Old cities carry old ghost stories, and Bern in Switzerland is no exception. From the old buildings filled with history to the depth of the Aare river, here are some of the most haunted places in Bern.

In Switzerland’s capital, behind its postcard-perfect streets and golden sandstone facades, Bern hides a much darker side when the lights go out. Beneath the Gothic spires, along narrow alleyways, and on timeworn staircases, ghost stories have lingered for centuries and still linger underneath the modern city. Tales of restless monks, cursed people forced to live out eternity as monstrous spirits, weeping mothers, and endless funeral processions to the afterlife.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Switzerland

From the shadow of the mighty cathedral to the crooked passages of the Matte district, Bern is a city where history and legend intertwine, and where the past refuses to stay buried. Although far from a complete list, here you have some of the most haunted places in Bern and some of their haunted tales.

The Headless Ghost Woman of Bern at Junkerngasse 54

Number 54 in Junkerngasse, Bern in Switzerland might be hiding more than just old history and dust. The legends of this long abandoned house just won't let go with the tale of the Headless Ghost Woman.
The Haunted Street: Junkerngasse street in the old part of Bern in Switzerland and was once a place were the rich lived. Today many of the old houses still remains, including the abandoned ones.//Photo by: Tony Badwy/wikimedia

Among the grand façades of Bern’s most historic street, Junkerngasse 54 stands out not for its elegance, but for the eerie silence that surrounds it. Abandoned for over a century, this seemingly ordinary building has long been the subject of chilling tales, most notably that of the Headless Ghost Woman that has become one of Bern’s most well known ghost stories. It is said that at the stroke of midnight, the spirit of a woman said to be headless appears at the window, haunting the quiet street below. Though the building likely served mundane purposes in its past, its shadowy interior now invites only speculation and spine-tingling legends, adding a dark twist to Bern’s beautifully preserved Old Town.

Read the whole story: The Headless Ghost Woman of Bern

The Sinful Monk Haunting the Former Monastery House on Junkerngasse

Before Junkerngasse became the street it is today, it used to house a lot of church buildings. The former monastery building, Frienisberghaus on Junkerngasse, once a residence for Cistercian monks from the Frienisberg Monastery, was long believed to be haunted by the ghost of a sinful monk. According to legend, the monk violated a nun during his time in the city, and after the Reformation turned the building to secular use, his restless spirit began to appear at midnight, silently climbing and descending stairs, sighing in torment. Even during the building’s demolition, tools dulled

Read the whole story: The Sinful Monk Haunting the Former Monastery House on Junkerngasse 

The Cursed Butcher Apprentice Haunting Rathausgasse in Bern 

Said to be cursed after torturing a calf, the butcher apprentice is now cursed to haunt the old butcher street for eternity. For centuries now, people claim to have heard the horrid sound of hooves clattering on the ground as he was transformed into the very thing he tortured for fun.
Rathausgasse: Die Berner Rathausgasse im Regen, 1992, Hotel Glocke. //Source: Christian Boss 1965/Wikimedia

In the heart of Bern’s Old Town, the legend of the ghostly butcher’s apprentice haunts the cobbled streets of Rathausgasse that was once known as Butcher’s Lane. Centuries ago, a cruel apprentice tormented and killed a calf for amusement, and as punishment, he was cursed to roam the area for eternity in the form of the very creature he tortured. People still claim to hear the eerie clatter of hooves echoing down the alleyways at night, though no horse or calf is ever seen. His restless spirit is also said to haunt the nearby Schlachthaus-Theater, formerly a slaughterhouse, where unexplained noises, spectral voices, and falling objects disturb the quiet. 

Read the whole story: The Cursed Butcher Apprentice Haunting Rathausgasse in Bern  

The Mattentreppen and the New Years Regretful Ghost

The old stairs around the old town in Bern are most definitely haunted. Ascending from the Cathedral on Münsterplattform towards the Aare River, ghosts of the past are said to be the ones behind the creaks on the stairs. 
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The Mattentreppe, a steep staircase linking Bern’s majestic cathedral to the old Matte district by the Aare River, is said to be one of the city’s most haunted sites. As this list will show, most of Bern’s old stairs have a couple of ghost stories attached to it. 

Known for its ties to bathhouses, brothels, and even Casanova, the area holds lingering traces of sorrow and scandal. One ghost is a despairing nobleman who leapt to his death after a maid he’d seduced became pregnant; another is a crippled man who vanishes in laughter when offered help. But the most haunting figure is that of a woman in a wide-brimmed hat who appears each New Year’s Eve, silently ascending the steps from her grave, returning to the home where she once murdered her child. When the cathedral bells toll midnight, her ghost walks again before vanishing into the night mist.

Read the whole story: The Ghosts Haunting the Mattentreppe, Ringing the New Year In 

The Burgträppe-Balzli Haunting Nydeggburg Castle

Where the Nydegg Church is today, there once used to be a castle. Tales about ghosts lingering around the old Nydegg Castle and the stairs leading up to it still roams. And one of the more infamous and feared ghosts of Bern is the Burgträppe-Balzli.
Burgtreppe in Bern: Castle stairs from Mattenenge to Nydegghöfli. // Source

The Burgträppe-Balzli is a familiar name to the people of Bern interested in a ghost story. It is said to be a violent ghost said to haunt the staircase near the long-vanished Nydegg Castle, destroyed in 1268 to prevent rival claims after the fall of the Zähringen dynasty. Though the castle is gone, Balzli’s presence remains, targeting young men with phantom beatings on cold winter nights. Some say his fury is tied to the castle’s mysterious past. Another ghost story tied to the location of the former castle whispers of ghostly builders said to be cursed spirits of those who dismantled the fortress. They return in the fog to tear it down again and again.

Read the whole story: The Burgträppe-Balzli Haunting: The Ghost of Nydegg Castle

Nydegg Church and Kreuzgasse

Where the Nydegg Church is today, there once used to be a castle. Tales about ghosts lingering around the old Nydegg Castle and the stairs leading up to it still roams. And one of the more infamous and feared ghosts of Bern is the Burgträppe-Balzli.
Burgtreppe: Castle stairs at Nydegg Church // Source

As it happens, The Burgträppe-Balzli is not the only ghost said to linger in this area. Nydegg Church in Bern stands on the ruins of the old Nydeggburg Castle, once home to Duke Berchtold V of Zähringen, the city’s founder. Though the duke died in 1218 and his dynasty ended with him, legend says his spirit still haunts the area, particularly the narrow alley of Kreuzgasse. On misty nights, he is said to step down from the Zähringer Monument to roam the streets, displeased with what his city has become. Locals also report eerie noises beneath the church from ancient tunnels linked to the old castle and nearby monasteries. This area of Bern, steeped in history, remains haunted by its founder’s restless legacy.

Read the whole story: Duke Berchtold V of Zähringen Haunting the Old Town in Bern

Kindlifresserbrunnen Fountain and the Spirit of the Discarded Children

Around the terrifying statue of the Kindlifressenbrunnen devouring children, young ghosts are said to haunt like a misty night. Said to be the unwanted babies taken out of the city through the underground tunnels, they return to the scene of the crime. 
Ogre Fountain: The Kindlifressenbrunnen literally means the Child Devour Fountain. There are many legends surrounding it, one being that the area around it is haunted, // Source: Andrew Bossi /Wiki

The eerie Kindlifresserbrunnen (“Child Eater Fountain”) stands as a grotesque 16th-century sculpture of an ogre devouring children, shrouded in mystery and unsettling legend. While historians debate its meaning, ranging from mythological Kronos to a jealous brother of Bern’s founder, local folklore speaks of a darker truth. Beneath the fountain once lay tunnels where unwanted children were said to be abandoned. According to legend, their spirits rise at midnight, dancing in the mist for one hour before vanishing again. The fountain is not just a chilling sculpture, but a symbol of Bern’s haunted past, where ghostly children still wander beneath its stone gaze.

Read the whole story: Kindlifresserbrunnen and the Ghosts of the Discarded Children Beneath Bern 

The Restless Spirit of Mayor Hans Franz Nägeli: The Ghost of the Fricktreppe

Hans Franz Nägeli: (c. 1497 – 9 January 1579) was a Swiss politician, military leader and diplomat who was a prominent force in Bern for four decades. He was the Schultheiß, or the chief magistrate, of Bern from 1540 to 1568.
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Beneath the historic charm of Bern’s Old Town lies the haunted Fricktreppe, a covered medieval staircase said to be stalked by the ghost of former mayor and military commander Hans Franz Nägeli. Though he died in 1579, Nägeli’s restless spirit is rumored to appear at midnight to those who dare stand at the base of the stairs and call his name three times. Locals, especially daring youths, attempt the ritual, but legend warns that Nägeli slaps those who mock him. Haunted by duty or pride, the stern mayor-turned-phantom is said to still patrol the steps he once governed, a spectral guardian of Bern’s storied past.

Read the whole story: The Restless Spirit of Hans Franz Nägeli: The Ghost of the Fricktreppe

More Ghosts Haunting the Fricktreppe

Hans Franz Nägeli: (c. 1497 – 9 January 1579) was a Swiss politician, military leader and diplomat who was a prominent force in Bern for four decades. He was the Schultheiß, or the chief magistrate, of Bern from 1540 to 1568.
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The Frick Stairs in Bern are haunted by many ghosts. In addition to the military commander, legends also tell of a ghostly funeral procession of mutilated children and crippled dwarves, a headless woman carrying her severed head with bats swirling from her neck, and a pale noblewoman eternally reenacting the murder of her child. These chilling visions, tied to guilt, infanticide, and punishment, have earned the stairs a reputation as a place where Bern’s darkest sins replay themselves in endless, spectral loops.

Read the whole story: The Haunting of the Frick Stairs: Bern’s Processions of Death and Ghosts of Murderesses 

The Ghost of Könizwald, Bern: The Ghost of General Robert Scipio von Lentulus

Where the former country estate Campagne Mon Repos in Bern once was, the ghostly council of the military leader from General Robert Scipio von Lentulus was given in times of unrest. Is he still haunting the Könizwald woods, even after his estate is gone?
The Former Manor in the Woods: The former Campagne Mon Repos estate, once home to General Robert Scipio von Lentulus, now a haunting memory in the woods of Könizwald.

The legend of General Robert Scipio von Lentulus haunts the former estate of Campagne Mon Repos near the Könizwald forest in Bern. A celebrated military figure from the 18th century, Lentulus is said to rest uneasily in a shuttered garden pavilion, rising only when Switzerland is in peril. According to local lore, those who gather at midnight and call his name three times may witness his ghostly form appear to offer a grim omen as well as reassurance. Though the estate was demolished in 1955 and the area is now a wooded green area in the city, the legend endures, portraying Lentulus as a spectral guardian of the nation, summoned only when its fate hangs in the balance.

Read the whole story: The Ghost of Könizwald, Bern: The Ghost of General Robert Scipio von Lentulus 

The Haunted Halls of the Bern City Hall (Rathaus)

Where history whispers and shadows reign, the Rathaus in Bern is said to be haunted by a myriad of ghosts. Who are the ghosts lingering in the City Hall after dark?

The Bern Town Hall (Rathaus), a 600-year-old Gothic landmark in the heart of the Old City, is not only a center of politics but also a hotspot for eerie hauntings. Among its ghostly residents are a mourning treasurer who weeps for lost gold, a spectral protector who appears in a golden carriage during times of crisis, and a council of black-clad skeletal officials who argue endlessly at midnight. The corridors echo with the presence of a headless execution victim and the furious cries of a caretaker’s ghostly wife scolding invisible children behind a stove. Together, these restless spirits create an atmosphere of haunting mystery within Bern’s historic seat of power.

Read the whole story: The Haunted Halls of the Bern City Hall (Rathaus)

Bern Christmas Special Ghost Stories

Free Muenster Bern photo and picture

During the Christmas season in Bern, ghostly tales come alive with chilling beauty. Locals speak of the Dancing Beguines, spirits of young women once confined to the Klösterlistutz monastery, who rise as flickering lights above the Aare River to dance briefly before vanishing at midnight. Another phantom, a silent old gentleman in 18th-century attire, takes his ritual walk toward the Studerstein, bringing eerie storms and crashes in his wake. And within a quiet house in the Old Town, a homesick ghost of a young woman in traditional dress returns each year to revisit her childhood home. 

Read the whole story: Ghosts of the Holy Season: The Christmas Hauntings of Bern

The Haunting of the Antoniterkirche: Where the Monks Never Left

File:Antonierkirche Bern.jpg
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The Antoniterkirche in Bern, once home to the Antonite monks who cared for the sick and dying, became a place of unrest after the Swiss Reformation of 1528 forced the brothers from the city. Known for treating “holy fire” (ergotism) and for their distinctive blue Tau cross, the Antonites also carried a reputation for superstition, greed, and moral decline, a resentment that exploded into violence when the city turned Protestant. Their Gothic church was desecrated, its sacred objects destroyed, and the monks cast out, but legends claim some never left. Over the centuries, as the building served as a granary, fire station, and now a Lutheran and Orthodox worship space, reports of ghostly chanting, cold drafts, and apparitions of black-robed monks have persisted. One woodcutter famously claimed to have seen the sorrowful prior himself, silently watching. 

Read the whole story: The Haunting of the Antoniterkirche: Where the Monks Never Left

The Calf Haunting of the Käfigturm: Bern’s Grotesque Ghost of Guilt

Said to be cursed forever after mistreating his prisoners, the jailer in Bern's former prison tower, Käfitier is said to be haunted by the ghost of a monstrous calf.

The Käfigturm, once Bern’s medieval city gate and later its notorious prison, carries with it a chilling legend of cruelty and punishment that outlived its walls. Said to be haunted by the Käfitier, a grotesque calf ghost, the tower’s curse stems from a jailer infamous for denying prisoners clean water, offering only filth to the thirsty. Condemned by his own cruelty, he is believed to have returned after death in the form of this monstrous beast, forever running between the tower and the Anna Seiler Fountain, drinking desperately yet never quenching his thirst. Witnesses claim to hear heavy thuds and see the ghastly calf rise from the cobblestones, howling into the night. Echoing the tale of the cursed butcher’s apprentice who haunts Rathausgasse as a calf, this story underscores a haunting Bernese motif: cruelty transforms the guilty into the very beasts they once abused. Today, though Käfigturm serves as a center for civic debate and political discourse, its stones still whisper of suffering, judgment, and the ghostly reminder that merciless deeds may earn merciless fates.

Read the whole story: The Calf Haunting of the Käfigturm: Bern’s Grotesque Prison Tower

The Haunted Story of Bern

Looking closer at the ghost stories told through time, it paints a picture of the history that helped mold the Swiss city to today, but it also shows us what people feared and dreamed about. As mentioned, these are just a few of the many haunted places that make up Bern.

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