A new report indicates that government subsidies aimed at distributing tourism more evenly have failed to reduce congestion at Switzerland's most popular destinations. Major tourist spots saw a 6% increase in overnight stays, while smaller destinations grew by less than 2%, raising questions about the effectiveness of the current strategy.

"It is still too early to draw conclusions. Travel habits change only slowly."
Switzerland is grappling with a staggering paradox: the more the government spends to decentralize tourism, the more visitors pack into the same iconic streets. A scathing new report reveals that CHF 60 million in federal subsidies has failed to move the needle on overtourism. Despite a clear mandate to distribute visitors across the country, the nation’s most famous landmarks are more congested than ever. The federal government makes these massive payments conditional on easing the pressure on hotspots, yet the data suggests the strategy is crashing into reality. While Switzerland Tourism argues that travel habits are slow to shift, the immediate reality is one of mounting frustration for locals and a diluting of the 'Swiss experience' for travelers. The current trajectory raises a critical question: is the state effectively subsidizing its own overcrowding?
The divide between Switzerland’s tourism 'haves' and 'have-nots' is widening at an alarming rate. The top 50 destinations recorded a surging 1.7 million more overnight stays compared to 2023—a dramatic 6% increase that shatters previous records. In sharp contrast, the 130 smaller, rural destinations that the government desperately wants to promote saw a measly growth of less than 2%. This isn't just a statistical gap; it is a structural failure. While Lucerne and Interlaken struggle to breathe under the weight of new arrivals, charming villages in the Jura or the Eastern Alps remain overlooked. The magnet effect of the 'Big Names' is overpowering the state's attempts at diversification. The concentration of wealth and foot traffic into a handful of postal codes is creating a two-speed tourism economy that leaves the Swiss hinterland in the dust.
It is not just where they go, but when they go. The latest analysis from NZZ am Sonntag confirms that the seasonal distribution of visitors has shown zero improvement. Switzerland remains trapped in a cycle of peak-season intensity followed by off-season lulls. The dream of a 'year-round' destination where crowds are thinned out across twelve months remains just that—a dream. This seasonal density puts unprecedented strain on Swiss infrastructure, from the SBB rail network to mountain cable cars. When millions of visitors descend simultaneously, the quality of service plummets and environmental impact soars. Switzerland Tourism maintains that it is 'too early to draw conclusions,' but for the residents of overrun alpine valleys, the time for patience has long since passed. The lack of progress in seasonal leveling suggests that marketing efforts are simply reinforcing existing travel patterns rather than disrupting them.
The failure of current tourism policy demands a radical rethink of how Switzerland sells itself to the world. If CHF 60 million in taxpayer money cannot influence where a tourist sleeps, the very mechanism of federal subsidies must be interrogated. We are witnessing a critical moment for the Swiss brand. As arrivals from the US and India rebound strongly, and the potential return of Chinese group travel looms, the pressure will only intensify. Switzerland cannot afford to be a victim of its own success. Future policy must move beyond gentle encouragement and toward aggressive steering—or risk losing the tranquility and exclusivity that define the Swiss image. The government must now decide: will it continue to fund a failing strategy, or will it impose stricter conditions that finally force a balance between economic gain and national livability? The stakes for the Swiss landscape have never been higher.