Eurovision fans find Swiss franc’s latest surge hitting a sour note


This aerial picture taken on April 30, 2025 in Basel shows the St. Jakobshalle arena that will host the 2025 edition of the Eurovision Song Contest with the St. Jakob-Park football stadium that will host the Public viewing show, seen behind. Basel will be in the international spotlight for a week of festivities from May 11 to 17, 2025 surrounding the Eurovision Song Contest. (Photo by Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP)

Basel: As many as half a million fans heading to Basel for the Eurovision Song Contest this week are about to discover that Swiss prices stoked by the franc’s gains are far from music to their ears.

With the currency having hit a decade high against the US dollar in April, when it also reached close to the strongest in that period against the euro, visitors will soon find their passion for pop comes at a cost.

For those from neighbouring countries, a 200-franc or about US$240 hotel night would have been at least €12 cheaper if the event took place on the same date last year.

“To be honest, I wonder every year if I should travel there again,” said Andreas Tuerk, who has attended 14 consecutive Eurovision finals and will brave the cost of a pilgrimage this time too.

“In the end, it’s always my fan gene that kicks in.”

Switzerland hosted the first-ever final in 1956 in its southern city of Lugano, and then in Lausanne after the 1988 win of the country’s candidate, Celine Dion.

But given the franc’s gains over the years, prices on the ground in Basel, on Switzerland’s northwestern border, potentially make it one of the most expensive destinations in Eurovision history.

The currency has surged amid haven flows after market turmoil stoked by US President Donald Trump’s trade wars.

While the Swiss National Bank has tried to contain that, having cut its interest rate in March, that may prove of limited comfort to Eurovision fans with emptier wallets.

Basel normally hosts smaller cohorts of visitors, such as central bankers at gatherings of the Bank for International Settlements, gallery exhibitors and connoisseurs of the annual Art Basel fair, and pharmaceutical executives flying in for meetings at one of its two drugs giants, Novartis AG and Roche Holding AG.

Eurovision is in a different league, however.

The tally of fans expected easily dwarfs the city’s population of about 178,000, and are likely to spill over the frontier into neighbouring France and Germany.

That’s the approach Tuerk will take when he and his sister make the trip from their home close to Koblenz in western Germany.

Renting a room across the border from Basel in the nearby German town of Loerrach, booked well in advance, will bring his accommodation tab to roughly €500 or about US$562.

Jan Peter Kern won’t be taking the cheaper option.

His group of friends are forking out €2,500 for an Airbnb apartment for the week in Basel’s old town, costing about €800 per person.

“Living outside the host city is out of the question,” said the 37-year-old fan from the German city of Mannheim, about two hours’ drive from Basel. “I mean, the parties go on until 4am.”

Tuerk has spent roughly €1,000 on tickets for several of the nine Eurovision shows during the week, plus some fan parties, and has set aside another €1,000 for food, drinks and merchandise.

He may well find eating locally to be far pricier than recent years.

A Whopper burger and standard serving of Coca Cola ordered on Uber Eats from a local Burger King outlet costs 17.30 francs, significantly more than the bill for the same meal in Malmo, the 2024 Swedish host city, and in Liverpool, where Britain held the event in 2023 on behalf of Ukraine.

The Swiss National Bank is uncomfortable enough with the franc’s strength for President Martin Schlegel to have said last week that the currency “appreciated really a lot”.

But its options to contain that are limited. Interventions to push down the exchange rate – which the central bank used liberally until 2022 – could risk Trump’s wrath.

Cutting borrowing costs would quickly bring its rate to zero, or even lower, hurting the financial system, though a growing number of economists do still expect a further reduction at the next meeting on June 19.

That will be too late for Eurovision fans however. The alternative for visitors of avoiding Basel as much as possible – by spending cash in France and Germany – became a political controversy in the city, forcing a vote on whether to finance 37.4 million francs of spending on the event that locals then backed.

Jessie Smith, a senior economist at research firm Tourism Economics, reckons each of the expected visitors will need to spend US$90 to ensure local businesses earn enough to justify the public expense.

That’s far less than the US$300 needed in Malmo. Basel itself is reckoning on a 62 million-franc boon for the area, but insists it’s trying to mitigate high local prices with associated events that are free. — Bloomberg

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Swiss , franc , currency , Eurovision

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