Liechtenstein

A tiny principality tucked between Switzerland and Austria. Barely forty thousand inhabitants, and yet it exists with full dignity – quiet, small, and deeply self-assured.

The prince’s castle rises above Vaduz – the capital that looks like something out of a fairy tale. In Liechtenstein, everything is close. A train can pass through the entire country faster than you can finish your espresso.

It’s a place where banks resemble art galleries, and contemporary art is exhibited in museums that feel more like private homes – calm, understated, welcoming.

You can sip local wine, walk along the Rhine valley, or simply listen to the silence. Because Liechtenstein doesn’t shout. It speaks in stillness.

It’s a country that reminds you: less really can mean more.

And although its history hasn’t always been spotless – for decades, it attracted finances from the shadowy edges of legality – as if The Wolf of Wall Street had found a quiet refuge here. But today, Liechtenstein is rewriting its story: toward transparency, ethics, and quiet modern pride.

This place is like a footnote at the end of a book. Small, but significant. If only you know where to look.

You do not have access to this content. You need to create an account.

Buy the subscription – get an access

  • Access to all blog posts. (100 zł is aprox. € 25 / $28)
    Dostęp do wszystkich wpisów na blogu.
  • Payment Details

Already subscribed? Log in!