Winter · Off-season walking
Most high hiking trails close from early November for safety. But “closed trails” does not mean “nothing to walk” — the valley keeps a network of prepared winter paths, and the scenery is arguably better under snow.
The high summer hiking trails, the Eiger Trail, the ridge walks, the via ferrata, close from early November and reopen in late spring, because snow and ice make them genuinely dangerous. That is real, and any honest guide should say so. What the marketing sites gloss over is what stays open, which is more than you would think.
The Jungfrau region grooms a network of dedicated winter walking paths, signposted in pink, kept clear and walkable in normal winter boots. They run through the ski areas above the valley, around Wengen, Mürren and Kleine Scheidegg, with the Eiger, Mönch and Jungfrau right there. You ride up by train or cable car and walk the high, sunny terrace while the valley floor sits in shadow.
The flat valley-floor path between Lauterbrunnen and Stechelberg stays open year-round and is one of the most peaceful walks anywhere in winter, frozen or full-flowing waterfalls on both sides, almost nobody about. Add snowshoe tours for deeper snow, sledging runs for something faster, and the simple walk through the village past the Staubbach Falls.
On a true whiteout or wind-hold day, the weather-proof options are skating and curling at the Bödeli ice centre, a spa afternoon at Beatus on Lake Thun, or indoor climbing at Orbit in Wilderswil. The valley is never a write-off, it just rewards a flexible plan.
Common questions
The high summer trails close from early November for safety, but the region grooms dedicated winter walking paths (Winterwanderweg, pink signs) in the ski areas, and the valley-floor path to Stechelberg stays open year-round.
Yes. Prepared winter walking paths run through the high ski areas, and the flat valley-floor walk is open all year. You can walk in normal winter boots; snowshoes open up deeper terrain.
A winter walking path — a route kept clear and walkable through the snow, signposted in pink in the Swiss Alps. The Jungfrau region maintains several around Wengen, Mürren and Kleine Scheidegg.
Valley-floor apartment and studios, a short walk from the village, with a private wood-fired hot tub in The Apartment for when you come in from the cold.