Country guide

Switzerland,
decoded.

Let's be straight: Switzerland is the hardest country in this catalogue for Americans and Canadians to retire to, and the most expensive — prices run about 70% above the EU average. There is a retiree route, but it demands "close ties" to Switzerland and cantonal approval. If you qualify, here's everything, from official sources, checked and dated.

Switzerland quick facts · verified 9 July 2026
9.1MPopulation, of which ~26.5% are foreign nationals (FSO, Dec 2025 provisional)
55+Minimum age for the retiree residence permit (Art. 28 FNIA) — plus "close ties" to Switzerland
8,5002026 quota for non-EU workers (4,500 B + 4,000 L) — Federal Council, Nov 2025
CHF 465/moAverage adult basic health-insurance premium 2026 (BAG) — mandatory within 3 months
+71%Price level vs the EU average, 2025 — only Iceland scores higher in Europe (Eurostat, provisional)
CHF 1,451Average monthly net rent, all rented dwellings (FSO structural survey 2023)
CHF 435kFederal minimum tax base for lump-sum taxation, 2026 — cantons often want more
10 yrsResidence required for citizenship; C permit after 5 yrs for US/CA nationals (SEM)
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Three things most sites won't tell you

There is no general retirement visa. The Art. 28 FNIA retiree permit requires age 55+, financial independence for life, no work anywhere in the world — and "close personal ties to Switzerland" (prior stays, family, real connections). It is discretionary and decided canton by canton. Money alone does not qualify you. Most Americans and Canadians without a Swiss history will be refused.
It is about as expensive as Europe gets — officially. Eurostat puts Swiss consumer prices about 71% above the EU average (2025, provisional — only Iceland ranks higher); food is 61% dearer and housing/energy more than double. A retired couple should budget roughly CHF 6,000–8,500 a month outside Zurich and Geneva (our estimate from FSO data) — more inside them.
Property rules may tighten further. Lex Koller already blocks non-residents from buying ordinary homes. A Federal Council proposal to tighten the rules for non-EU/EFTA nationals — including permit requirements for residential purchases — is in public consultation until 15 July 2026. Status: pending, not yet law.
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Sources for the quick facts

  1. Population and foreign-national share (end-2025, provisional) — bfs.admin.ch
  2. Art. 28 FNIA retiree permit — fedlex.admin.ch (SR 142.20); Art. 25 OASA (age 55)
  3. 2026 non-EU quotas (8,500) — Federal Council decision, 19 Nov 2025
  4. 2026 premiums (adult average CHF 465.30/month) — bag.admin.ch, 23 Sept 2025
  5. Price level 2025 (provisional) — Eurostat
  6. Rents (structural survey 2023) — bfs.admin.ch
  7. Lump-sum minimum CHF 435,000 (2026) — estv.admin.ch
  8. C permit and naturalisation — sem.admin.ch
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