möchtest du mehr Ideen?
Erhalte einmal pro Woche eine E-Mail mit Vorschlägen, die zu euch passen.
- Strandbad Mythenquai: the most family-friendly on the western shore, with a large grassy area, sun loungers, a children's pool, and a good restaurant. One of the most popular with young families.
- Strandbad Tiefenbrunnen: slightly further along the eastern shore, with a waterslide and a more relaxed atmosphere.
- Oberer Letten: a free, open-air swimming area along the Limmat River in the city itself. Incredibly popular with families and locals. The current carries you gently along and children love the experience.
Insider tip: Arrive early on weekends in July and August as the Badis fill up quickly and the good sunbeds go fast. Mythenquai and Tiefenbrunnen charge a small entrance fee (around CHF 6–8 for adults, free for young children). Oberer Letten is completely free.
2. Art for All Ages: Visiting the Kunsthaus Zurich with Kids
If you're looking for an inspiring family outing that blends culture with hands-on fun, the Kunsthaus Zurich is a must-visit. As one of Switzerland's premier art museums, the Kunsthaus offers a surprisingly child-friendly experience that appeals to budding creatives and curious minds alike.
The museum hosts a wide collection of works, from classic masters like Monet and van Gogh to contemporary pieces that spark conversation and imagination. For families, the highlight is the Kunsthaus’s dedicated children’s gallery and art studio, where kids can join interactive workshops and create their own masterpieces. Special exhibitions often include art tours tailored for children, complete with age-appropriate guides, creative activities, and the chance to get hands-on with artistic materials. The “Kinderatelier” (children’s studio) runs programs most weekends and during school holidays, no prior art experience needed!
Practical tips for parents: The Kunsthaus is fully accessible with strollers, and there’s a family-friendly café onsite for snack breaks. Most importantly, you'll also find a famous stainless steel slide by Swiss artist Carsten Höller that has become a favorite for kids and families. This playful installation is a perfect stop for children to burn off some energy while parents enjoy the surrounding cultural atmosphere.
Lockers make it easy to stash coats and bags while you explore. Admission for children under 16 is free, and you can ask for the free audio guide designed just for kids at the front desk, which turns the visit into a fun treasure hunt through the galleries. Workshops and family events can fill up quickly during holidays.
Address: Heimplatz 1, 8001 Zurich. Easily reached by tram (lines 3, 5, 6, 9, and more) from anywhere in the city. kunsthaus.ch
Insider tip: Let kids take the lead, encourage them to pick a favorite artwork and tell you what they see. Some families bring sketchbooks so little ones can draw what inspires them. Combining a morning at the Kunsthaus with an afternoon at the lake or playground makes for a perfectly balanced Zurich day out.
Zoo Zurich — A Full Day in One of Europe's Great Urban Zoos
Best for: All ages | Duration: Half day to full day
Zoo Zurich is Switzerland's largest and most visited zoo, and it earns that title. Sitting on a hillside in the Fluntern district, just 15 minutes by tram from the city centre — it spans 27 hectares of carefully designed habitats that genuinely prioritise animal welfare. Over 360 species live here, from Asian elephants in the Kaeng Krachan Elephant Park to lions, giraffes, snow leopards, and penguins.
The showstopper is the Masoala Rainforest Hall — a vast, climate-controlled dome recreating Madagascar's tropical rainforest with a canopy walkway threading through the treetops. Chameleons, flying foxes, lemurs, and parrots move freely around you. The humidity hits you immediately and the children go very quiet, which is a miracle in itself.
The zoo is hilly — take comfortable shoes and a buggy with good wheels if you have a toddler. Between spring and autumn, a toy train connects the Masoala Hall and elephant park, which gives little legs a much-needed rest.
Insider tip: Children up to age 12 get free admission on their birthday with valid ID (Monday to Friday, excluding public holidays). File this one away — it makes for a very special outing. Book tickets in the Zoo app before you arrive.
Prices: Adults approximately CHF 29 | Teenagers (13–17) reduced rate | Children (6–12) approximately CHF 14 | Under 6 free | Family day ticket (2 adults + 2 children) CHF 71. Zürich Card gives 10% off.
📍 Zürichbergstrasse 221, 8044 Zürich | Open 365 days a year | [zoo.ch](https://www.zoo.ch)
3. Lindt Home of Chocolate — The World's Greatest Chocolate Experience
Best for: Ages 4 and up | Duration: 1–1.5 hours
Just 11 minutes by S-Bahn from Zurich HB, in the lakeside suburb of Kilchberg, sits what may be the most child-pleasing museum on earth. The Lindt Home of Chocolate is built around a 9.3-metre free-standing chocolate fountain — the tallest in the world — and centres on an interactive journey through the history of chocolate, from the cacao plantations of Central America to the Swiss confectionery revolution that gave the world milk chocolate.
The tasting room at the end is the reason children sprint through the exhibits: unlimited sampling from multiple chocolate fountains (white, milk, and dark), plus dispensers offering eight different flavours of Lindt bars that drop into your hand like a winning slot machine. The children will want to stay in this room indefinitely. Plan accordingly.
The building itself — designed by celebrated Swiss architects Christ & Gantenbein — is spectacular, with a soaring atrium and the kind of sightlines that make every arrival feel like an event.
Insider tip: This is one of the most popular attractions in the greater Zurich area and it frequently sells out, particularly in summer and at weekends. Book directly from Lindt's website as early as possible — sometimes a month in advance for peak season. If you find direct tickets sold out, the SBB RailAway combination ticket (train + entry) often has availability when Lindt's own site does not, and it offers the added flexibility of a non-fixed entry time.
Prices (2025): Adults CHF 17 | Children (8–15) CHF 10 | Children under 8 free. Zürich Card holders get 20% off.
4. Swiss Science Center Technorama — Switzerland's Most Hands-On Museum
Best for: Ages 6 and up | Duration: Half to full day | Location: Winterthur (30 min from Zurich)
Technically just outside Zurich in Winterthur, the Technorama belongs on this list because it is genuinely one of the best science museums in Europe and is easily reached by direct train from Zurich HB in about 25 minutes.
Over 500 experiments are laid out across multiple exhibition halls, covering physics, biology, mathematics, chemistry, and perception — and virtually every one of them involves doing something rather than reading something. Children can generate electricity by pedalling, create plasma, see how sound waves move through sand, and observe chemical reactions up close. It is loud, busy, messy, and completely wonderful.
Insider tip: Plan a full day. Most families underestimate how long they stay — the exhibits are genuinely absorbing for adults too. The on-site restaurant is reasonable and child-friendly. The museum is largely sheltered so it makes an excellent rainy-day option.
Prices: Adults CHF 32 | Children (6–15) CHF 22 | Children under 6 free | Family ticket (2 adults + children) available. Zürich Card gives a discount on entry.
5. Uetliberg — Zurich's Own Mountain for Little Adventurers
Best for: Ages 4 and up | Duration: Half day | All year round
Zurich's very own mountain rises to 871 metres just 20 minutes by S-Bahn from the city centre (S10 from Zurich HB, direction Uetliberg). The summit offers panoramic views across the city, the lake, and on clear days the full sweep of the Swiss Alps. There is a viewing tower, a playground, and a restaurant where you can reward small hikers with hot chocolate and Rösti.
The Planet Trail is the highlight for school-aged children: a 6-kilometre path from the summit to Felsenegg (reachable by cable car), designed as a scale model of the solar system, with each planet positioned at its exact proportional distance from a sun at the trailhead. It is educational without feeling educational, and children genuinely engage with the scale of it.
Insider tip: The cable car from Felsenegg back down to Adliswil, and then the tram back to the city, makes a perfect loop without retracing your steps. The Zürich Card covers the S-Bahn up. Pack layers — it is reliably cooler at the summit than in the city, even in summer.
Prices: S10 train is covered by standard ZVV tickets and the Zürich Card. The Felsenegg cable car is covered by Zürich Card or costs around CHF 7 return for adults, less for children.
📍 Take S10 from Zürich HB to Uetliberg | Open year-round
6. WOW Museum — The Illusion Experience Your Kids Will Talk About for Weeks
Best for: Ages 5 and up | Duration: 60–90 minutes
Right in the heart of the city, just a 5-minute walk from Zurich HB, the WOW Museum is one of those rare places that genuinely delights every age at the table. Spread across three floors and around 400 square metres, it is entirely dedicated to optical illusions — rooms that make you look gigantic or tiny, infinity mirrors, spaces where the floor becomes the ceiling, and light installations that challenge everything your eyes think they know.
The secret weapon for families with younger children is Willow — a tiny elf who supposedly lives in the museum. His footprints, miniature furniture, and hidden clues are scattered throughout, giving toddlers and early primary-age children a magical scavenger hunt layered on top of the main experience.
For teenagers, the real draw is the photography. Nearly every room is designed as a photo opportunity, with QR codes that activate animated GIF booths you can download instantly. Bring a fully charged phone — your camera roll will thank you.
Insider tip: Book your time slot online in advance, especially for weekends and school holidays. The museum sells out regularly. Thursdays offer a 15% discount on all tickets (excluding public holidays) — a genuinely useful tip for local families.
Prices: Adults CHF 23 | Ages 6–16 CHF 16 | Ages 2–5 CHF 5 | Under 2 free | Family ticket (2 adults + up to 4 children aged 6–16) CHF 73. With the ZVV Ferienpass, children get 33% off.
7. Lake Zurich Boat Cruise — The Most Relaxed Way to Spend an Afternoon
Best for: All ages | Duration: 1–3 hours
ZSG (Zürichsee-Schifffahrtsgesellschaft) operates regular cruises on Lake Zurich throughout the year, and a boat trip on the lake is one of those Zurich experiences that works equally well for a six-month-old and a sixteen-year-old. The combination of movement, fresh air, stunning views of the city skyline, and the slow unwinding of the lake stretching south toward the Alps tends to put children in the best possible mood.
The short Kleine Seerundfahrt (Small Lake Tour) runs approximately 90 minutes and is ideal for families — long enough to feel like a proper adventure, short enough that younger children do not reach meltdown point. For a longer outing, the cruise to Rapperswil (about 1.5 hours each way) takes you to a charming medieval town with a castle, rose gardens, and a zoo for children that can be added to the same day.
Insider tip: The cruise to Kilchberg stops near the Lindt Home of Chocolate — combining the boat and the chocolate museum in a single day is a classic Zurich family combination and one of the best ways to do both. The Zürich Card covers selected ZSG cruises.
Prices: Short round trip from approximately CHF 13 adults, CHF 7 children. Zürich Card covers many routes.
📍 Departs from Bürkliplatz, Zürich | [zsg.ch](https://www.zsg.ch)
8. Old Town (Altstadt) and the Grossmünster Tower
Best for: Ages 6 and up | Duration: 2–3 hours
Zurich's Altstadt, spread across both banks of the Limmat River, is one of the most walkable and child-friendly historic centres in Europe. The streets are cobblestoned, largely pedestrianised, and packed with chocolate shops, bakeries, and fountains that children find irresistible.
The Grossmünster — Zurich's iconic twin-towered Romanesque cathedral, dating from the 12th century — offers a tower climb that rewards families with the best panoramic view of the city. The 187 steps are manageable for children aged 6 and up, and the circular staircase is a small adventure in itself.
For a more interactive cultural experience, the Kunsthaus Zurich — one of Switzerland's premier art museums — offers a free audio guide specifically designed for children aged 5 to 12, making it genuinely accessible for families rather than something to endure.
Insider tip: Visit the old town in the early morning before the tourist crowds arrive, or in the evening when the light on the Limmat is extraordinary and the streets quieten down. Stop at Café Sprüngli on Paradeplatz for the famous Luxemburgerli macarons — children consider these a perfectly legitimate breakfast.
📍 Altstadt, central Zurich | Accessible on foot from Zurich HB
9. Dolder Sports Ice Skating in Winter, Swimming and Minigolf in Summer
Best for: Ages 3 and up | Duration: 2–3 hours | All year round
Located near the zoo on the Zürichberg hillside, Dolder Sports is a beloved Zurich institution and one of the best all-season family venues in the city. In winter (roughly October to March), the outdoor ice rink is one of the largest in Switzerland — open-air, surrounded by trees, and magical in the early evening when the lights come on. Skate hire is available and lessons can be arranged for children who are starting out.
In summer, the complex transforms: there is an outdoor pool, a minigolf course, and open green space for picnics. The location feels removed from the city bustle while remaining easy to reach by tram.
Insider tip: Midweek visits are significantly quieter than weekends. The café on site serves decent hot chocolate and has a heated indoor seating area — essential if small skaters need a warming-up break. Bring your own helmet for young children if possible, as hire helmets run out quickly on busy days.
Prices: Ice skating entry approximately CHF 6–8 per person | Skate hire approximately CHF 6 | Open year-round, hours vary by season.
10. Blatterwiese Playground at Zürichhorn Park — The Best Playground in the City
Best for: Toddlers to age 10 | Duration: 1–2 hours | Free
Sometimes the best thing you can do with children in a new city is give them a great playground and get out of the way. The Blatterwiese playground in Zürichhorn Park, on the eastern shore of the lake, is considered by local parents to be the finest in Zurich — and with good reason.
A large sand pit, four different-sized slides, a generous swing section, a splash pool in summer, and wide open grassy areas for running make this a complete afternoon for children under 10. The park itself is beautifully maintained, directly on the lakefront, and surrounded by space for a family picnic. The kinetic sculpture *Heureka* by Jean Tinguely is displayed in the park from April to mid-October and provides a fascinating, slightly noisy backdrop.
Insider tip: Combine a Blatterwiese visit with a short ZSG ferry hop from nearby Zürichhorn jetty to the city centre — children love the transition from playground to boat. The park is free, parking is available nearby, and tram lines 2 and 4 stop at Fröhlichstrasse, a short walk away.
Prices: Free
📍 Zürichhorn Park, eastern shore of Lake Zurich | Open year-round
Practical Tips for Parents Visiting Zurich
The Zürich Card is worth buying for visits of 24 or 48 hours. It covers unlimited public transport, free entry to over 40 museums including the Swiss National Museum, and discounts at the zoo, Lindt, and more. Available at Zurich Airport, Zurich HB, and online.
The ZVV Ferienpass (available during Zurich school holidays) gives children heavily discounted or free travel on public transport and substantial discounts at many attractions including the WOW Museum (33% off) and Zoo Zurich.
Getting around with children is straightforward — Zurich's tram network is stroller-friendly, punctual, and covers virtually every attraction on this list. The main train station (Zurich HB) is the hub for S-Bahn connections to the zoo, Uetliberg, Winterthur (Technorama), and Kilchberg (Lindt).
Budget guide for a family of four (2 adults, 2 children) per activity:
- WOW Museum: approximately CHF 73 (family ticket)
- Zoo Zurich: approximately CHF 71 (family day ticket)
- Lindt Home of Chocolate: approximately CHF 44
- Uetliberg: approximately CHF 20 (transport only)
- Lake cruise: approximately CHF 40
- Technorama: approximately CHF 108
- Blatterwiese playground: Free
Which of these is already on your Zurich family list? Send us your favourites at [email protected] and we will share it with more parents!
Maria Karachaliou
Maria, founder of Momizen and mom of three, is all about making life easier (and more fun) for parents. She’s on a mission to help families discover the coolest after-school activities, while connecting them with local gems. Parenting hacks, local spots, and tons of fun—find it all on Momizen!
Top 10 Aktivitäten mit Kindern in Zürich | Momizen