Morges Tulip Festival — Switzerland's Free Answer to Keukenhof
When people think of tulips, they think of the Netherlands. Keukenhof, the crowds, the €20 ticket. But there's another festival — smaller, quieter, free — on the shore of Lake Geneva, with the Alps as a backdrop instead of flat Dutch farmland.

The first time I walked into Parc de l'Indépendance during tulip season, I wasn't prepared. Over a hundred thousand tulips in every color imaginable, arranged in patterns that change every year, with snow-capped mountains reflecting in the lake behind them. And not a single ticket booth. Not a single queue. Just a park, open to everyone.
The Morges Tulip Festival is one of Europe's best-kept spring secrets. And most people outside Switzerland have never heard of it.
What Makes It Special
This isn't a commercial flower show. It's a free public park that transforms into a living carpet of tulips every spring — and has been doing so since the early 1970s, when the city's gardeners decided to create a spring tradition that would be open to all.

Every year, 100,000 to 140,000 tulip bulbs are planted across 30,000 m² of flower beds — over 250 varieties. The bulbs go into the ground six to seven months before the festival, and the varieties are carefully chosen to bloom in sequence. Early varieties open first, mid-season varieties follow, late varieties close the show. The result is a festival that looks different every single week for six weeks straight.
And every year, the design is completely new — different color combinations, different patterns, sometimes dedicated to a theme or a country. If you visited last year, this year will surprise you again.
It's not just tulips either. Daffodils, crocuses, hyacinths, and other spring flowers fill the gaps between the tulip beds, adding layers of color.
Morges vs Keukenhof — Why This Might Be Better

Morges | Keukenhof | |
|---|---|---|
Entry | Free (donations welcome) | €20+ per person |
Crowds | Quiet, especially on weekdays | Packed, timed entry |
Backdrop | Lake Geneva + the Alps | Flat Dutch countryside |
Duration | ~6 weeks (early April – mid May) | ~8 weeks |
Number of tulips | 100,000–140,000 | 7,000,000 |
Atmosphere | Calm, local, unhurried | Tourist attraction |
Getting there | Train from anywhere in Switzerland | Bus from Amsterdam/Leiden |
Keukenhof is bigger — by far. But Morges is free, uncrowded, and framed by mountains. For photography, for a peaceful day out, for the feeling that you discovered something before everyone else — Morges wins.
When to Visit (Week by Week)
Early April (1–10): Tulips are just starting to open. Fewer flowers, but almost no people. Good for a quiet visit, not ideal for photos.
Mid-April (10–25) — BEST TIME: Peak bloom. The most vibrant beds, the fullest colors, the best photo opportunities. This is when you want to be here. Weekday mornings are the sweet spot — fewer visitors, softer light.
Late April (25 – May 5): Still beautiful, fewer people than peak. A great compromise between color and calm.
After May 5–10: Most tulips have faded. Only late varieties remain. Still worth a walk, but the wow factor is gone.
Pro tip: Visit right after rain — the colors are even more intense when the petals are wet.


The best time to take photos at the Morges Tulip Festival is at sunset. There aren't as many people, but the colors are incredible.
A Perfect Day in Morges
A full-day itinerary — no rushing, good cafés, tulips, and lake views.

10:00 — Arrive in Morges
Take the train — it's the easiest option and parking is limited, especially on weekends. The station is a 5–10 minute walk from the park through the old town. During the festival, the town is decorated with tulip-themed signs pointing the way. You can't get lost.
10:15 — Coffee with a lake view
Le Cygne Café — coffee and a croissant on the terrace, looking out over the lake. A slow start before the tulips.
11:00 — The Tulip Festival
Parc de l'Indépendance — walk along the lake, find the themed flower beds, take your time. The park is compact but dense with detail. Average visit: 1.5–2 hours. Don't rush — the point is to enjoy the atmosphere, not tick a box.
Free entry. Donation boxes are available but optional.

13:00 — Lunch by the water
La Terrasse du Petit Manoir — a more refined spot, good for a light lunch and a glass of local wine. Morges is in a wine region — take advantage of it. Simpler alternative: Pizzeria Venezia.
14:30 — Walk through the old town
Morges is small but full of character. Walk along the waterfront, see Morges Castle from outside, explore the narrow streets and the Temple de Morges. About 1 hour without entering any museums.


15:30 — Gelato break
Gelateria Venezia Morges — perfect for a pause after walking in the afternoon sun.
16:30 — Stay or go
You can head back, or stay by the lake for a mini-picnic on the grass. On weekends, the park sometimes has live music in the late afternoon — a reason to return for one more walk among the tulips at golden hour.
Total: 6–7 hours. Maximum tulips, relaxed pace, good food.
How to Get There
Method | Details |
|---|---|
Train | From anywhere in Switzerland to Morges station. 5–10 min walk to the park through the old town |
Car | Possible, but parking is limited. On weekends, finding a spot can be difficult |
Best option | Train — especially since Morges is a wine region. Skip driving, enjoy a tasting |
Practical Information
Detail | Info |
|---|---|
Festival name | Fête de la Tulipe / Morges Tulip Festival |
Location | Parc de l'Indépendance, Morges, Switzerland |
When | Early April – mid May (~6 weeks) |
Peak bloom | Mid-April (10–25) |
Entry | Free (voluntary donations) |
Tulips | 100,000–140,000 bulbs, 250+ varieties |
Area | ~30,000 m² |
Best time of day | Morning (fewer people) or golden hour (best photos) |
Weekend events | Live music, local markets (check locally) |

A Bit of History
The festival started in the early 1970s, when the city's parks department wanted to create a spring attraction for Morges. From the beginning, the idea was simple: plant tulips along the lakefront, make it beautiful, and keep it free for everyone.

What started as a few modest flower beds grew into one of the largest tulip displays in Switzerland. Today, the bulbs are planted every autumn — six to seven months before the festival — with each year's design planned from scratch. After the season ends, the bulbs are recycled or reused. The city uses sustainable planting methods, treating the festival as a living garden, not a disposable show.
Over fifty years later, the tradition hasn't changed: no tickets, no barriers, no VIP sections. Just a park full of flowers, open to anyone who walks in.

Come in mid-April on a weekday morning. You'll have the park almost to yourself. If you can, combine it with a wine tasting in Morges — the Lavaux vineyards are nearby, and a half-day of tulips followed by a half-day of wine is one of the best spring days you can have in Switzerland.
One more thing: the festival isn't a "one-day event." It's a living process that changes every week. If you visit in early April and come back three weeks later, it will look like a completely different park. Same beds, different flowers, different colors. That's the beauty of it.

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