The real comparison at Zurich Airport is train vs everything else. But when road transport is needed, here is how taxis and transfers compare.
When you should just take the train
For central Zurich, the train is 7.20 CHF (about $9 USD), takes 10-13 minutes, and runs every few minutes. Unless you have a specific reason to take road transport, the train is the answer. This applies to solo travelers, couples, families with manageable luggage, and business travelers alike.
Taxis
Swiss taxis are metered, clean, and driven by professional, licensed drivers. Vehicles are typically Mercedes or BMW sedans. The ride to central Zurich runs to several times the train fare — Zurich taxi tariffs are set per operator (a base fare plus per-kilometer and per-minute charges), so ask the driver for an estimate or check with the taxi company before you ride; we could not confirm a single official city-wide rate to publish here. Card payment is standard.
There is no negotiation, no scams, and no ambiguity. The meter runs and you pay the metered amount. The only issue is the price, which is simply what things cost in Switzerland.
Pre-booked transfers
Transfers from Zurich Airport are squarely aimed at the premium market. Sedan transfers run $70-120 USD. The vehicles are typically executive-class (Mercedes E-Class, S-Class, BMW 5 or 7 Series). The driver meets you at arrivals with a name sign and handles luggage.
For the 15-minute ride to central Zurich, this is a premium service at a premium price. It makes the most sense for business travelers who want a polished arrival, groups splitting the cost, or travelers heading to destinations outside the city where the train is not practical.
Comparing the costs
| Option | Price to Zurich center | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Train | 7.20 CHF (about $9) | 10-13 min |
| Taxi | metered, several times the train fare — ask for an estimate | 15-25 min |
| Transfer (sedan) | $70-120 USD | 15-25 min |
| Transfer (minivan) | $100-160 USD | 15-25 min |
The train is dramatically cheaper than any road-transport option. This is the widest rail-vs-road price gap you will find at any major airport.
When road transport makes sense
- After midnight when trains stop running
- Heavy or oversized luggage that is impractical on the train
- Groups of 4+ where splitting a minivan transfer becomes cost-effective per person
- Destinations not on the rail network (specific hotels in suburbs, private addresses)
- Business and VIP arrivals where a premium vehicle and driver are expected
- Families with car seats since the train obviously does not require one but the taxi to your final destination might
The bottom line
Zurich Airport has the best train connection of almost any airport worldwide. For the vast majority of travelers heading to central Zurich, nothing competes with it. Taxis and transfers serve legitimate but niche needs: late-night arrivals, heavy luggage, groups, premium service, and non-central destinations. If none of those apply to you, take the train.