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Family reunification allows foreign nationals living in Switzerland, and Swiss citizens returning from abroad, to bring their spouse, registered partner, minor children, and in some cases dependent parents to live with them under a single household. Understanding how to apply for family reunification in Switzerland is essential because the procedure differs significantly depending on whether the joining family member holds EU/EFTA nationality (governed by the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons, or FZA) or comes from a third country (governed by the Foreign Nationals and Integration Act, FNIA). Processing is handled at the cantonal level, which means timelines, document expectations, and fee schedules can vary between Zurich, Geneva, St. Gallen, and every other canton.
With administrative guidance updated in late 2025 to reflect revised FZA implementation, 2026 applicants face new canton‑level procedural nuances that make careful preparation, and early legal advice where custody or KESB matters are involved, more important than ever.
Swiss family reunification enables a person already lawfully resident in Switzerland (the sponsor) to apply for a residence permit for close family members who wish to join them. The process applies to three broad groups of sponsors: Swiss nationals, EU/EFTA nationals exercising free‑movement rights, and third‑country nationals holding a valid B (residence) or C (settlement) permit.
The family members who may qualify include:
A critical first question is whether the joining family member is an EU/EFTA national. If yes, the FZA fast‑track applies, the right to reunification is largely automatic once the sponsor demonstrates lawful residence, suitable housing, and sufficient financial resources. If the joining family member is a non‑EU/EFTA (third‑country) national, stricter eligibility requirements for family reunification in Switzerland apply, including hard time limits for bringing children and more demanding proof of accommodation and income.
Canton migration offices, not a single federal authority, are responsible for processing applications, which explains why timelines and document expectations can differ materially between, for example, Zurich and Geneva. The State Secretariat for Migration (SEM) sets the federal framework and must be notified in certain third‑country cases, but day‑to‑day decision‑making sits with the cantons. Early indications suggest that 2026 administrative updates have streamlined EU/EFTA processing in several cantons, though applicants should verify current requirements directly with their canton migration office before filing.
Eligibility for family reunification in Switzerland depends on the sponsor’s residence status, the nationality of the joining family member, and specific conditions relating to housing, finances, and, for third‑country nationals, statutory time limits.
| Family member | EU/EFTA route (FZA) | Third‑country route (FNIA) |
|---|---|---|
| Spouse | Entitled to join; no separate work permit needed | Entitled if sponsor holds B or C permit and meets housing/income tests |
| Registered partner | Same rights as spouse | Same rights as spouse |
| Unmarried children under 21 | Entitled to join (under 21 or dependent) | Entitled for children under 18; must apply within five years of sponsor’s arrival (B permit) or within 12 months for children over 12 |
| Dependent parents / grandparents | May join if financially dependent on sponsor | Generally not eligible; narrow exceptions for parents of children under 12 |
EU/EFTA nationals (FZA): Under the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons, family members of EU/EFTA nationals exercising their free‑movement rights have a derived right to reside in Switzerland. The sponsor must demonstrate suitable accommodation and sufficient financial resources so the family will not require social assistance. The SEM factsheet on family reunification under the FZA confirms that the right extends to spouses, registered partners, children under 21 (or older if dependent), and dependent ascendants. No separate work permit is required for family members who are themselves EU/EFTA nationals.
Third‑country nationals (FNIA): A sponsor holding a C (settlement) permit may reunify a spouse and children under 18, provided the family will live together in suitable accommodation and will not depend on social assistance. A B‑permit holder faces the same conditions but must also observe strict time limits: the application for a spouse or child under 12 must be filed within five years of the sponsor’s own arrival, and for children aged 12–17 the application must be filed within 12 months. Missing these deadlines can result in a permanent loss of the right to reunify.
Same‑sex couples: Switzerland recognises registered partnerships, which confer the same family reunification rights as marriage. Since 1 July 2022, same‑sex marriage has been legal in Switzerland, and married same‑sex couples are treated identically to opposite‑sex married couples for all immigration purposes.
Non‑marital partners: Unmarried cohabiting partners who are not in a registered partnership do not have an automatic right to family reunification. EU/EFTA nationals may rely on free‑movement principles for “durable” partners, but this requires substantial evidence of a long‑standing relationship. Third‑country non‑marital partners generally cannot apply under family reunification and must seek an independent permit category.
Refugees and provisionally admitted persons: Recognised refugees may apply for family reunification for their spouse and minor children after three years of residence, provided they are financially independent and have suitable housing. Provisionally admitted persons face similar but more restrictive conditions. The UNHCR provides specific guidance for these categories.
The end‑to‑end family reunification procedure follows six core steps. The table below summarises each step, the responsible party, and the typical duration before the detailed walkthrough that follows.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Preliminary eligibility check (EU/EFTA vs third‑country) | Applicant / lawyer | 1–7 days |
| 2. Document collection and legalisation | Applicant / foreign authorities / translator | 2–8 weeks (varies by country of origin) |
| 3. Submit application (Swiss consulate or cantonal migration office) | Applicant or authorised representative | Same day (submission); processing begins immediately |
| 4. Cantonal processing and SEM notification | Canton migration office / SEM | 6–12 weeks (EU/EFTA cases often faster; canton variance applies) |
| 5. Visa issuance and entry to Switzerland | Swiss consulate (if visa required) | 2–6 weeks after cantonal approval |
| 6. Municipal registration and permit card issuance | Applicant / municipality (Einwohnerkontrolle) | 1–4 weeks after arrival |
Before gathering any documents, determine which legal framework applies. If the joining family member is an EU/EFTA national, the FZA route provides broader entitlements, fewer time limits, and, in most cantons, a faster processing track. If the joining member is a third‑country national, the FNIA rules apply and you must check whether the sponsor’s permit type (B or C) and the elapsed time since the sponsor’s arrival still allow filing. Confirm the five‑year and 12‑month time limits for third‑country children. Where the sponsor holds a C permit, the time limits are more generous but still apply. If a KESB decision restricts parental custody, verify at this stage whether a reunification application is legally viable.
A preliminary consultation with a family lawyer is advisable whenever custody, shared parental authority, or a prior immigration refusal is in the picture.
Collect every document listed in the required documents table below. Civil‑status documents (birth certificates, marriage certificates) issued outside Switzerland must be apostilled if the issuing country is a party to the Hague Apostille Convention, or legalised through the relevant Swiss consulate if it is not. All documents not in the canton’s official language (German, French, or Italian, depending on canton) must be accompanied by a certified translation. Allow two to eight weeks for this step, particularly if documents must be requested from foreign government agencies.
Where to file depends on where the joining family member currently resides:
Ensure you retain a stamped copy or electronic receipt confirming the date of submission. This date is critical for time‑limit calculations, particularly for third‑country applicants approaching the five‑year deadline.
The canton migration office reviews the application for completeness and substance: it verifies the family relationship, accommodation suitability, and financial resources. For third‑country nationals, the canton must notify SEM before issuing an approval, which adds processing time. For EU/EFTA applicants, SEM notification is generally not required, which is one reason family visa Switzerland processing time tends to be shorter on the FZA track. During this phase the canton may request supplementary documents, respond promptly, as delays at this stage reset informal processing clocks.
If the joining family member’s nationality requires a visa for Switzerland (most third‑country nationals), the cantonal approval is forwarded to the Swiss embassy or consulate, which issues a national D visa. Schengen‑area nationals and visa‑exempt nationalities can enter without a separate visa step. The visa is typically valid for 90 days and allows a single entry; the family member must register in Switzerland within this validity period.
Within 14 days of arrival, the family member must register in person at the Einwohnerkontrolle (residents’ registration office) of the municipality where the family lives. Bring the passport, visa (if applicable), tenancy agreement, and health insurance confirmation. The municipality forwards the registration to the cantonal migration office, which issues the biometric residence permit card. Industry observers expect the card to arrive by post within two to four weeks of registration in most cantons.
The documents needed for family reunification must be assembled before filing. An incomplete dossier is the single most common reason for processing delays. The table below provides a comprehensive family reunification checklist with notes on who issues each document, the required format, and practical validity considerations.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Passport (applicant and all joining family members) | Issued by national authority; colour copies plus originals at interview; must be valid for at least six months beyond the intended entry date |
| Long‑form birth certificate | Issued by civil registry in country of birth; must show full parentage; apostille or consular legalisation required; certified translation into DE/FR/IT as needed |
| Marriage certificate or registered partnership certificate | Issued by national authority; must confirm current legal marital/partnership status; apostille or legalisation plus certified translation |
| Proof of family relationship (custody order, adoption decree) | Court or relevant authority; certified copy; if a minor is with only one parent, include the other parent’s written consent or the sole‑custody decision; KESB decisions required where applicable |
| Proof of suitable accommodation | Tenancy contract or property deed showing address, number of rooms, and total living area; canton assesses whether the dwelling meets “typical local living standards” for the family size |
| Proof of sufficient financial resources | Employment contract, three months’ pay slips, bank statements, or a declaration of subsistence; requirements vary by canton and sponsor permit type |
| Health insurance enrolment or confirmation of plan | Evidence of Swiss‑compliant health insurance, or a binding enrolment commitment effective from the date of arrival; travel insurance may be required for the entry period |
| Police clearance / certificate of good conduct | Issued by country of residence; apostille and translation often required; some cantons require this for all adult family members |
| Passport‑style photographs | Per Swiss consular specifications (biometric format, 35 × 45 mm) |
| Copy of sponsor’s Swiss residence permit | Colour copy of the B or C permit card, or EU/EFTA registration confirmation; demonstrates lawful stay of the sponsor |
| KESB / child protection documents (where relevant) | KESB decision text, guardianship order, welfare assessment, critical where custody is shared, contested, or subject to a protection measure; absence of these documents can trigger a refusal |
| Proof of prior cohabitation or relationship evidence | Joint tenancy agreements, shared bank accounts, photographs, correspondence, especially important where the marriage or partnership was concluded recently or where authorities suspect a sham arrangement |
Certification and apostille requirements: Switzerland is party to the Hague Apostille Convention. Civil‑status documents from other Convention countries need only an apostille stamp. Documents from non‑Convention countries must be legalised by the relevant Swiss embassy or consulate. All documents not in the official language of the destination canton must be accompanied by a certified translation prepared by a sworn or officially recognised translator.
KESB and custody documentation: Where a child is being reunified and parental custody is shared or contested, the canton migration office will require evidence of the KESB decision or court order confirming the applying parent’s right to relocate the child internationally. Missing or ambiguous KESB documentation is a frequent cause of refusals in children’s reunification cases. If a KESB proceeding is pending, the likely practical effect will be that the migration office suspends its decision until the KESB determination is final.
The total family reunification timeline in Switzerland depends on the route (EU/EFTA vs third‑country), the canton of residence, and the completeness of the application. The table below consolidates the main processing phases and the statutory deadlines that applicants must observe.
| Phase or deadline | EU/EFTA route | Third‑country route |
|---|---|---|
| Document preparation | 2–4 weeks | 4–8 weeks (foreign legalisations take longer) |
| Cantonal processing (from complete submission) | 4–8 weeks | 6–12 weeks (SEM notification adds time) |
| Visa issuance (if applicable) | Usually not required | 2–6 weeks |
| Municipal registration and permit card | 1–4 weeks | 1–4 weeks |
| Total estimated end‑to‑end | 7–16 weeks | 13–30 weeks |
Critical statutory deadlines for third‑country nationals:
Canton variance: Processing times differ materially. Zurich and Geneva, for instance, typically process EU/EFTA cases within four to six weeks, while smaller cantons may take eight weeks or longer due to staffing constraints. Third‑country cases requiring SEM notification routinely reach eight to twelve weeks at the cantonal stage. Applicants should confirm estimated timelines directly with their canton migration office and build in a buffer for supplementary document requests.
Appeals: If an application is refused, the applicant generally has 30 days from receipt of the written decision to file an appeal with the cantonal administrative court. Tight observance of this deadline is essential, a missed appeal window normally renders the refusal final.
Fees for family reunification in Switzerland vary by canton, consulate, and applicant nationality. The table below provides representative ranges based on published cantonal fee schedules and consular fee lists.
| Item | Typical amount (CHF) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Application / processing fee (cantonal) | CHF 100–400 | Varies by canton and permit type; EU/EFTA applications often attract lower administrative fees |
| Visa fee (consular) | CHF 80–120 | Payable if a national D visa is required; Schengen and visa‑exempt nationalities are exempt |
| Certified translation (per document) | CHF 30–120 | Depends on language pair and document length |
| Apostille / legalisation (per document) | CHF 20–150 | Hague apostille generally cheaper; consular legalisation for non‑Convention countries costs more |
| Lawyer / advisor fee (optional) | CHF 200–350 per hour; or flat fee CHF 800–3,000 | Recommended when custody/KESB issues, prior refusals, or complex evidence are involved |
| Miscellaneous (photos, postal, courier) | CHF 50–200 | Biometric photos, tracked postage, courier for original documents |
Tax considerations: Family reunification itself does not trigger a direct tax liability, but the arrival of family members affects the household’s tax assessment. Switzerland levies income tax at federal, cantonal, and communal levels, and the applicable rates depend on the canton of residence. Family allowances (Familienzulagen) are paid through the employer’s family‑allowance fund and vary by canton. Newly arrived family members must also enrol in mandatory Swiss health insurance within three months, which represents a significant recurring cost. Applicants with complex financial arrangements, cross‑border employment, assets in multiple jurisdictions, should consult a tax adviser in addition to a family lawyer.
In late 2025, the Swiss Federal Council and SEM issued updated administrative guidance on the implementation of the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons (FZA) as it relates to EU/EFTA family reunification. Industry observers expect these changes to have several practical effects for applicants filing in 2026.
Faster EU/EFTA processing: The updated guidance clarifies that cantons should treat EU/EFTA family reunification applications as priority cases. Early indications suggest that several larger cantons, including Zurich, Bern, and Vaud, have shortened their internal processing targets to four to six weeks for complete dossiers.
Stricter documentation standards for housing and finance: While the right to reunification under the FZA is well established, the 2026 implementation guidance reaffirms that cantons may require detailed evidence of suitable accommodation and sufficient financial resources. The likely practical effect will be that even EU/EFTA applicants must submit tenancy contracts, income evidence, and health insurance confirmations, documents that some cantons previously treated as optional for FZA cases.
Third‑country applicants, no substantive legislative change: The FNIA time limits and eligibility conditions for third‑country family reunification have not been amended. However, some cantons have updated their internal checklists and online submission portals, so applicants should verify current requirements directly through their canton’s migration office website before filing.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Eva Staub at Märki Staub Rechtsanwälte AG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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