A no-nonsense breakdown of the Swiss mandatory health insurance system. Understand the rules, avoid the traps, and get insured correctly from day one.
Arriving in Switzerland is overwhelming enough. Here is exactly what to do about health insurance in your first days.
Visit your local municipality office within 14 days. Bring your passport, rental contract, and work permit. This registration triggers the 3-month insurance clock.
Use an independent comparison platform. Note your canton and postcode — premiums vary dramatically. Never sign up with the first insurer your relocation agent recommends.
Decide between standard, Hausarzt, HMO, or Telmed models. Pick your deductible (CHF 300–2'500). Higher deductible means lower premiums but more out-of-pocket risk.
Submit your application. The insurer must accept you. Confirm receipt and keep your policy number. Your coverage starts retroactively from your registration date.
Switzerland does not have a national health service. Instead, it operates a regulated private market under the Federal Health Insurance Act (KVG in German, LAMal in French). Every resident must purchase basic health insurance from one of approximately 50 approved private insurers.
The key principle is solidarity: every insurer must accept every applicant for basic coverage, regardless of age, health status, or pre-existing conditions. Premiums within a given region are the same for all adults aged 26+, though they vary significantly between cantons, insurers, and insurance models.
This creates an unusual hybrid: the benefits are standardised (every insurer covers the same treatments), but the prices are not. This is why comparing premiums is so critical — you are literally paying different amounts for identical coverage.
After helping thousands of international residents navigate Swiss insurance, these are the errors we see again and again.
The canton assigns you the most expensive plan and may add a 50% premium surcharge for every month you were uninsured. One expat in Zurich reported paying CHF 680/month instead of the CHF 350 they could have chosen. Do not procrastinate — start comparing in your first week.
Many relocation companies have partnerships with specific insurers and earn commissions for referrals. They may steer you towards a convenient but expensive option. Always verify their recommendation against an independent comparison tool before signing anything.
BUPA, Cigna Global, Allianz Worldwide — none of these satisfy Switzerland's mandatory insurance requirement, regardless of their coverage level. Swiss law requires a KVG-approved insurer. Your international plan can complement Swiss insurance as supplementary coverage, but it cannot replace it.
The CHF 300 deductible feels safe, but if you are healthy and rarely visit doctors, you are paying an unnecessary premium surcharge of CHF 1'500–2'500 per year. Run the numbers first. For many young, healthy expats, the CHF 2'500 deductible saves thousands over time.
Many expats default to the standard (free choice) model because it feels safest. But the Hausarzt or Telmed model offers 10–25% savings with minimal restrictions. If you are comfortable calling a medical hotline before visiting a doctor, Telmed alone can save CHF 50–100 per month.
The cheapest insurer changes every year. Many expats set up their insurance upon arrival and never look at it again. A 5-minute annual comparison in October or November can save you hundreds of francs. Set a calendar reminder for 15 October each year.
Understanding the differences helps you navigate the Swiss system faster and avoid false assumptions.
| Aspect | Switzerland | United Kingdom | United States | Germany / EU |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| System Type | Mandatory private insurance | National Health Service (NHS) — tax-funded | Employer-based / marketplace / public (Medicare/Medicaid) | Statutory insurance (employer + employee contributions) |
| Who Pays | Individual pays full premium | Government via taxes | Split employer/employee or individual | Split employer/employee (50/50) |
| Pre-existing Conditions | Cannot be denied (basic insurance) | Not applicable — universal coverage | Protected under ACA marketplace plans | Covered under statutory insurance |
| Cost to Individual | CHF 250–550+/month + deductible + co-pay | Free at point of care (tax-funded) | $300–$800+/month typical | ~7.3% of gross salary (capped) |
| Dental Coverage | Not included in basic insurance | Partially covered by NHS | Usually separate plan | Basic dental included, extras not |
| Wait Times | Generally short (days to weeks) | Can be months for specialists | Varies by network and region | Moderate; faster with private insurance |
| Quality | Consistently among the world's highest | High but resource-constrained | Excellent but access varies by coverage | High, standardised across regions |
These gaps catch many expats by surprise. Plan for them early or consider supplementary insurance.
The biggest shock for most expats. Routine dental care — cleanings, fillings, root canals, crowns, implants, orthodontics — is entirely excluded from basic insurance. A single root canal can cost CHF 1'500–3'000. Supplementary dental insurance costs CHF 20–50/month but often has waiting periods and annual caps. Many expats travel to neighbouring countries for dental work.
Basic insurance contributes CHF 180 every 5 years towards corrective lenses for children, but adults receive nothing. Glasses, contact lenses, and laser eye surgery are fully out of pocket. A pair of prescription glasses in Switzerland typically costs CHF 400–1'200. Some supplementary insurance plans cover a portion.
Basic insurance covers only the general ward (shared room) in your canton's public hospitals. If you want a private room, choice of doctor in hospital, or treatment in any hospital nationwide, you need supplementary hospitalisation insurance. These plans range from CHF 50 to CHF 300+ per month depending on your age and coverage level.
Basic insurance covers limited complementary therapies (acupuncture, traditional Chinese medicine, anthroposophic medicine, homeopathy) only when provided by a certified physician. Treatments by non-physician practitioners — naturopaths, osteopaths, chiropractors beyond basic coverage — require supplementary insurance.
Planned medical treatment abroad is not covered unless pre-approved. Emergency care abroad is covered at up to twice the Swiss rate, which is usually sufficient in Europe but wholly inadequate in the USA, Canada, or Australia. If you travel frequently, travel health insurance is essential.
Basic insurance covers most recommended vaccinations from the Swiss immunisation schedule but does not cover travel vaccinations (yellow fever, typhoid, Japanese encephalitis, etc.). If you travel to tropical regions, budget CHF 200–500 for travel vaccinations at a travel medicine centre.
Your health insurance cost is not just the premium. Here is the full picture.
| Cost Component | Amount (Adults) | Amount (Children) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly Premium | CHF 250–550+ | CHF 80–140 | Varies by canton, insurer, model, deductible |
| Annual Deductible | CHF 300–2'500 | CHF 0–600 | You choose; higher deductible = lower premium |
| Co-payment (10%) | Max CHF 700/year | Max CHF 350/year | 10% of costs above deductible; 20% for some drugs |
| Maximum Annual Out-of-Pocket | CHF 1'000–3'200 | CHF 350–950 | Deductible + co-payment cap (excl. premiums) |
| Hospital Stay Contribution | CHF 15/day | CHF 0 | Adults pay CHF 15/day for inpatient hospital stays |
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