Switzerland · Housing

Plan to rent.
Like the Swiss do.

Only about 36% of Swiss households own their home — the lowest rate in Europe — and for foreigners, the Lex Koller law makes buying harder still. Until you hold a residence permit, you essentially can't buy a normal home at all. Here's how the market really works.

Figures verified 9 July 2026
The key numbers · 2026
  • Average net rent, all rented dwellings: CHF 1,451/month (FSO structural survey 2023); 4-room average CHF 1,708 (end-2024)
  • Dearest cantons: Zug, Zurich, Schwyz · cheapest: Jura, Neuchâtel (FSO 2024)
  • Zurich/Geneva market asking rents for a 3–4-room flat: commonly CHF 2,500–4,000+ (market data, indicative)
  • Homeownership: ~36% — Europe's lowest (FSO)
  • Holiday-home quota for non-residents: 1,500 units/year nationally (Valais 330), tourist zones only, max 200 m² living area
  • Typical rental deposit: up to 3 months' rent in a blocked account

Lex Koller: what foreigners can and can't buy

The Federal Act on the Acquisition of Real Estate by Persons Abroad — "Lex Koller" — is the wall most would-be buyers hit. As a non-resident, you cannot buy ordinary residential property; the only opening is a holiday home in a designated tourist zone, under the national quota of 1,500 units a year, capped at 200 m² net living area and 1,000 m² of land — and you can't rent it out long-term. As a resident non-EU national with a B permit, you may buy one primary residence for your own occupation where you live. With a C permit (5 years for US/CA nationals), you're treated like a Swiss buyer.

Pending change — watch this. The Federal Council has proposed tightening Lex Koller for non-EU/EFTA nationals, including permit requirements for residential purchases and tighter holiday-home rules. Public consultation opened 15 April 2026 and runs to 15 July 2026. Status: proposal, not law. We'll cover the outcome in the newsletter.

Renting, the Swiss way

Renting is the national norm and carries no stigma — and no urgency to buy your way out of it. Expect a competitive dossier process in the cities: application form, permit copy, proof of income or means, and a debt-registry extract (Betreibungsauszug — newcomers substitute bank references). Deposits run up to three months' rent in a blocked account in your name. Notice periods and rent increases are regulated, and the official cantonal form is required for both — Swiss tenancy law protects tenants better than almost anywhere in North America. Budget separately for the compulsory extras: building service charges (Nebenkosten), household/liability insurance (most landlords require it), and, in most buildings, the shared laundry-room schedule. That last one is not a joke.

StatusWhat you can buy
Non-resident (US/CA)Holiday home in a tourist zone under quota — nothing else residential
B-permit resident (non-EU)One primary residence for own occupation
C-permit residentAnything — treated as Swiss
In this section

Guides

Coming soon

Winning a Swiss rental dossier

What landlords score, the documents newcomers lack, and how to compensate.

Coming soon

Buying as a B-permit resident

The primary-residence exception, mortgages for over-60s, and the 20% deposit rules.

Coming soon

Lex Koller reform tracker

Where the tightening proposal stands and what it would change for non-EU buyers.

Sources

  1. Rent levels — FSO structural survey and rent statistics: bfs.admin.ch; average rent by canton (2024): bfs.admin.ch
  2. Homeownership rate — bfs.admin.ch (Housing in Switzerland)
  3. Lex Koller (SR 211.412.41) and quota system — fedlex.admin.ch; Federal Office of Justice guidance: bj.admin.ch
  4. Lex Koller tightening proposal (consultation 15 Apr – 15 Jul 2026) — Federal Council release, 15 Apr 2026
  5. Tenancy rules — ch.ch
  6. City asking-rent ranges: market portals, 2026 — indicative only, not FSO data.
This page is general information, not legal advice. Lex Koller authorisations are cantonal; confirm with the cantonal authority or a property lawyer before committing funds.
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