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If you need to know how to terminate a rental agreement in Switzerland, the process hinges on three essentials: written notice delivered in the correct form, strict observance of the contractual notice period, and proof that the other party received the letter before the deadline. Tenants who must leave before the fixed term expires can propose a substitute tenant under Article 264 of the Swiss Code of Obligations (CO), potentially releasing themselves from further rent obligations. With the 2025 rent‑transparency rules now in force and a national rent‑control initiative scheduled for June 2026 sharpening public focus on tenancy rights, understanding the termination of rental agreement procedures in Switzerland has never been more important.
This guide provides the statutory framework, ready‑to‑use templates, and practical warnings about the pitfalls that catch both tenants and landlords off guard.
Swiss tenancy law, governed primarily by Articles 253–274g of the Code of Obligations, recognises several distinct routes through which a lease can come to an end. The most common is ordinary termination at the contractual term: either party gives written notice within the agreed notice period, and the tenancy concludes on the next permissible termination date. This is the route the overwhelming majority of Swiss tenants and landlords follow.
A second route is mutual rescission, sometimes called an “Aufhebungsvertrag” in German‑speaking cantons, where both parties agree in writing to end the lease on a specific date, often accompanied by a financial settlement covering final rent or redecoration costs. The third route, extraordinary termination, applies only when one party commits a grave breach of the contract, such as persistent non‑payment of rent by the tenant or the landlord’s failure to remedy serious habitability defects. Extraordinary termination can take immediate effect but demands careful documentation.
| Termination Method | Who Can Use It | Key Notice & Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Ordinary termination at term | Tenant or landlord (contractual terms) | Observe contractual notice period; written notice on the official form where required; proof of delivery |
| Extraordinary termination | Tenant or landlord for grave breach | Immediate effect possible, must document the breach, give prior written warning where required, and retain evidence of timing |
| Mutual rescission | Tenant & landlord by agreement | Written agreement signed by both parties; consider financial settlement for deposit, repairs and outstanding rent |
A fourth scenario, early release via a substitute tenant under Article 264 CO, sits between ordinary termination and mutual rescission. It allows a tenant to exit before the end of the fixed term by presenting a replacement tenant whom the landlord cannot reasonably refuse. This mechanism is explored in detail below.
The notice period for a Swiss tenancy is set by the lease contract, but statutory minimums apply when the contract is silent. For residential apartments, the standard statutory notice period is three months, ending on a date that is customary in the locality, typically 31 March, 30 June or 30 September, though many contracts permit any month‑end. Commercial premises may carry a six‑month notice period. Furnished rooms without a fixed term require only two weeks’ notice, concluding at the end of any month.
A critical trap lies in the timing of delivery. According to Swiss practice as outlined by the federal information portal ch.ch, the termination letter must be received by the other party no later than the last working day before the notice period begins to run. This is not a “postmark” rule, the date that matters is the date the letter reaches the recipient’s mailbox or is collected from the post office. Industry observers routinely note that tenants who post their notice too close to the deadline risk having it treated as valid only for the following termination date, costing three to six additional months of rent.
| Tenancy Type | Statutory Notice Period | Deliver By (Deadline Rule) |
|---|---|---|
| Unfurnished residential apartment | 3 months (unless contract provides otherwise) | Received by landlord on last working day before the 3‑month period starts |
| Furnished room (no fixed term) | 2 weeks | Received by landlord at least 2 weeks before the desired end date (month‑end) |
| Commercial premises | 6 months (unless contract provides otherwise) | Received by landlord on last working day before the 6‑month period starts |
| Parking space / storage | As per contract; typically 1–3 months | Per contractual clause; same “received by” rule applies |
Always check your lease for any clause extending the statutory minimum. Many Swiss landlords specify longer periods, four or even six months, and contractual provisions override the statutory default provided they do not fall below the mandatory minimum. If in doubt, count backwards from your desired move‑out date and send the letter with a comfortable margin of at least one week.
The following numbered process covers the standard ordinary termination. Tenants seeking early exit should complete these steps and then proceed to the Article 264 CO substitute‑tenant section below.
Registered mail remains the safest method. Swiss courts have consistently treated email as insufficient for formal lease termination unless the contract explicitly permits electronic notice. Hand delivery works, but only if you obtain a dated, signed acknowledgement. Sending via standard post is risky because you cannot prove the date the landlord received the letter.
Below is a concise English‑language template. Short translations of the key operative clause follow for German, French and Italian.
English:
[Your name and address]
[Landlord / property management name and address]
[City], [Date]
Subject: Termination of rental agreement, [Property address, floor, apartment number]
Dear [Landlord / Property Manager],
I hereby give notice to terminate the above‑referenced rental agreement effective [termination date], in accordance with the contractual notice period.
I kindly request written confirmation of receipt of this notice at your earliest convenience.
Yours sincerely,
[Signature]
[Printed name]
German (operative clause): Hiermit kündige ich den oben genannten Mietvertrag ordentlich per [Datum].
French (operative clause): Par la présente, je résilie le contrat de bail susmentionné pour le [date].
Italian (operative clause): Con la presente disdico il contratto di locazione sopra indicato per il [data].
For a ready‑to‑use version you can download as a PDF or Word file, including the full multilingual templates, look for the downloads in Section 8 of this guide.
Swiss cantons require landlords to use a cantonal official termination form (amtliches Formular) when giving notice to tenants. Failure by the landlord to use this form renders the termination void. What many tenants do not realise, however, is that this requirement applies primarily to landlord‑initiated terminations. Tenants are generally free to terminate by ordinary letter or email (if contractually permitted), although using the official form or the template above is strongly recommended for evidential safety.
The “official‑form trap” arises when landlords challenge a tenant’s notice on procedural grounds or when landlords themselves send notices that are technically defective. Common defects include:
To avoid the official termination form trap in Switzerland, tenants receiving a landlord’s notice should verify that all required fields are completed, that the form matches their canton, and that it was sent to every co‑tenant individually. Any defect can form the basis of a challenge at the conciliation authority.
Article 264 of the Swiss Code of Obligations provides tenants with a powerful early‑exit mechanism. Under this provision, a tenant may relinquish the lease before the contractual end date by proposing a substitute tenant (Ersatzmieter / locataire de remplacement) who is “reasonably acceptable” to the landlord. If the landlord refuses without valid reason, the tenant is released from the lease as of the date the substitute would have assumed the tenancy.
Federal Tribunal case law has distilled the Article 264 CO substitute tenant mechanism into three cumulative requirements:
The Federal Tribunal has addressed Article 264 CO in numerous decisions. In a leading judgment, the Court held that a landlord who refused a financially qualified substitute without articulating a specific, concrete objection could not hold the departing tenant liable for ongoing rent. In another decision, the Court confirmed that where the tenant presents multiple suitable candidates and the landlord rejects all of them without adequate justification, the tenant is released from the obligation to pay rent from the proposed takeover date. Conversely, the Court has upheld a landlord’s refusal where the proposed substitute had outstanding debt‑collection proceedings and no verifiable income.
Present all documentation to the landlord in writing, by registered mail or signed hand‑delivery, and set a reasonable deadline (typically 30 days) for the landlord to respond. Retain copies of everything.
Extraordinary termination without notice (ausserordentliche Kündigung / résiliation extraordinaire) is the exception, not the rule. Articles 257d and 257f CO govern the landlord’s right to terminate for serious tenant breaches. Article 259b CO gives tenants grounds for termination where the property has defects that seriously impair its use and the landlord fails to remedy them within a reasonable time after written notice.
A tenant may terminate with immediate effect, or on the next statutory notice date, if:
In all cases, the tenant must first give the landlord a written warning with a deadline to remedy the defect. Only if the landlord fails to comply may the tenant invoke extraordinary termination. Documentary evidence, photographs, expert reports, written correspondence, is essential. Without it, a tenant’s premature departure risks being treated as abandonment, triggering liability for the remaining lease term.
Under Swiss law, rental deposits must be held in a blocked bank account (Sperrkonto / compte bloqué) in the tenant’s name at a bank approved by the canton. The landlord cannot access these funds unilaterally. At the end of the tenancy, the following procedure applies:
The conciliation authority attempts to mediate a settlement. If mediation fails, the authority issues an authorisation to proceed to court. Tenants should be aware that normal wear and tear, faded paint, minor scuff marks, worn carpets, is not a valid basis for deposit deductions under Swiss law.
The following copyable templates cover the most common termination scenarios. For formatted, print‑ready versions, download the full set as a PDF or Word document using the buttons below.
(A) Tenant Ordinary Termination Notice, see the full English template in Section 3 above, with German, French and Italian operative clauses.
(B) Tenant Extraordinary Termination Notice (English):
[Your name and address]
[Landlord / property management name and address]
[City], [Date]
Subject: Extraordinary termination, [Property address]
Dear [Landlord / Property Manager],
Despite my written notice of [date of prior warning letter], the following defect(s) have not been remedied: [describe defect(s)].
I hereby terminate the rental agreement with immediate effect in accordance with Article 259b CO.
I request the release of my rental deposit and confirmation of this termination.
Yours sincerely,
[Signature]
(C) Substitute‑Tenant Offer Letter (English):
[Your name and address]
[Landlord / property management name and address]
[City], [Date]
Subject: Proposal of substitute tenant, Article 264 CO, [Property address]
Dear [Landlord / Property Manager],
Pursuant to Article 264 of the Swiss Code of Obligations, I propose the following person as a substitute tenant willing to assume the lease on unchanged terms from [proposed takeover date]:
Name: [Substitute’s full name]
Address: [Current address]
Contact: [Phone / email]
Please find enclosed: salary statements, debt‑register extract, identification copy and a written acceptance of the current lease terms.
I kindly request your response within 30 days. Should you refuse, please provide written reasons.
Yours sincerely,
[Signature]
(D) Landlord Notice (Explanatory Note): Landlords must use the cantonal official termination form. A free‑text letter alone is not sufficient. Ensure the form is completed in full, served individually to each co‑tenant, and sent by registered mail. Retain postal receipts.
Landlord pushback after a tenant’s termination or substitute‑tenant proposal is common. If you find yourself in this situation, act quickly and methodically:
Early indications from recent conciliation-office statistics suggest that tenants who provide complete documentation, including the substitute’s financial records and a clear paper trail of correspondence, prevail in the majority of disputes over Article 264 CO refusals.
Terminating a rental agreement in Switzerland is procedurally straightforward when you follow the correct steps: check your lease terms, draft a clear written notice, send it by registered mail well before the deadline, and retain proof of delivery. Tenants leaving before the fixed term ends should take full advantage of the Article 264 CO substitute‑tenant mechanism, it is one of the most tenant‑friendly provisions in European tenancy law, provided you present a solvent, willing replacement and document the process thoroughly.
Whether you are dealing with a landlord who has rejected your substitute, disputing deposit deductions, or facing an invalid termination notice, the conciliation offices across Switzerland’s cantons provide an accessible, low‑cost first step toward resolution. For complex disputes, especially those involving extraordinary termination or high‑value commercial leases, professional legal guidance from a civil law specialist familiar with Swiss tenancy litigation is strongly recommended. Download the templates above, follow the checklists, and move forward with confidence.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nicolas Bloque at Etude Bloque, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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