Moving To Switzerland For Work: The 2026 Guide To Visas And Permits

If you are planning to move to Switzerland for work in 2026, the single most important question is your nationality. EU/EFTA citizens can still move relatively freely; non-EU citizens face quotas, strict eligibility criteria and longer lead times. Here is what you need to know and what to do first.

Check Your Nationality, It Determines Almost Everything

EU/EFTA Citizens

If you hold a passport from one of the 27 EU member states or from Iceland, Liechtenstein or Norway, you benefit from the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons.

  • You do not need a visa to enter Switzerland.

  • You can move to Switzerland once you have a signed employment contract.

  • You must register with your local municipality (Gemeinde/commune) within 14 days of arrival.

  • You will receive:

    • an L permit (short-term residence) if your contract is up to 12 months, or

    • a B permit (initial residence) if your contract is longer.

  • For assignments under 90 days, your employer must complete an online notification procedure, but you do not need a residence permit.

What to do first: Secure a job offer, then prepare your documents (passport, contract, proof of address) for registration.

Read More: Job Vacancies Fall Zurich Unemployment Holds At 2.9%


Non-EU/EFTA Citizens (Third-Country Nationals)

If you are from the US, UK, India, China, or any other country outside the EU/EFTA, the rules are stricter.

  • You generally need a work permit and often an entry visa before you can start work.

  • Permits are subject to annual federal quotas. For 2026, the quotas for third-country nationals are:

    • 4,000 L permits (short-term)

    • 4,500 B permits (long-term)

    • Total: 8,500 permits for specialists from non-EU/EFTA countries.

  • Only highly qualified specialists, managers and researchers are normally eligible.

  • Your employer must apply for your permit via the cantonal migration office where you will work

  • Authorities assess whether your skills are in demand and whether the role could be filled by a Swiss or EU/EFTA candidate

What to do first: Do not move to Switzerland until your employer has initiated the permit process and you have clarity on whether a quota is available.

Read More: Swiss Median Salary Jumps To CHF 87,000: The Sharpest Rise In Years


Understand the Permit Types

Permit Who Gets It Validity Notes
L permit Short-term employment (up to 12 months) Up to 12 months, can be extended to 24 months in some cases Subject to quotas for non-EU.
B permit Longer-term employment Initially 12 months, renewable Most common for employed expats.
G permit Cross-border commuters 12 months, renewable For those living in neighbouring EU countries and working in Switzerland.
C permit Permanent residence Indefinite Usually after 5–10 years of continuous residence, depending on nationality and integration.

The 2026 Quotas: What They Mean for You

The Swiss Federal Council has kept the 2026 quotas for third-country nationals unchanged from 2025: 8,500 total (4,000 L + 4,500 B).

Why this matters:

  • Quotas are allocated nationally but managed by the cantons.

  • They can be exhausted before year-end, especially in high-demand cantons like Zürich, Geneva and Basel.

  • Applications are processed in chronological order; timing matters

Practical tip: If you are a non-EU candidate, ask your employer’s HR or immigration advisor whether the relevant canton still has quota headroom for your start date.


Family Reunification: Can Your Partner and Kids Come?

  • EU/EFTA B and L permit holders can generally bring spouses and minor children under family reunification rules, provided they have adequate housing and financial means.

  • Non-EU B permit holders can also apply for family reunification, but the rules are stricter and processing times longer

  • Family members receive their own residence permits (usually B or L, aligned with the main permit holder).

What to do: Factor family reunification into your timeline, it can add several weeks or months to the process.


How Long Does It Take?

  • EU/EFTA: Registration can often be completed within a few days to two weeks after arrival, assuming you have all documents

  • Non-EU/EFTA: Expect 8–12 weeks (sometimes longer) from application submission to permit issuance, depending on the canton and whether a visa is required

Practical tip: Do not resign from your current job or book irreversible moves until you have written confirmation that the permit will be issued.


Where to Find Official Information

Use these official sources to avoid outdated or incorrect advice:


Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Assuming you can start work immediately: Non-EU nationals must have the permit (or at least written approval) before starting employment.

  • Ignoring the quota: In high-demand periods, quotas can be exhausted unexpectedly.

  • Underestimating processing times: Especially for non-EU cases and family reunification.

  • Relying on unofficial advice: Always cross-check with SEM or your cantonal office.


If You Are Already in Switzerland

  • EU/EFTA: You can change jobs relatively freely while keeping your permit status, as long as you remain employed.

  • Non-EU/EFTA: Changing employer usually requires a new permit application and is subject to approval.


Bottom line: For EU/EFTA citizens, moving to Switzerland for work in 2026 remains straightforward. For everyone else, it is possible but requires careful planning, an employer willing to sponsor you, and patience with the process. Start early, use official sources, and treat the permit as the critical path in your move, not an administrative afterthought.

Akriti Seth
About the Author

Akriti Seth

Akriti Seth is a Zürich-based editor with more than a decade of experience, anchored by foundational training at Bloomberg. As a journalist, she covers global affairs, financial markets and technology. Her career has taken her from television studios to digital newsrooms. She has reported as an on-air correspondent for Channel NewsAsia and covered markets, corporate finance and business strategy for Informa UK. Her work has appeared in Entrepreneur Magazine, Hindustan Times, Yahoo Finance, TradingView, the Crypto Council for Innovation, DailyCoin, Tech Panda and more. She founded Helvetica Times to bring independent, English-language journalism to Switzerland — serving the expats, international professionals and global readers who want Swiss news reported with clarity and rigor.

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