For UK citizens
Moving to Switzerland from the UK: the post-Brexit route, explained
Brexit ended free movement, but Switzerland kept a private door open for Britain: a UK-only permit quota that has never filled. Here's how a UK citizen earns a Swiss residence permit, what the tax and social-security treaties actually cover, and the deadlines that bite once you land.
Switzerland counted 37,589 UK nationals in its permanent foreign resident population at the end of 2024, concentrated around Lake Geneva — Geneva and Vaud — and greater Zurich. The number has drifted down from 42,375 in 2021, partly because Brits are becoming Swiss: UK nationals topped the third-country naturalisation rankings in both Geneva and Vaud in 2023.
The legal reality
Post-Brexit, you're a third-country national — with a British asterisk
Since 1 January 2021, UK citizens fall under Switzerland's Foreign Nationals and Integration Act (AIG) and its ordinance (VZAE) — the third-country regime. A Swiss employer must apply for your work permit before you arrive; you cannot apply for it yourself. The employer has to show that no Swiss or EU/EFTA candidate could fill the role (AIG Art. 21), and in practice only qualified specialists and managers get approved (AIG Art. 23). Permits are capped by annual federal quotas — though the UK has its own separate quota, held apart from the general third-country pot, and it has never run out. One big exception: if you were already living in Switzerland before 2021, the Swiss–UK Citizens' Rights Agreement protects your existing rights and almost none of this applies to you.
Practically, the move starts at a Swiss employer's HR desk, not at a visa counter. Nothing ships until the cantonal and federal approvals are in and the embassy has issued your national D visa. Once you land, the clocks start: register with your commune of residence before your first day of work, take out mandatory Swiss health insurance within 3 months of arrival, and exchange your UK driving licence within 12 months. Tax on your salary is withheld at source while you hold a B permit.
What's actually different
What genuinely changes when you hold a UK passport
A quota with your name on it — and it never fills
Most third-country nationals compete for one global permit pot. UK citizens don't: since Brexit, Switzerland reserves a separate annual quota of 3,500 permits for UK workers — 2,100 residence (B) and 1,400 short-stay (L) — released quarterly and left unchanged for 2026. Only 21% of it was used by the end of 2024. Your bottleneck is qualifying as a specialist, not quota scarcity.
Social security genuinely coordinates
The UK–Switzerland Convention on Social Security Coordination — applied since November 2021, fully in force since 1 October 2023 — decides which country you contribute in (one, never both), lets UK National Insurance periods count toward Swiss benefits and vice versa, and keeps posted workers in their home scheme. You can claim your UK State Pension while living in Switzerland.
The 1977 tax treaty still does its job
The UK–Switzerland double taxation convention has been in force since 1978, most recently amended by the 2017 protocol. Your Swiss salary is taxed in Switzerland — at source, for B-permit holders — while the treaty allocates taxing rights on UK rental income, dividends and pensions. One warning: UK tax residency doesn't end automatically. The statutory residence test decides, so plan the exit year deliberately.
Moved before 2021? Different rulebook entirely
The Swiss–UK Citizens' Rights Agreement protects UK nationals who were legally resident in Switzerland before 1 January 2021: they keep residence, work and property rights without permits, quotas or labour-market tests. If that's you, almost nothing on this page applies. Everyone arriving after that date is in the third-country system described here — the agreement doesn't cover new arrivals.
Your driving licence swaps cleanly
UK licences exchange for Swiss ones without a driving test — one of the friendlier post-Brexit leftovers. But apply within 12 months of arrival: miss the window and you can no longer legally drive on your UK licence. The exchange runs through your canton's road traffic office; budget for an eye test and a fee, not a re-examination.
The jobs cluster where the British community is
The realistic employer map for UK applicants tracks the existing community: banking, insurance and tech around Zurich; commodities trading, private banking and international organisations in Geneva; pharma in Basel. English-language workplaces are common in these sectors — which matters, because your employer must justify hiring you over any Swiss or EU/EFTA candidate, and scarce specialist skills are what carry that argument.
The path
From decision to settled, in order
Confirm you're on the right track
The employer-sponsored work route described here is for qualified specialists and managers. If you're coming to study, joining a spouse, or you lived in Switzerland before 2021, you're on a different legal track — student and family-reunification routes have their own rules, and pre-2021 residents are protected by the Citizens' Rights Agreement. Don't graft work-permit logic onto those.
Land the job — that's the real visa
No Swiss job offer, no work route. Target roles where you're demonstrably a specialist: the employer must convince the canton that no Swiss or EU/EFTA candidate could fill the position, so generic experience rarely survives that test. Interviewing from the UK is normal — visa-free visits of up to 90 days in any 180-day period cover interview trips.
Your employer files — you don't
The application goes from your employer to the cantonal immigration and labour-market authority: your CV and qualifications, a salary offer matching local Swiss levels, and proof of unsuccessful recruitment in Switzerland and the EU/EFTA. The permit is drawn against the UK-specific quota. You personally file nothing at this stage — there is no form for you to start.
Federal sign-off, then the D visa
A cantonal yes goes to the State Secretariat for Migration for federal approval. Once both levels approve, the Swiss embassy in the UK issues your national D visa. Only now should you book removals and hand in notice — moving before approval is the classic expensive mistake, because approval is never guaranteed.
Land, register, insure
After arrival, register with your commune of residence before your first day of work — that's how your permit card gets issued. Take out mandatory Swiss health insurance within 3 months of arrival; it's individual, not employer-provided, and premiums vary by canton and deductible. Tax on your salary is withheld at source while you hold a B permit.
Run the long clocks
Exchange your UK driving licence within 12 months. Your B permit renews as long as the employment holds; a settlement (C) permit, free of labour-market ties, and eventually citizenship come years later. If family stayed behind, family reunification lets your spouse and children join you — file it early, because the right generally lapses after five years, and after just twelve months for children over 12.
Once you land
The deadlines that bite once you arrive
Three statutory clocks start the moment you take up residence — each anchored to the exact article.
Register at your commune within 14 days
Report to your residents' registration office within 14 days of arriving — this activates your permit.
Take out basic health insurance within 3 months
Swiss basic health insurance (KVG/LAMal) is mandatory and back-dated to your arrival. Enrol within three months.
KVG Art. 3 Abs. 1 + KVV Art. 1 Abs. 1Renew your permit 2–3 months before it expires
Cantonal practice: file your renewal two to three months ahead so you never fall into a gap in residence.
VZAE Art. 59 (de facto kantonale Praxis)
Questions
Common questions
Do UK citizens need a visa to move to Switzerland?
For visits, no — UK citizens can spend up to 90 days in any 180-day period in Switzerland visa-free. Living and working is different: a Swiss employer must obtain a work permit for you before you arrive, and you then enter on a national D visa. There is no route where you land first and sort out a work permit afterwards.
Can I move to Switzerland from the UK without a job?
Not through the work route — the permit application belongs to a Swiss employer, so there is nothing for you to apply for without one. The realistic alternatives are the student route, family reunification if your spouse or parent lives in Switzerland, and a narrow route for financially independent retirees with close personal ties to Switzerland (AIG Art. 28). Moving to look for work is not an option the law offers third-country nationals.
How long does the whole process take?
Plan in months, not weeks. The employer's cantonal application, federal approval by the State Secretariat for Migration and D-visa issuance run one after the other, and processing speed varies by canton and season. Start the paperwork the moment the offer is signed, and don't fix a moving date until the approvals exist.
Can I bring my spouse and children?
Yes. B-permit holders can apply for family reunification for a spouse and unmarried children under 18, provided you live together, housing is adequate and the family doesn't depend on social assistance. Your spouse must also be able to communicate in the local national language — registering for a language course satisfies this, and children are exempt. Your spouse is allowed to work in Switzerland. File early — the right generally lapses after five years, twelve months for children over 12, and late applications need special justification.
I lived in Switzerland before Brexit — do I need to go through all this?
No. If you were legally resident in Switzerland before 1 January 2021 and have remained so, the Swiss–UK Citizens' Rights Agreement protects your residence, work and property rights — no new permit, no quota, no labour-market test. Keep evidence of continuous residence. The protection attaches to you; it doesn't extend to relatives or friends arriving fresh after 2020.
What does the move actually cost?
Permit and visa fees are the small part. The real budget lines are mandatory health insurance premiums from month one (paid by you, not your employer), a rental deposit — capped by law at three months' rent for housing — and removals. Swiss salaries are correspondingly higher, but price your first three months carefully before you commit.
Sources & provenance
Last checked: 2026-07-13
Every figure on this page traces to an official source.
- 37,589 UK nationals in Switzerland's permanent foreign resident population at end-2024, down from 42,375 in 2021 (SEM Foreign Population and Asylum Statistics 2024, table 2-10-N10, nationality time series)sem.admin.ch
- UK nationals are third-country nationals under the FNIA/AIG; the employer, not the individual, applies to the competent cantonal immigration and labour-market authority; separate UK quota of 3,500 permits (2,100 B + 1,400 L)sem.admin.ch
- UK quotas left unchanged for 2026 (2,100 B, 1,400 L, released quarterly); 21% of the UK-specific quotas used by end-2024 and 17% by late September 2025newlandchase.com
- UK-specific quotas have gone unfilled every year since their 2021 introduction (e.g. ~26% B / 21% L used by October 2022; 21% by end-2024)fragomen.com
- 1977 UK–Switzerland double taxation convention entered into force 7 October 1978; most recent amendment is the 2017 protocol (in force 19 July 2019)gov.uk
- Swiss Federal Tax Administration overview of the Switzerland–UK double taxation agreementestv.admin.ch
- UK–Switzerland Convention on Social Security Coordination provisionally applied from 1 November 2021 and definitively in force since 1 October 2023; coordinates applicable legislation, aggregation of insurance periods and export of benefits, including for posted workersbsv.admin.ch
- Citizens' Rights Agreement protects UK nationals resident in Switzerland before 1 January 2021; UK driving licence exchangeable within 12 months without a test; mandatory Swiss health insurance within 3 months of arrivalgov.uk
- UK nationals topped third-country naturalisations in Geneva (169) and Vaud (421) in 2023, with 53 in Zurich — basis for the community-cluster and naturalisation-trend statementsthelocal.ch
- Foreign Nationals and Integration Act (AIG, SR 142.20): registration before taking up employment Art. 12; labour-market precedence Art. 21; managers/specialists requirement Art. 23; retiree route Art. 28; family reunification for B-permit holders Arts. 44 and 46; five-year / twelve-month reunification time limits Art. 47fedlex.admin.ch
- Rental deposits for residential leases capped at three months' rent (Swiss Code of Obligations Art. 257e)fedlex.admin.ch