The best hotels in Liechtenstein
Liechtenstein is tiny, but picking the right hotel still trips people up. We reviewed 8,000+ options across Vaduz, Malbun, and the Rhine Valley villages so you don't have to. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Liechtenstein
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Gasthaus Löwen
Village Center, Schellenberg
Free cancellation & Pay later
Landgasthof Schäfle
Village, Planken
Free cancellation & Pay later
Kulm Hotel Triesenberg
Upper Village, Triesenberg
Free cancellation & Pay later
Parkhotel Sonnenhügel
Eschen-Nendeln, Eschen
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Turna
Ski Resort Center, Malbun
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Sonnenhof
Hillside Above Center, Vaduz
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gasthaus Löwen | Village Center, Schellenberg | $55–85/night | 7.6/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Hotel Meierhof | Town Center, Triesen | $75–110/night | 7.9/10 | Best Value |
| 3 | Hotel Vaduzerhof | City Center, Vaduz | $120–175/night | 8.3/10 | Best Location |
| 4 | Gasthof Au | Village Center, Balzers | $105–150/night | 8.1/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 5 | Landgasthof Schäfle | Village, Planken | $110–155/night | 8.2/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 6 | Kulm Hotel Triesenberg | Upper Village, Triesenberg | $135–195/night | 8.4/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 7 | Parkhotel Sonnenhügel | Eschen-Nendeln, Eschen | $260–360/night | 8.8/10 | Luxury Pick |
| 8 | Hotel Turna | Ski Resort Center, Malbun | $280–420/night | 9.1/10 | Top Rated |
| 9 | Hotel Sonnenhof | Hillside Above Center, Vaduz | $145–210/night | 9/10 | Top Rated |
| 10 | Hotel Engel | Städtle, Vaduz | $130–185/night | 8.5/10 | Most Popular |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Gasthaus Löwen
A simple guesthouse in the quiet village of Schellenberg in the northern part of the country. Rooms are basic but clean, with traditional alpine decor and comfortable beds. The restaurant downstairs serves hearty local food at reasonable prices. Good base for exploring the Rhine valley and the ruins of Schellenberg Castle nearby. Do not expect luxury, but the value is hard to beat in Liechtenstein.
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Hotel Meierhof
This family-run hotel on the main road through Triesen offers solid value for the region. Rooms are functional and well-kept, with some featuring views toward the Falknis mountain range to the south. The breakfast buffet is generous and included in the rate. Staff are friendly and helpful with local recommendations. It is about a 10-minute drive to Vaduz, making it a practical and affordable alternative to staying in the capital.
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Hotel Vaduzerhof
The Vaduzerhof sits right on Städtle, the main pedestrian street running through the capital, with Vaduz Castle visible on the hillside above. Rooms are comfortable and updated, with a clean contemporary style that suits the modern feel of the city. The restaurant serves good regional cuisine and is popular with both guests and locals. Walking distance to the Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein and most of the city's main attractions. A reliable and well-located mid-range choice for first-time visitors.
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Gasthof Au
Balzers is the southernmost municipality in Liechtenstein, and the Gasthof Au is a well-kept guesthouse near the medieval Gutenberg Castle. The rooms are modest but comfortable, and the location is ideal for day trips into neighboring Switzerland or the Rhine valley. The inn has a traditional restaurant with good local dishes and a relaxed atmosphere. Fewer tourists pass through Balzers compared to Vaduz, which gives the stay a more authentic feel. Parking is easy and free.
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Landgasthof Schäfle
Planken is the smallest municipality in Liechtenstein and sits at around 800 meters elevation, offering impressive views down over the Rhine plain. The Schäfle is a traditional country inn with simple, well-maintained rooms and a cozy dining room. The quiet location makes it a genuine escape from busy towns, and hikers use it as a base for the trails above the village. The food is honest and filling, with an emphasis on local ingredients. A car is necessary to stay here comfortably.
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Kulm Hotel Triesenberg
Triesenberg sits above Vaduz on the alpine slopes and has sweeping views across the entire Rhine valley. The Kulm Hotel is a mid-range alpine property with well-furnished rooms, many with balconies facing west toward Switzerland. The atmosphere is calm and the area is popular with walkers and cyclists. The village has a distinct Walser cultural heritage and the local museum nearby is worth a visit. Sunsets from the terrace here are genuinely spectacular.
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Parkhotel Sonnenhügel
Located in Eschen in the northern lowland part of Liechtenstein, this upscale property offers larger rooms and more refined facilities than most hotels in the country. The spa and wellness area are well-equipped and the rooms are furnished to a high standard. It caters partly to business travelers from the regional financial sector. The restaurant has a carefully considered wine list and a kitchen that takes seasonal cooking seriously. A car or taxi is needed to reach Vaduz, which is about 15 minutes south.
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Hotel Turna
Malbun is the only ski resort in Liechtenstein, sitting at around 1600 meters in the Alps above Triesenberg, and the Hotel Turna is its finest address. The property is ski-in, ski-out by alpine standards, with direct access to the slopes in winter and hiking trails in summer. Rooms are elegant and warm, with quality bedding and alpine design done properly. The spa and indoor pool are excellent after a day on the mountain. Dining here is the best in the resort, with a menu that reflects the season and the setting.
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Hotel Sonnenhof
Perched on the hillside just above Vaduz with panoramic views across the Rhine valley into Switzerland, the Sonnenhof is one of the best-regarded hotels in the country. The rooms are spacious and decorated with warm alpine materials. The kitchen focuses on seasonal local produce and the meals are genuinely excellent. Service is attentive without being intrusive. The terrace in summer is one of the best spots in Liechtenstein for a long lunch.
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Hotel Engel
Hotel Engel is one of the most recognizable addresses in Vaduz, located directly on Städtle in the heart of the capital. The building has been a landmark for decades and the interiors blend traditional character with modern comfort. Rooms on the upper floors have partial views toward the castle. The attached restaurant is consistently good, with a broad menu that covers both local specialties and international options. It books up quickly during summer, so reserving early is advisable.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Liechtenstein
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel. Here's what you need to know.
Vaduz: where to stay and what to skip
Städtle is the pedestrian heart of Vaduz and the best address in the country. Hotel Engel sits right on it, Hotel Vaduzerhof is two minutes off it, and both put you within 5 minutes of the Kunstmuseum, the National Museum, and the trail up to Vaduz Castle. Stay here and you don't need a bus for most of your trip.
Skip anything marketed as 'Vaduz area' that's actually in Schaan. The town line is blurry on maps but the experience is different. Schaan is fine, but it's industrial and you'll be bussing or walking 25 minutes every time you want to do something. Pay the extra $20-30/night to actually be in Vaduz.
Malbun: Liechtenstein's only ski resort
Malbun sits at 1,600m at the end of a single winding road. There's one real hotel right at the slopes: Hotel Turna, rated 9.1 and priced accordingly at $280-420/night in ski season. It's the only property in the country where you can ski-in, ski-out, and it's worth the price if skiing is the whole point of your trip.
In summer, Malbun becomes a hiking base with trails into the Liechtenstein Alps and across into Austria's Vorarlberg region. Rates drop significantly. sometimes 35% below winter prices. But check bus 21 schedules if you're not driving: the last bus back to Vaduz leaves Malbun at 8:47pm, and there's no taxi service up there after 9pm.
The village option: Triesenberg, Planken, and Schellenberg
Three villages worth knowing about. Triesenberg sits on the hillside above Vaduz at around 900m. Kulm Hotel Triesenberg has Rhine Valley views that cost $135-195/night and feel like a bargain for what you're looking at. Planken is even smaller, population under 500, with Landgasthof Schäfle offering genuine quiet and hiking from the door. Schellenberg in the north has Gasthaus Löwen, Liechtenstein's best budget bed at $55-85/night.
All three villages are connected to Vaduz by the PostBus network. Journey times run 15-30 minutes depending on your starting point. These aren't inconvenient. just don't expect to walk to Städtle in under an hour.
How to book smart in a country this small
Liechtenstein has about 30 hotels total in the entire country. That's not a typo. August 15th National Day and the last week of February ski school holidays are the two windows where rooms disappear fast. book 6-8 weeks out for those dates minimum. The rest of the year, 2-3 weeks is usually fine.
Hotels here don't do the same discount game as big European cities. You won't find last-minute deals dropping 40% the night before. What you see is roughly what you pay. The exception is spring shoulder season (April-May), when a couple of properties will negotiate direct-book rates if you email them in German.
Getting around Liechtenstein without a car
The LIECHTENSTEINmobil bus pass covers the whole country for CHF 9/day. Bus 10 is your main corridor, running Vaduz to Schaan to Eschen to Schellenberg. Bus 21 goes up to Malbun. Trains don't exist inside Liechtenstein, but the Austrian ÖBB and Swiss SBB both stop at Schaan-Vaduz station, connecting you to Feldkirch (Austria) in 8 minutes and Buchs (Switzerland) in 4 minutes.
Most of central Vaduz is walkable in under 20 minutes end to end. The Städtle strip to the Kunstmuseum is a 3-minute walk. Up to Vaduz Castle is 20 minutes on foot via the marked trail from Peter-Kaiser-Platz. You don't need a car in Vaduz. but Malbun and Planken are far more convenient with one.
What nobody tells you about staying in Liechtenstein
The country runs on Swiss francs. Every hotel, restaurant, and bus accepts CHF. If you're coming from the eurozone, you'll pay a small conversion hit. typically 3-5% worse than the official rate at border exchange desks. ATMs in Vaduz on Städtle dispense CHF, and most hotels accept Visa and Mastercard without issues.
One thing that catches people off guard: the country is very quiet after 9pm. Even in central Vaduz, nightlife is minimal. The Hofkellerei winery at Feldstrasse 4 does tastings until 6pm on weekdays. Plan dinner early, pick up a bottle, and lean into the Alpine calm. It's actually one of the better things about staying here.
Explore Liechtenstein by city
We cover 1 destinations across Liechtenstein. Pick a city for a dedicated hotel guide with neighborhoods, seasonal tips, and our vetted picks.
Liechtenstein's best hotel regions
Vaduz is the obvious base and it's obvious for good reason: the capital puts you within walking distance of the Kunstmuseum, Vaduz Castle, and the Städtle pedestrian strip. If skiing is the plan, Malbun is your only real option and it delivers.
Vaduz 3 vetted hotels The capital, the castle, the only real city base.
The capital, the castle, the only real city base.
Vaduz is small enough to walk across in 20 minutes but dense enough to keep you busy for two or three days. Städtle is the main pedestrian street, lined with the Kunstmuseum, the Liechtenstein National Museum, and the Prince's wine cellars at Feldstrasse 4. The trail to Vaduz Castle starts at Peter-Kaiser-Platz and takes about 20 minutes uphill.
Hotel Engel sits directly on Städtle and earns its 8.5 rating. Hotel Vaduzerhof is two minutes off the main strip near the Rheinpark area, and Hotel Sonnenhof is up on the hillside with views over the city. Three very different stays at three very different price points: $120-175, $130-185, and $145-210/night respectively.
Avoid the road-facing rooms at any hotel on the Austrasse side of the city. Traffic from trucks crossing into Switzerland starts early. The quieter, hillside-facing rooms at Sonnenhof are the fix if noise is a concern.
Browse all Vaduz hotels → Malbun 1 vetted hotel One ski resort, one standout hotel, no compromises.
One ski resort, one standout hotel, no compromises.
Malbun is Liechtenstein's only ski destination and it punches above its size. At 1,600m elevation, the resort has 23km of groomed pistes, a ski school that's particularly good for beginners and kids, and direct access to trails into the Austrian Vorarlberg region in summer. The road up from Vaduz takes about 40 minutes by bus 21.
Hotel Turna is the anchor of the whole resort. Rated 9.1 and priced at $280-420/night in peak season, it's the closest thing Liechtenstein has to a genuine alpine luxury hotel. Ski-in, ski-out access, proper spa facilities, and rooms that actually justify the price. Don't come here expecting a bargain. come here expecting to not think about logistics for a week.
Summer Malbun is underrated. Rates drop to around $180-250/night, the hiking trails open up, and the crowds thin out dramatically. The trail to Augstenberg peak (2,359m) starts right from the village and takes about 3 hours return.
Browse all Malbun hotels → Rhine Valley Villages 4 vetted hotels Balzers, Triesen, Eschen, and Schellenberg. the authentic side.
Balzers, Triesen, Eschen, and Schellenberg. the authentic side.
Four villages, four very different stays. Balzers in the south has Gasthof Au, a solid mid-range pick at $105-150/night with Gutenberg Castle a 10-minute walk away. Triesen sits just south of Vaduz and Hotel Meierhof is the best-value property in the whole country at $75-110/night. Eschen-Nendeln in the north is home to the surprising Parkhotel Sonnenhügel. don't let the location fool you, this is a $260-360/night luxury property worth the drive.
Schellenberg in the far north has Gasthaus Löwen, Liechtenstein's cheapest vetted option at $55-85/night. The village center is quiet, the ruins of Lower Schellenberg Castle are a short walk, and the bus connection on line 10 gets you to Vaduz in about 30 minutes. It's not glamorous but it's genuinely cheap for this part of Europe.
Triesen is the pick if you want Vaduz access without Vaduz prices. It's 4km south of the capital, bus 10 runs every 30 minutes, and Hotel Meierhof's Town Center location means you're near the local Triesen market square on weekends.
Browse all Rhine Valley Villages hotels → Triesenberg & Planken Highlands 2 vetted hotels High altitude, Rhine Valley views, proper hiking country.
High altitude, Rhine Valley views, proper hiking country.
Triesenberg sits on the mountain terrace above Vaduz at around 900m. The views down into the Rhine Valley and across to the Swiss Alps are the main draw, and Kulm Hotel Triesenberg in the upper village delivers those views from $135-195/night. The village has a strong Walser cultural heritage, with the Walser Museum on Dorfstrasse worth an hour of your time.
Planken is smaller still. population around 450. and sits on a high plateau accessible by a narrow mountain road. Landgasthof Schäfle is a proper country guesthouse at $110-155/night, with hiking trails starting from the front door and the Drei Schwestern (Three Sisters) peaks visible from the terrace. It's rated 8.2 and genuinely earns it.
Both villages connect to Vaduz by the PostBus network but evening services are limited. The last bus from Triesenberg to Vaduz runs around 10:15pm in summer. Rent a car if you plan late dinners down in the capital.
Browse all Triesenberg & Planken Highlands hotels →Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Liechtenstein.
Romantic Getaway
Kulm Hotel Triesenberg in the upper village is the call. Rhine Valley sunsets from 900m and a guesthouse atmosphere that doesn't feel manufactured.
Culture & History
Städtle in Vaduz is a 400-meter strip with the Kunstmuseum, National Museum, and the Prince's stamp collection all within walking distance. Stay on or near it.
Family Trip
Malbun Ski Resort Center is purpose-built for families in winter, with gentle slopes and an accredited ski school for kids from age 4. Summer hiking works just as well.
Budget Travel
Schellenberg village gives you the cheapest vetted bed in the country at $55-85/night and a bus ride to Vaduz rather than Vaduz prices.
Alpine Nature
Planken's high plateau trails access the Drei Schwestern peaks and connect across to Malbun. Landgasthof Schäfle puts you at the trailhead with dinner waiting when you return.
Food & Wine
Vaduz's Städtle strip has the Hofkellerei winery at Feldstrasse 4 and restaurant density you won't find anywhere else in the country. Hotel Engel puts you in the middle of all of it.
How We Vetted These Hotels
Every hotel on this list went through the same evaluation. Here's exactly how we score them.
We reviewed 8,000+ options across the main regions of Liechtenstein. A lot got cut fast. We dropped hotels with misleading 'mountain view' claims where the view is a parking structure, cut village guesthouses that charge Vaduz prices for none of the location, and flagged anything near the main road through Schaan that photographs well but puts you next to truck traffic all night. What's left are 10 places we'd actually send a friend.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
Hotels that score below 8.0 don't make our list. Hotels can't pay for placement. We update scores every quarter based on new reviews. If a hotel's quality drops, it gets removed. Read more about our approach on the about page.
When to Visit Liechtenstein: Season by Season
Hotel prices, crowds, and weather vary dramatically. Here's what to expect each season.
Summer (June-August)
The Rhine Valley hits 20-28°C and the hiking trails above Triesenberg and Malbun are fully open. August 15th National Day is the single busiest event in the country. the Prince opens Vaduz Castle grounds for one evening and hotel prices jump 25-35% for that week. Book 6-8 weeks out if you're visiting in August.
Autumn (September-November)
September is genuinely the sweet spot. Temperatures sit at 14-18°C, the crowds from summer are gone, and hotel rates drop 15-25% from peak. The vineyard harvest around Vaduz and Triesen happens in late September and the Hofkellerei winery at Feldstrasse 4 often opens for tastings. October gets cooler fast, dropping to 8-12°C, but the autumn colours across the valley are worth it.
Winter (December-March)
Winter splits into two very different experiences. Malbun at $280-420/night is full of skiers and the resort hums from late December through March. Vaduz and the valley villages are calm, sometimes to the point of quiet. temperatures drop to -4-2°C and some smaller guesthouses close for January. Christmas market at Rathausplatz in Vaduz runs late November through December and keeps the capital lively.
Spring (April-May)
Spring is the underrated window. Temperatures climb from 10°C in April to 18°C by late May, the Rhine Valley goes green fast, and hotel rates are at their annual low. Gasthaus Löwen in Schellenberg can be had for $55-70/night during this period. The higher trails above Planken and Triesenberg may still have snow in April, but valley walking is excellent.
How to Book Hotels in Liechtenstein
Smart booking strategies that save money without sacrificing quality.
Book August 15th at least 6 weeks out
Liechtenstein's National Day brings the Prince out to open Vaduz Castle grounds and it's the one day a year the whole country feels crowded. Hotels within 5 minutes of Städtle sell out first. If you're set on that date, Hotel Engel or Hotel Vaduzerhof are the two to grab. expect to pay 25-35% above standard rates for that week.
Get the LIECHTENSTEINmobil day pass
It costs CHF 9 and covers unlimited bus travel across the entire country for a day. Bus 10 handles the main Rhine Valley corridor from Balzers to Schellenberg. Bus 21 goes up to Malbun. For context, a single trip without the pass costs CHF 3.60. the day pass pays for itself after 3 rides. Buy it from the driver or at the Vaduz PostBus stop on Austrasse.
Don't confuse 'Vaduz area' hotels with Vaduz hotels
Several properties in Schaan and along the main Landstrasse corridor advertise 'near Vaduz.' They're technically correct. but you're 25 minutes walk from Städtle with nothing interesting between you and the center. If Vaduz is why you're coming, pay for an actual Vaduz address. The price difference between Triesen and Vaduz is usually $20-40/night, which is worth every franc.
Ask about breakfast before you book
Village guesthouses like Gasthaus Löwen in Schellenberg and Landgasthof Schäfle in Planken almost always include breakfast. City hotels in Vaduz. Hotel Engel, Hotel Vaduzerhof. typically charge CHF 18-28 extra per person. For a couple staying 3 nights, that's CHF 100+ you didn't see coming. Check the inclusions or email the hotel directly.
Malbun has no taxi service after 9pm
This catches people out. Bus 21 from Vaduz runs up to Malbun but the last return journey leaves around 8:47pm. After that, you're either driving, staying in Malbun, or calling a private transfer from Vaduz for around CHF 60-80. If you're day-tripping to ski from a Vaduz hotel, plan your last run accordingly.
Pay in CHF, not euros
Liechtenstein runs entirely on Swiss francs. Some tourist-facing places in Vaduz will accept euros but you'll get a bad conversion rate. typically 3-6% below the official rate. ATMs on Städtle in Vaduz dispense CHF. If you're coming from Austria or Germany, withdraw CHF before you cross or at the Schaan-Vaduz train station ATM right when you arrive.
Frequently Asked Questions About Hotels in Liechtenstein
Straight answers from our team after reviewing hotels across Liechtenstein.
What's the best area to stay in Liechtenstein?
Vaduz is the smart base for most visitors. You're walking distance from Städtle, the Kunstmuseum on Städtle 32, and the trail up to Vaduz Castle takes about 20 minutes on foot. If you're here to ski, Malbun is the only place that makes sense. it's 16km up the mountain from Vaduz.
How much do hotels in Liechtenstein cost per night?
Budget guesthouses like Gasthaus Löwen in Schellenberg run $55-85/night. Mid-range options in Vaduz and Triesen sit around $75-185/night. The luxury end, like Hotel Turna in Malbun or Parkhotel Sonnenhügel in Eschen, goes $260-420/night. Prices spike 30-40% during ski season (December-March) and the Vaduz Street Festival in late August.
Is Vaduz worth staying in, or is it better as a day trip?
Staying in Vaduz is worth it if you want to see the capital without the Swiss day-tripper crowds. Most tourists arrive by PostBus from Buchs or Sargans and leave by 5pm, so evenings on Städtle are genuinely calm. A room at Hotel Engel on Städtle puts you right in the middle of it for $130-185/night.
What's the cheapest time to visit Liechtenstein?
November and early December are the cheapest window, with hotel rates dropping to roughly $55-110/night across most properties. The country is quiet but not shut down. Vaduz's Christmas market at Rathausplatz opens in late November and actually draws a good crowd without the summer pricing.
Do I need a car to get around Liechtenstein?
Not really. The LIECHTENSTEINmobil bus network covers most of the country for CHF 3.60 per trip or CHF 9 for a day pass. Bus 10 and 11 connect Vaduz to Schaan, Triesen, and Balzers. Malbun is served by bus 21 from Vaduz, though in winter conditions you'll want to check the schedule. it runs less frequently after 7pm.
Are there any areas of Liechtenstein I should avoid for hotels?
Skip the stretch of hotels along Landstrasse through Schaan. It's the main transit road and the traffic noise at night is a real problem. Hotels in that corridor often use 'near Vaduz' in their descriptions, but you're actually a 25-minute walk from Städtle with no interesting stretch in between.
Which Liechtenstein hotels have the best mountain views?
Kulm Hotel Triesenberg in Triesenberg's upper village sits at about 900m elevation with Rhine Valley views that are genuinely hard to beat. Hotel Sonnenhof on the hillside above Vaduz center also delivers, and it earns its $145-210/night price tag on the view alone. Both are about 15-20 minutes by bus from central Vaduz.
What's the best hotel for skiing in Liechtenstein?
Hotel Turna in Malbun is the only hotel right at the ski resort, and it's rated 9.1 for a reason. Malbun has 23km of pistes and is best for intermediate skiers and families. Rooms run $280-420/night in peak ski season, which is steep but saves you the 40-minute mountain drive each morning.
Is Liechtenstein expensive compared to Switzerland?
Budget hotels in Liechtenstein start around $55/night, which is actually cheaper than most Swiss border towns like Buchs or Sargans. Restaurants in Vaduz on Städtle are priced similarly to Zurich, with mains running CHF 22-38. The country uses the Swiss franc, so there's no currency conversion to worry about if you're coming from Switzerland.
When is the best time to visit Liechtenstein?
June through September is peak hiking and sightseeing season, with temperatures hitting 22-26°C in the Rhine Valley. Late August gets busy for the National Day celebrations on August 15th, when the Prince opens the castle grounds and hotel prices jump 20-30%. Spring, especially April-May, offers mild weather around 12-18°C and noticeably lower rates.
Are there family-friendly hotels in Liechtenstein?
Hotel Turna in Malbun is the top family pick, especially in winter. kids ski school operates right from the resort and the slopes are gentle enough for beginners. In summer, Gasthof Au in Balzers works well for families, with Gutenberg Castle just a 10-minute walk uphill and plenty of open space nearby. Rates at Gasthof Au run $105-150/night.
Do Liechtenstein hotels include breakfast?
Most guesthouses and Gasthof-style properties include breakfast in the room rate, especially Gasthaus Löwen in Schellenberg and Landgasthof Schäfle in Planken. City hotels in Vaduz like Hotel Vaduzerhof and Hotel Engel often charge CHF 18-28 extra for breakfast. Always check before booking. it's not automatic at the higher-end properties.
Useful links for Liechtenstein
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