landereference

Schweiz — Arbejdskalender, løn- og momreferense

Den hurtigste vej til dette markeds feriekalender, lønplanlægning og momsregler.

🇨🇭 CHFEurope/Zurich8.1% standard moms

Næste helligdag

Whit Monday · man. 25. maj 2026

national

Arbejdsdage

253 arbejdsdage i 2026

10 offentlige helligdage

Almindelig moms

8.1% standard

3.8% · 2.6%

løneksempel

8.450,00 CHF → 6.200,00 CHF net

Gennemsnitlig månedlig eksempel

Kernruter for dette marked

Åbn det nøjagtige workflow, du har brug for, uden at forlade landssammenhængen.

Kommende offentlige helligdage

De næste helligdage betyder mest for udskydelser, bemanding og lønudbetaling.

DatoHelligdagType
man. 25. maj 2026Whit Mondaynational
lør. 1. aug. 2026Swiss National Daynational
fre. 25. dec. 2026Christmas Daynational
lør. 26. dec. 2026Boxing Day / St. Stephen's Daynational

2026 månedlig kapacitet

En hurtig månedlig visning, før du åbner siden med fuld arbejdsdag.

1

20 arbejdsdage

2 helligdage i måned

2

20 arbejdsdage

0 helligdage i måned

3

22 arbejdsdage

0 helligdage i måned

4

20 arbejdsdage

2 helligdage i måned

5

18 arbejdsdage

3 helligdage i måned

6

22 arbejdsdage

0 helligdage i måned

7

23 arbejdsdage

0 helligdage i måned

8

21 arbejdsdage

1 helligdage i måned

9

22 arbejdsdage

0 helligdage i måned

10

22 arbejdsdage

0 helligdage i måned

11

21 arbejdsdage

0 helligdage i måned

12

22 arbejdsdage

2 helligdage i måned

lønlisteereference

Øjebliksbillede af lønplanlægning

Gennemsnitlig brutto månedlig8.450,00 CHF
Gennemsnitlig månedlig netto6.200,00 CHF
Minimaløn22,50 CHF / hourly
Løn modelår2026

moms reference

Standard- og reducerede satser

standard takst8.1%
Reduced3.8%
Reduced2.6%

regionalt kontekst

Nationalt baseline, lokalt review hvor nødvendig

Schweiz har yderligere regionalt kontekst, der kan påvirke operationel planlægning. Tallene ovenfor viser det nationale basislinje først.

ZurichBernBasel-LandschaftGeneva

Schweiz — landereference

Den hurtigste vej til dette markeds feriekalender, lønplanlægning og momsregler.

Work culture and weekly rhythm in Switzerland

Switzerland operates a five-day workweek with a typical full-time schedule of forty to forty-two hours, depending on the canton and sector. The country's federal structure produces meaningful variation in employment law between French-speaking, German-speaking and Italian-speaking cantons, and a Zurich employment contract may differ in several practical respects from a Geneva or Lugano contract for an otherwise identical role.

Switzerland is not a member of the European Union but maintains bilateral agreements with the EU that govern free movement of workers between Switzerland and EU/EFTA member states. Cross-border workers who live in France, Germany or Italy and work in Switzerland are a meaningful share of the Swiss labour force, particularly in Geneva, Basel and Ticino.

Statutory paid leave starts at four weeks for adult employees and five weeks for those under twenty or over fifty. Many employers grant five weeks as a default contractual benefit. Annual leave is usually taken in two larger blocks, one in summer and one around Christmas or New Year, with shorter breaks distributed during the year.

Public holiday landscape in Switzerland

Switzerland has one federal public holiday (Swiss National Day on 1 August) plus a varying list of cantonal holidays that can range from seven to fifteen per year depending on the canton. Major widely-observed dates include New Year's Day, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Ascension, Whit Monday, Christmas Day and Saint Stephen's Day on 26 December, but the exact list is set at the cantonal level.

Catholic-majority cantons recognise additional religious feast days such as Corpus Christi, Assumption and All Saints' Day, while predominantly Protestant cantons observe fewer religious holidays but may include Reformation Day. The practical difference between cantons can be three or four extra paid days per year, which is significant for cross-canton workforce planning.

Substitute days when a holiday falls on a weekend are not granted in most cantons. The Swiss summer holiday window (mid-July to mid-August) is observed but less complete than in France or Italy, and most offices remain operational at reduced capacity rather than fully closing.

Salary and payroll fundamentals in Switzerland

Swiss payroll combines federal income tax, cantonal income tax and municipal income tax, producing significant variation in the effective tax rate by location. The same gross salary in Zug or Schwyz will produce a meaningfully higher net than in Geneva or Vaud due to differing cantonal tax rates, and this difference is one of the most important factors in location decisions for high-income employees.

Employee social contributions (AHV/IV/EO for old-age, disability and income compensation, plus unemployment insurance) total approximately 6.4 percent of gross salary, which is low by EU standards. Health insurance is mandatory but paid privately to a chosen insurer rather than through payroll, and is not deducted from salary; this often surprises foreign employees evaluating a Swiss offer.

The Swiss occupational pension system (the second pillar) is mandatory for most employees and contributions are split roughly equally between employer and employee. Total pension contribution rates depend on age and salary, ranging from approximately seven percent to eighteen percent of insured salary. Including the employer's share, the total payroll cost in Switzerland is typically twenty to twenty-five percent above gross salary.

VAT, invoicing and the business framework in Switzerland

Switzerland applies a standard VAT rate of 8.1 percent (raised from 7.7 percent in 2024 to fund pension reforms), a reduced rate of 2.6 percent (food, books, newspapers, medication) and a special rate of 3.8 percent for accommodation services. The standard rate is dramatically lower than EU neighbours, and Swiss VAT planning is generally less complex from a rate perspective.

Swiss invoice content requirements are similar to the EU directive but governed by Swiss law (LTVA / MWSTG) rather than the EU framework. Cross-border supplies into the EU are treated as exports under EU VAT rules, and Swiss businesses selling to EU B2C customers must consider VAT registration in the destination country or use the EU's IOSS scheme for low-value goods.

The Swiss VAT registration threshold is one hundred thousand CHF in annual worldwide turnover. Above the threshold, registration is mandatory regardless of where the customer is located, and quarterly or annual returns become the standard reporting cycle.

Practical planning tips for Switzerland

When recruiting in Switzerland, evaluate cantonal tax rates as a real component of the offer competitiveness. The same gross salary can produce twenty percent more after-tax income in Zug than in Geneva, which materially affects whether a candidate accepts.

Confirm holiday entitlement and the specific cantonal calendar in writing at the offer stage. Two candidates working for the same Swiss company in different cantons can have meaningfully different paid-day-off counts in any given year.

If your business sells to Swiss customers, factor the customs and VAT treatment into pricing. Switzerland is outside the EU customs union, so goods crossing the border require declarations and incur Swiss import VAT, payable by the importer regardless of the seller's VAT registration status in any EU country.

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What is included on the Schweiz page?
The country page links together holidays, working days, salary planning, VAT references and the most relevant calculators.
How should I use the country page?
Use it as the starting point for that market, then open the holiday, salary or VAT route that matches your task.
Are regional differences covered?
The page highlights regional considerations where they matter, but local verification may still be needed for final decisions.
Are the salary and VAT figures legal advice?
No. They are planning references and should be confirmed against official country sources before regulated use.
Hvad viser Schweiz-landesiden mig?
Schweiz-siden kombinerer fire søjler: helligdagskalenderen for det aktuelle og kommende år, antallet af arbejdsdage pr. måned, lønplanlægningsmodellen med aktuelle skattetrin og bidrag samt momsrammen med alle gældende satser og fakturaregler. Hver søjle leder til en dedikeret beregner eller årsspecifik dybdegående side.
Hvordan står Schweiz sammenlignet med nabolandene?
Sektionen Nærliggende lande nederst på siden linker direkte til nabolandes markeder. De mest nyttige sammenligninger er typisk brutto-netto delta, moms og antal helligdage.
Er Schweiz-løntal pålidelige for et tilbud?
Beregneren afspejler aktuelle trin og satser og giver et rimeligt skøn til planlægning af et tilbud. For den faktiske lønseddel i en bindende kontrakt, bekræft med en lokal lønadministrator.
Hvor kommer Schweiz-helligdagsdatoerne fra?
Data følger officielle regerings- og ministeriepublikationer. Regionale helligdage registreres separat, så HR-planlæggere kan bygge nøjagtige kalendere for distribuerede teams.
Kan jeg planlægge en projektdeadline med Schweiz-arbejdsdagstælling?
Ja. Det månedlige antal trækker allerede nationale helligdage og standardweekender fra. For projekter, der afhænger af by eller region, tjek også den regionale sektion.
Viser Schweiz-siden momsregler for grænseoverskridende salg?
Standard- og reducerede satser er direkte synlige; beregneren dækker almindelige scenarier. B2B- og B2C-regler under EU-OSS forklares i de linkede ressourceartikler.

Lønberegnere

Udforsk alle lønværktøjer for dette land: brutto-netto, netto-brutto og arbejdsgiverkostnader.

Helligdagsår

Se helligdage over flere år til omfattende ferieplanlægning.

Arbejdsdage pr. måned

Dril ind i enhver måned for den nøjagtige liste over arbejdsdage, offentlige helligdage og en fuldstændig planlægningsoversigt.

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