Timing strategies, insider knowledge, and step-by-step instructions to switch your insurer smoothly and save thousands of francs.
Here is a fact that insurers would rather you did not know: the cheapest health insurer in any given canton changes almost every year. Insurers use different pricing strategies, and what was the best deal in 2025 may be 15–20% more expensive in 2026 relative to competitors.
Yet only about 10% of Swiss residents switch each year. The rest pay a "loyalty tax" — an unnecessary premium for staying with an insurer out of inertia. For a family of four, this loyalty tax can exceed CHF 5'000 per year.
Switching basic insurance has zero downside. There is no gap in coverage, no new health checks, no waiting periods, and no penalties. Your new insurer must accept you unconditionally, and coverage continues seamlessly from the first day of the new insurance period.
Swiss law provides two opportunities to switch your basic health insurance each year. Understanding the details of each window is critical.
| Detail | End-of-Year Switch (1 January) | Mid-Year Switch (1 July) |
|---|---|---|
| New coverage starts | 1 January | 1 July |
| Cancellation deadline | 30 November (singed, received by insurer) | 31 March (singed, received by insurer) |
| Who qualifies | Everyone with basic insurance | Only if your canton had a premium adjustment AND you have the CHF 300 deductible |
| Can change deductible? | Yes — can change to any deductible level | Can only switch to a higher deductible |
| Can change model? | Yes — can switch to any model | Limited — depends on insurer availability |
| Recommended | Yes — maximum flexibility, best options | Only if you missed the November deadline |
| Key risk | Missing the 30 November deadline by even 1 day | Not all cantons qualify; limited deductible changes |
Your employer handles accident insurance (UVG), but health insurance is entirely your responsibility. Here are the things most HR departments overlook or get wrong.
Some employers have "partnerships" with specific insurers and may suggest or even pressure you to enrol with them. This is entirely optional. Your employer has no legal authority over your basic health insurance choice. These partnerships often benefit the employer (administrative simplicity) or the broker (commissions), not necessarily you.
If you work 8+ hours per week for one employer, your accident insurance (UVG/LAA) is covered by your employer's insurer. You can then suspend the accident coverage portion of your basic health insurance, saving CHF 5–15 per month. Many expats pay for overlapping accident coverage for years without realising they can suspend it.
If your employer relocates you to a different canton, your health insurance premium changes — potentially significantly. HR departments rarely mention this financial impact. Moving from Appenzell to Geneva could double your premium. You can (and should) switch insurers when you move, as the cheapest insurer differs by canton.
Unlike Germany or the US, Swiss employers do not contribute to your health insurance premiums. The full cost is yours. This comes as a shock to expats from countries where employer-sponsored insurance is standard. Budget accordingly — health insurance is typically your third-largest monthly expense after rent and taxes.
If you lose your job, your basic health insurance continues unchanged. You keep the same insurer, same premium, same coverage. However, you must now add accident coverage back to your basic policy (since your employer's UVG coverage ends). Contact your insurer immediately upon employment changes to adjust your policy.
If your company transfers you out of Switzerland, you must cancel your Swiss health insurance when you deregister from your Gemeinde. If you are transferred to Switzerland, you must obtain Swiss insurance within 3 months regardless of any group insurance your multinational employer may offer elsewhere. These are not interchangeable.
Follow these steps in order for a seamless transition. Start in early October for the best experience.
New premiums are published in late September. Use a comparison tool to see your options. Note the 3 cheapest insurers for your canton, model, and deductible preference. Check customer reviews for each.
Submit your application to the new insurer. Do this BEFORE cancelling your old one. Wait for written confirmation of acceptance. For basic insurance, acceptance is guaranteed, but having the confirmation in hand gives you peace of mind.
Send a cancellation letter by registered mail (Einschreiben). The letter must be received by 30 November, not just postmarked. Send it by 25 November to be safe. Keep the registered mail receipt as proof of timely cancellation.
Your new insurance starts automatically on 1 January. Return your old insurance card if requested. Ensure you have no outstanding invoices with your previous insurer. Any open claims from the prior year are still processed by the old insurer.
The mid-year switching window (cancellation by 31 March for 1 July start) exists as a consumer protection measure for years when premiums change mid-year. However, it comes with significant limitations.
First, not all cantons qualify — only those where premiums were adjusted. Second, you can only switch to a higher deductible, not a lower one. Third, the selection of insurers accepting mid-year switches may be smaller than at year-end.
In practice, the mid-year switch is most useful if you missed the November deadline and are paying a premium that is significantly above market rate. For most people, the end-of-year switch offers far more flexibility and better options.
International moves trigger specific insurance rules that many expats overlook.
You have 3 months from registering your residence to obtain Swiss basic health insurance. Coverage is retroactive to your registration date, so even if you apply in month 2, you are covered from day 1. Use the 3-month window wisely to compare options rather than rushing. If you have travel insurance or your home country's coverage in the interim, you are functionally (though not legally) covered while you decide.
When you deregister from your Gemeinde (mandatory when moving abroad), your basic health insurance obligation ends. Cancel your insurance effective from your departure date. You are entitled to a refund for any premiums paid beyond your deregistration date. Cancel supplementary insurance separately and well in advance, as those have different notice periods (often 3–6 months).
If you return to Switzerland after living abroad, you must re-register and obtain new insurance within 3 months. Your previous insurer is not obligated to reinstate your old policy, though many will. This is essentially a fresh start — use the opportunity to compare all options again, as premiums will have changed during your absence.
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