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If you are asking how do I terminate my employment in Switzerland, you are not alone, it is one of the most common questions asked by employees and expats navigating Swiss labour law for the first time. Switzerland operates a principle of “freedom of termination,” meaning either party may end an open-ended employment contract at any time, provided the applicable notice period is observed. What catches many employees off guard, however, are the practical mechanics: calculating notice correctly, understanding how sickness can suspend the clock, knowing what must appear in a resignation letter, and evaluating whether a post‑termination non‑compete clause is actually enforceable.
This guide walks through every step, from drafting your resignation letter Switzerland employers will accept, to negotiating a mutual termination agreement, managing garden leave and protecting yourself against overbroad restrictive covenants.
Yes. Under Swiss law, an employee can terminate an open-ended employment contract at any time by giving proper notice. No reason is required. The Swiss Code of Obligations (CO) establishes the framework, and the federal government portal ch.ch confirms that both employers and employees enjoy a broadly symmetrical right to terminate.
Your principal options are:
If you want to leave now, quick checklist:
Resigning correctly in Switzerland is straightforward once you understand three things: what your contract says, how to calculate your notice period, and what form the resignation must take. The process below applies to open-ended contracts, which are by far the most common arrangement. If you hold a fixed term contract Switzerland rules differ, see the dedicated subsection later in this guide.
Before doing anything else, read your employment contract and any applicable collective bargaining agreement (CBA) or staff regulations. Look for:
The notice period Switzerland employees must observe depends on the stage of employment and what the contract says. The CO sets statutory minimums, but contracts frequently extend them, especially for managerial and senior roles. The table below summarises the most common scenarios.
| Situation | Statutory / Typical Notice | Practical Example / Note |
|---|---|---|
| Probationary period (employee or employer) | 7 days (statutory minimum; contract may extend probation up to 3 months) | If still in probation, resignation can be effective after just 7 days. Check whether your contract requires written notice or a longer probationary notice. |
| After probation, year 1 | 1 month, ending at end of calendar month (statutory minimum) | Resign on 15 June → last day is 31 July (notice runs to end of next full calendar month). |
| Years 2–9 of service | 2 months, ending at end of calendar month (statutory minimum) | Resign on 10 March → last day is 31 May. |
| From year 10 onward | 3 months, ending at end of calendar month (statutory minimum) | Often mirrors the 3 months notice period Switzerland employers impose on long-tenured staff. |
| Senior / managerial roles (contractual) | 3–6 months (contractual, common in practice) | Senior roles frequently carry a 3‑month contractual notice regardless of tenure. Always check your contract. |
Key rule: notice must reach the employer before the relevant cut-off. If you post your letter on 30 June but it arrives on 2 July, notice is deemed given in July, and the period shifts by a full month.
Swiss law does not strictly require resignation to be in writing for it to be valid, an oral statement can technically suffice, as confirmed by ch.ch. However, written proof is strongly recommended. In the event of a dispute, you will need to demonstrate that notice was given and when it was received. Best practice is to hand your letter to your manager in person (and obtain a signed acknowledgement) or send it by registered post (Einschreiben) so you have a delivery receipt.
Quick resignation letter Switzerland template:
[Your name and address]
[Employer name and address]
[Date]
Dear [Manager’s name],
I hereby give notice of my resignation from my position as [job title], effective [date, ensure the notice period is fully observed]. My last working day will be [date], in accordance with the [X]-month notice period stipulated in my employment contract dated [date].
I kindly request written confirmation of receipt of this letter and confirmation of my last working day.
Yours sincerely,
[Signature]
Deliver the letter so it arrives before the month-end cut-off relevant to your notice period. Keep a copy for your records.
The notice period is the single most important variable when you terminate your employment in Switzerland. Getting it wrong can delay your departure, trigger a damages claim or create unnecessary conflict with your employer.
During probation, which lasts one month by default but can be extended to a maximum of three months by written agreement, either party may terminate with just seven days’ notice. Probationary notice can be given at any time (it is not tied to the end of the calendar month). This makes probation the most flexible window for a swift departure, and the period where employees have the lowest risk exposure.
Once probation ends, the CO sets graduated statutory minimums: one month during the first year of service, two months from the second through the ninth year, and three months from the tenth year onward. These statutory periods are minimums, contracts often set longer notice, and any contractual extension is binding provided it applies equally to both parties. The notice period always runs to the end of a calendar month unless the contract expressly provides otherwise. This “end-of-month” rule is a frequent source of miscalculation, particularly for employees planning to start a new role on a specific date.
Example: You have worked for four years and your contract mirrors the statutory two-month notice. You hand in your resignation letter on 18 April. Notice is deemed given in April, and two full calendar months must pass, so your last day is 30 June.
A fixed term contract Switzerland employees hold ends automatically on the agreed date without any notice being required. Neither party can ordinarily terminate early unless the contract includes an express early-termination clause. If no such clause exists and you leave before the expiry date, you may be liable for damages equal to the salary you would have earned for the remaining term.
One of the trickiest areas of Swiss employment termination law concerns so-called “blocking” (protected) periods. These are windows during which an employer’s termination notice is void, and during which a running notice period is suspended. Understanding them is essential whether you are resigning or being dismissed.
Yes, and it has significant legal consequences. If an employee falls ill during the notice period, the notice period is suspended for the duration of the incapacity. Once the employee recovers (or the maximum protected period expires), the notice period resumes and runs to the end of the next calendar month. The length of the protected period depends on tenure: 30 days in the first year of service, 90 days from the second to the fifth year, and 180 days from the sixth year onward. This is one reason why sick leave Switzerland salary obligations are a critical concern for employers.
Practical example: You have four years of service and are serving a two-month notice period ending 31 August. You fall ill on 1 August and remain incapacitated for six weeks. Your notice period is suspended for 90 days (maximum protected period for your tenure). Once you recover, the remaining notice period resumes, potentially pushing your last day well into the following months.
Employers are entitled to require a medical certificate (sick leave certificate Switzerland employers commonly request from day one or day three of absence, depending on internal policy). If you cannot produce a valid certificate, the employer may dispute the suspension of the notice period and, in some cases, withhold salary for the days in question. During the notice period, your salary continues to be paid under the normal sick-pay rules, typically at full salary for a limited period determined by the applicable cantonal scale (the Berner, Basler or Zürcher scale) or by the employer’s loss-of-earnings insurance policy.
An employer may require you to take outstanding holiday during the notice period, provided the remaining notice is sufficiently long for you to enjoy genuine rest and still have time to search for a new job. If the notice period is too short for both, the employer must pay out the unused holiday in cash on the final payslip. Holiday payout should be calculated at the regular daily rate including any variable compensation components.
Swiss law allows either party to terminate the employment relationship with immediate effect where there is “good cause”, meaning circumstances that make continuation of the employment relationship in good faith unreasonable. For an employee, this typically involves serious breaches by the employer such as persistent non-payment of salary, harassment or a fundamental breach of safety obligations.
The risk of getting this wrong is substantial. If a court later determines that “good cause” did not exist, the employee who resigned immediately may be ordered to pay damages to the employer. These damages are typically equivalent to the salary the employee would have earned during the notice period, and potentially more if the employer can demonstrate additional loss.
Before resigning immediately, take these steps:
On the employer side, summary dismissal for gross misconduct (theft, fraud, serious insubordination) follows the same “good cause” standard. If you are summarily dismissed and believe the grounds are insufficient, you have the right to challenge the dismissal and claim compensation.
A mutual termination agreement Switzerland employees increasingly use offers both parties certainty and flexibility. Instead of one side giving notice, you and your employer negotiate an agreed end date and package. This is especially common for senior employees, executives and situations involving restructuring.
Key clauses to negotiate:
A template for mutual termination clauses is provided in the sample documents section below.
Garden leave, known in Swiss practice as Freistellung, is a period during which the employer releases the employee from the obligation to attend work while the employment contract (and salary) continues to run. Employers typically impose garden leave to protect confidential information, client relationships or to manage team dynamics after a resignation.
During garden leave your rights and obligations include:
Sample garden-leave clause wording: “The Employee is hereby released from the obligation to perform work with effect from [date]. The Employee’s salary and contractual benefits shall continue to be paid in full until the termination date. Outstanding holiday entitlement of [X] days shall be deemed taken during the release period. The Employee’s duty of loyalty and all confidentiality obligations remain in full force.”
A post-termination non-compete clause restricts an employee from working for a competitor or setting up a competing business after the employment ends. Such clauses are common in Swiss contracts, but their enforceability is far from automatic. Understanding how to terminate your employment in Switzerland also means understanding what happens after you leave.
Under the CO, a non-compete clause is only valid if it is agreed in writing and the employee had access to the employer’s clientele or to business or manufacturing secrets during the employment. Even where these threshold conditions are met, the clause must be reasonable in three dimensions: scope (what activities are restricted), geography (where the restriction applies) and duration (how long it lasts). Industry observers expect courts to continue their established trend of scrutinising over-broad covenants closely and reducing excessive restrictions.
If you believe your non-compete is overbroad, a labour law specialist can assess whether it would withstand court challenge and advise on negotiation strategies to narrow or eliminate it.
Your final payslip should include:
Request a detailed final payslip and a written employment certificate (Arbeitszeugnis) no later than your last working day. Under SECO guidance, the employer is obliged to provide both promptly.
Below are two compact templates and a sample garden-leave clause you can adapt to your own situation. Personalise all bracketed fields before use and consider having them reviewed by a legal professional.
[Your full name]
[Your address]
[Date]
To: [Employer / HR Manager name and address]
Subject: Resignation from the position of [job title]
Dear [Name],
I hereby resign from my position as [job title] with [Company name]. In accordance with the [X]-month notice period set out in my employment contract dated [date], my last working day will be [date].
Please confirm receipt of this letter and the agreed termination date in writing. I look forward to completing a thorough handover during the notice period.
Kind regards,
[Signature and printed name]
The parties agree as follows:
1. The employment relationship shall terminate by mutual agreement on [date]. 2. The Employer shall pay the Employee a severance amount of CHF [amount] gross, payable on the termination date. 3. The Employee shall be released from duties from [date] until the termination date (garden leave). Salary and benefits continue in full. 4. The Employer shall provide the Employee with a reference letter rated no less than “good” by [date]. 5. The non-compete clause in the employment contract dated [date] is hereby waived / limited to [revised scope and duration]. 6. Both parties release each other from all further claims arising from the employment relationship, save as expressly set out in this agreement. 7.
The terms of this agreement shall remain confidential.
“The Employee is released from the obligation to perform work with immediate effect. Full salary and all contractual benefits shall continue until the termination date. Outstanding holiday of [X] days is deemed taken during the release period. All duties of loyalty, confidentiality and the return of company property remain in full force.”
Most straightforward resignations can be handled by following the steps above. However, certain situations call for professional legal advice before you act. Finding a labour lawyer in Switzerland is particularly important if:
Early legal intervention can prevent costly mistakes and, in many cases, improve the financial and practical terms of your departure significantly. How you terminate your employment in Switzerland matters not just for your current role but for your next one.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Audrey Pion at Locca Pion & Ryser, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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