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Labour law Switzerland entered 2026 with a cluster of regulatory changes that demand immediate attention from every employer operating in the country. The AVS reform, adjusting first-pillar pension contributions and harmonising the reference retirement age, took effect on 1 January 2026, alongside cantonal minimum-wage indexation events in Geneva, Neuchâtel, Jura and Basel-Stadt. Payroll reporting obligations, including updated salary-certificate fields and revised social-security coding, compound the compliance burden on HR directors, general counsel and payroll managers alike. This guide distils the changes into an actionable employer checklist, covering employer obligations Switzerland-wide, and provides a practical 90-day implementation timeline so that no deadline is missed.
Before diving into the detail, here are the eight highest-priority actions every Swiss employer should have completed, or must complete immediately if overdue. Each item is expanded in the sections that follow, with citations to the relevant federal or cantonal authority.
These steps are grounded in guidance published by the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) via the KMU portal and by the FSIO. The sections below unpack each obligation in detail.
The AVS reform is the single largest change to labour law Switzerland has introduced this cycle. Adopted following the federal referendum process and implemented through amendments to the Federal Act on Old-Age and Survivors’ Insurance (OASI/LAVS), the reform recalibrates first-pillar financing and adjusts the reference retirement age, with direct consequences for every employer’s payroll ledger. The FSIO published updated contribution tables and implementation guidance through its official channels.
The core employer-facing changes under the AVS reform fall into three categories:
The following illustrative table shows how a gross monthly salary flows through the revised AVS deduction structure. Employers should cross-reference their own payroll output against the FSIO’s published contribution tables to confirm accuracy.
| Payroll line item | Employer share | Employee share |
|---|---|---|
| Gross monthly salary | , | CHF 8,000.00 |
| AVS/AHV deduction (revised 2026 rate) | Calculated per FSIO table | Calculated per FSIO table |
| ALV (unemployment insurance) | Per existing rate | Per existing rate |
| BVG/LPP (occupational pension, updated coordination deduction) | Per pension-fund schedule | Per pension-fund schedule |
| Net salary to employee | , | After all deductions |
Industry observers expect that the cumulative annual cost impact per employee will be modest in isolation, but for employers with hundreds or thousands of staff, the aggregate payroll increase is material. Finance teams should model the full-year cost at the earliest opportunity.
Employers are required to inform the following bodies of the updated contribution parameters:
Switzerland does not impose a federal statutory minimum wage. Instead, minimum-wage indexation is a cantonal matter: several cantons have enacted minimum-wage laws that are automatically indexed to the national consumer price index (CPI) or a cantonal equivalent. When the index moves, the canton minimum wage adjusts on 1 January of the following year, and employers must apply the new floor from the first pay run.
The following table summarises the cantons that have implemented statutory minimum wages with indexation mechanisms and identifies the employer action required for 2026. Employers should confirm the precise hourly rate on the relevant cantonal government website, as final indexed figures are published in the fourth quarter of the preceding year.
| Canton | 2026 minimum-wage indexation | Employers / sectors affected |
|---|---|---|
| Geneva | Yes, indexed to CPI; new hourly floor published by cantonal authorities | All employers in the canton, unless a CBA prescribes a higher rate |
| Neuchâtel | Yes, automatic annual CPI indexation | All private-sector employers; agriculture and domestic work included |
| Jura | Yes, indexed annually | All employers in the canton |
| Basel-Stadt | Yes, statutory minimum wage with indexation mechanism | All employers in the canton; verify sectoral exceptions via cantonal guidance |
| Ticino | Sectoral minimum wages apply; check cantonal updates for 2026 indexation status | Sectors specified by cantonal law (hospitality, retail, logistics and others) |
Where an employer pays part-time staff, the indexed hourly minimum must be applied proportionally. Payroll teams should recalculate monthly pay as: indexed hourly rate × contractual weekly hours × 52 ÷ 12. For employees covered by a collective bargaining agreement Switzerland-wide or at the cantonal level, the CBA wage floor may already exceed the statutory minimum, but employers must still verify compliance, because the indexed minimum can occasionally leapfrog a stale CBA rate that has not been renegotiated.
High-risk flag: Employers in Geneva and Neuchâtel face the highest scrutiny. Labour inspectorates in these cantons actively audit compliance with minimum-wage laws, and penalties for underpayment can include back-pay orders, fines and, in repeat cases, exclusion from public contracts.
Beyond the headline AVS and minimum-wage changes, payroll compliance Switzerland-wide requires attention to several technical reporting obligations that take effect in the 2026 tax year. Failure to update these items can result in incorrect salary certificates, tax-authority queries and employee disputes.
The salary certificate 2026 must accurately reflect the revised AVS contribution structure. Payroll teams should focus on the following fields:
Employers should request written confirmation from their payroll software vendor that the January 2026 software update incorporates the correct fields and rates before processing the first pay run.
For employees subject to withholding tax at source (Quellensteuer), primarily foreign nationals without C permits, the revised AVS deductions alter the net taxable income base. Payroll teams must recalculate withholding using the 2026 cantonal tariff tables, which themselves are updated annually. Failure to apply the correct tariff can expose the employer to joint liability for underpaid tax.
Annual social-security declarations submitted to the cantonal compensation office must use the 2026 contribution rates from the first reporting period. Employers who file electronically should verify that their declaration software has been updated. Manual filers should download the revised forms from the compensation office portal.
Employers who send workers into Switzerland for short-term assignments, or who receive posted workers from abroad, must comply with the 8-day notification rule under the Federal Act on Measures to Combat Illegal Employment. According to the official guidance published on entsendung.admin.ch, any posting of eight or more calendar days within a calendar year triggers a mandatory advance notification to the cantonal authority. The 2026 changes do not alter this threshold, but employers should confirm that posted workers’ pay meets the newly indexed cantonal minimum wages and that social-security coordination certificates (A1 forms) remain current.
The AVS reform and minimum-wage indexation events create a direct need to review employment contract changes across the workforce. Under the Swiss Code of Obligations (Art. 319–362 CO), the employment contract sets the binding terms, but where those terms reference statutory rates, pension ages or specific deduction percentages, they may now be out of date.
Under Swiss law, a CBA (Gesamtarbeitsvertrag / convention collective de travail) that has been declared generally binding (allgemeinverbindlich) by the Federal Council takes precedence over individual contracts and, in many cases, over cantonal minimum-wage floors if the CBA rate is higher. Employers covered by a generally binding CBA must check whether the 2026 CBA supplement includes adjusted wage scales, pension contributions or new working-condition provisions. The SECO publishes a register of generally binding CBAs on the KMU portal.
The table below provides two example clause amendments that employers may use as a starting point. These should be reviewed by a qualified Swiss labour lawyer before implementation.
| Clause | Why change | Sample wording |
|---|---|---|
| Salary / gross pay | AVS deduction recalibration changes net pay if gross is fixed | “The Employee’s gross annual salary is CHF [amount]. Social-insurance deductions, including AVS/AHV, are applied at the rates in force from time to time as published by the FSIO.” |
| Retirement age | Harmonised reference retirement age under AVS reform | “The employment relationship ends, without notice, at the end of the month in which the Employee reaches the reference retirement age as defined by the Federal Act on Old-Age and Survivors’ Insurance (LAVS), as amended.” |
Employers should circulate amended contracts or addenda to affected employees, allowing a reasonable period for review before the revised terms take effect. Where a summary dismissal or termination dispute is ongoing, the timing of contract amendments requires particular care.
The following table maps the key actions onto a 90-day implementation schedule, assigning responsibility to the appropriate function. Employers who have not yet completed the “immediate” actions should treat them as overdue and prioritise accordingly.
| Action | Owner | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Confirm payroll software has 2026 AVS rates loaded | Payroll / IT | Immediate (before January pay run) |
| Verify cantonal minimum-wage indexed rate and adjust base pay | HR / Payroll | Immediate |
| Notify occupational pension fund of revised coordination deduction | HR / Finance | Within 30 days of 1 Jan 2026 |
| Distribute amended employment-contract addenda | Legal / HR | Within 45 days |
| Update salary-certificate template for 2026 Lohnausweis | Payroll | Before first 2026 salary certificate is issued |
| Audit CBA compliance, confirm wage floors and pension terms | Legal / HR | Within 60 days |
| Brief cross-border and secondment teams on updated rules | HR / Legal | Within 60 days |
| Complete full reconciliation of Q1 payroll against new rates | Payroll / Finance | End of Q1 (90 days) |
Escalation triggers: If your canton introduces a mid-year sectoral minimum wage, if your pension fund issues guidance that diverges from the FSIO’s published coordination deduction, or if a generally binding CBA is renegotiated during Q1, escalate immediately to legal counsel. Employers with long-term-disability cases on the books should also verify whether the AVS reform affects ongoing benefit calculations.
Not every employer faces the same compliance burden. The comparison table below maps the 2026 obligations onto three common entity types to help organisations prioritise.
| Entity type | Key obligations for 2026 | Priority actions (by 1 Jan 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| SME (<50 employees) | Update payroll to reflect AVS reform rates; check canton minimum-wage applicability; update salary certificates. | Update payroll provider settings; notify employees of any net-pay change; review key contracts referencing fixed amounts. |
| MNC / employer with cross-border staff | All SME obligations plus cross-border reporting, secondment 8-day notifications, social-security coordination (A1 forms) and withholding-tax recalculations. | Coordinate global payroll, update expatriate policies, confirm withholding tariffs and tax-treaty positions with each relevant canton. |
| Non-profit / public sector | AVS and minimum-wage obligations as applicable; sectoral CBAs for healthcare, education or social services may impose additional requirements. | Verify sectoral CBAs; update HR policies and public-facing job advertisements to reflect revised pay floors. |
The 2026 changes to labour law Switzerland represent a meaningful compliance event for employers of every size. From AVS reform recalibrations and canton minimum-wage indexation to salary-certificate updates and CBA audits, the volume of required action is substantial, but manageable with a structured 90-day plan. Employers who act promptly will avoid back-pay exposure, tax-authority queries and employee-relations friction. Those still preparing should prioritise the checklist above and seek specialist guidance where the obligations intersect with cross-border employment, sectoral CBAs or complex payroll architectures.
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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