Family Reunification Switzerland: Permits (2026)
Family reunification Switzerland — known in Swiss law as Familiennachzug — allows a person lawfully residing in Switzerland to bring their spouse, partner, or children to live together in the country. If you hold a Swiss residence permit and want to bring family members, the rules vary significantly depending on your permit category, your nationality, how long you have lived here, and which canton you reside in. This guide sets out the concrete requirements for 2026 so you know exactly what applies before you file.
What Is Family Reunification in Switzerland?
Family reunification allows a person lawfully residing in Switzerland — the sponsor — to bring qualifying family members into the country to live together. It is governed primarily by the Foreign Nationals and Integration Act (AIG) and, for EU/EFTA nationals, by the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons (AFMP). Official guidance is published at admin.ch.
The permit category the sponsor holds is the single most important factor. Swiss citizens and C permit holders enjoy the broadest rights. Non-EU/EFTA B permit holders face the strictest conditions.
Who Can Sponsor Family Reunification?
Swiss Citizens
Swiss citizens have the strongest sponsorship rights. A Swiss national can bring their spouse or registered partner and dependent children under 18 to Switzerland without an income threshold requirement for the spouse. The application can be filed immediately — there is no minimum residency period.
Children from a previous relationship may also qualify, provided the Swiss citizen has custody or the child is primarily dependent on the Swiss parent.
C Permit Holders (Settled Foreign Nationals)
C permit holders enjoy rights equivalent to Swiss citizens for family reunification purposes. There is no mandatory waiting period and no income threshold specifically tied to the permit category itself (ordinary means-testing rules apply, but the bar is lower than for B permit holders). Family members typically receive a B permit initially, upgrading to C once they meet the standard settlement criteria.
For more on what the C permit entails, see our guide to the C permit Switzerland.
B Permit Holders — EU/EFTA Nationals
EU and EFTA nationals holding a B permit benefit from the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons. Under free movement rules, there is no waiting period. A qualifying family member — spouse, registered partner, or dependent children under 21 — can join the EU/EFTA national immediately upon establishment of residence in Switzerland.
The conditions are straightforward: the sponsor must have adequate housing suitable for the family, and neither the sponsor nor the joining family members should become dependent on social welfare in a way that would trigger abuse of rights. In practice, the bar is lower than for non-EU nationals because the AFMP takes precedence over the stricter domestic AIG provisions.
Further details on the B permit itself are covered in our B permit Switzerland overview.
B Permit Holders — Non-EU/EFTA Nationals
This is the category with the strictest rules, and where most mistakes — and refusals — occur.
Three-year residency requirement. A non-EU/EFTA national holding a B permit must have resided continuously in Switzerland for at least three years before applying for family reunification. The clock starts from the date the B permit was first issued. Gaps in residency (periods spent outside Switzerland exceeding the permitted absence thresholds) can reset or pause the count.
Income threshold. The sponsor must demonstrate sufficient financial resources to support the entire family without recourse to social assistance. There is no single federal figure — cantons apply their own reference amounts — but as a practical benchmark:
- For a couple (no children): typically CHF 40,000–45,000 net annual income
- For a couple with one child: typically CHF 50,000–55,000 net annual income
- For a couple with two or more children: typically CHF 60,000 or more net annual income
These are minimum benchmarks. Cantonal authorities can and do apply higher thresholds in higher cost-of-living areas. The income must be stable and foreseeable — temporary employment contracts or income from social benefits do not count toward the threshold.
Adequate housing. The sponsor must demonstrate that the family will live in accommodation that meets cantonal housing standards — sufficient floor space per person, proper registration with the commune.
All three conditions must be met simultaneously at the time of application.
Which Family Members Qualify?
Spouse and Registered Partner
The strongest claim to family reunification belongs to a legally married spouse or a registered same-sex partner. The marriage or partnership must be genuine — Swiss authorities actively scrutinise suspected sham marriages, particularly in non-EU/EFTA cases.
Unmarried Cohabiting Partners
An unmarried partner does not have an automatic right to family reunification under Swiss law. To obtain a permit for a cohabiting partner, the sponsor must demonstrate a long-term, stable relationship — typically supported by evidence of cohabitation in the country of origin, joint financial ties, and a credible intention to continue the relationship in Switzerland. These applications are assessed at cantonal discretion and are more frequently refused than spouse applications.
Dependent Children Under 18
Children under 18 of the sponsor (or the sponsor’s spouse) are eligible for family reunification. For non-EU/EFTA B permit holders, children must be brought to Switzerland within five years of the sponsor receiving the permit — or before the child turns 12, whichever comes first, though exceptions exist for genuine family circumstances.
Children over 12: cantonal authorities have discretion to scrutinise applications for children over 12 more closely, assessing whether successful integration is realistically achievable given the child’s language background, schooling history, and adaptability. Some cantons apply this scrutiny strictly; others less so. Professional legal guidance is particularly valuable in these cases.
Dependent Parents
Sponsoring a parent for family reunification is possible but rarely approved in the non-EU/EFTA context. It requires demonstrating that the parent is genuinely dependent on the sponsor and has no other support available in the home country. These applications are exceptional.
What Permit Do Joining Family Members Receive?
The permit issued to a joining family member mirrors and is tied to the sponsor’s permit status:
| Sponsor’s Permit | Spouse/Children Receive |
|---|---|
| Swiss citizenship | B permit (can apply for C after 5 years) |
| C permit | B permit (upgrades to C after standard criteria met) |
| B permit (EU/EFTA) | B permit (linked to sponsor’s B permit) |
| B permit (non-EU/EFTA) | B permit (expires with sponsor’s permit) |
The family member’s permit is dependent on the sponsor’s. If the sponsor’s permit is not renewed or is revoked, the family member’s right of residence is directly affected. Upon the sponsor obtaining a C permit, family members typically qualify to upgrade as well.
Right to Work
Spouses and registered partners joining under family reunification can generally work in Switzerland without a separate work authorisation. The B permit they receive includes employment rights. This applies to both EU/EFTA and non-EU/EFTA family members. For more on the intersection of permits and employment, see our work permit Switzerland guide.
The Application Process
Family reunification applications are filed with the cantonal migration authority (Migrationsamt or Service de la population) in the canton where the sponsor resides — not with a federal authority and not with a Swiss embassy abroad (though the family member may need to collect their visa at a Swiss representation once the canton approves the application). Population statistics for cantons are available at bfs.admin.ch.
Required Documents
Prepare the following for a complete application:
- Valid passports for all applicants
- The sponsor’s current residence permit
- Marriage certificate or partnership registration (apostilled and officially translated)
- Birth certificates for children (apostilled and officially translated)
- Proof of adequate housing (rental contract, confirmation of registration with the commune)
- Proof of income: recent payslips (typically last 3 months), employment contract, most recent tax assessment
- Bank statements (typically last 3 months)
- For non-EU/EFTA sponsors: proof of uninterrupted residency of 3+ years
Documents issued abroad must be apostilled under the Hague Convention, or legalised through the relevant Swiss embassy if the issuing country is not a Hague signatory. Translations must be certified.
Timeline
From submission of a complete application: 8 to 16 weeks is the standard processing window. Incomplete applications — the single most common cause of delay — reset this clock. Cantons with higher caseloads (Zurich, Geneva, Vaud) tend toward the longer end of this range.
Integration Requirements
Since 2018, family members joining from non-EU/EFTA countries are subject to mandatory integration measures under the AIG. In practice this means:
- Signing an integration agreement (Integrationsvereinbarung) committing to attend language courses and meet language benchmarks
- Achieving a minimum language level (typically A1 oral on arrival; A2 or B1 within a specified period depending on canton)
- Children of school age are enrolled in the Swiss public school system; this is both a requirement and an integration resource
Failure to comply with integration agreements can be grounds for refusing permit renewal.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I apply for family reunification before I have lived in Switzerland for 3 years as a non-EU/EFTA B permit holder?
No. The three-year residency requirement is a hard statutory threshold for non-EU/EFTA nationals on a B permit. The only exceptions are narrow humanitarian cases or situations involving undue hardship, which require specific legal argumentation. Applying early without meeting this threshold will result in refusal.
My child is 13. Will the canton refuse the family reunification application?
Not automatically. The law does not prohibit reunification with children over 12, but cantonal authorities have discretion to assess integration prospects more critically. A well-prepared application that documents the child’s language exposure, schooling history, and adaptability significantly improves the outcome. Legal representation at this stage is advisable.
My spouse’s family reunification permit was tied to my B permit. I have now received my C permit. Does my spouse automatically upgrade?
The upgrade is not automatic, but it is straightforward. Once the sponsor holds a C permit, the family member can apply for a C permit through the cantonal migration authority. The standard conditions for C permit issuance apply — principally, length of residence and integration criteria. Your spouse will not be required to start the residency clock from scratch.
Does a joining family member have the right to work in Switzerland?
Yes. Spouses and registered partners joining under family reunification can generally work in Switzerland without separate work authorisation. The B permit they receive includes employment rights — for both EU/EFTA and non-EU/EFTA family members.
What is the income threshold for family reunification in Switzerland?
There is no single federal figure. As a practical benchmark for non-EU/EFTA B permit holders: CHF 40,000–45,000 net annual income for a couple, CHF 50,000–55,000 with one child, and CHF 60,000 or more with two or more children. Cantons in high cost-of-living areas may apply higher thresholds.
How long does a Swiss family reunification application take?
From submission of a complete application, the standard processing window is 8 to 16 weeks. Incomplete applications are the most common cause of delay and reset the clock. Cantons with higher caseloads — Zurich, Geneva, Vaud — tend toward the longer end.
What documents are needed for a Swiss family reunification application?
Core documents include valid passports, the sponsor’s current permit, marriage certificate (apostilled and translated), birth certificates for children, proof of adequate housing, payslips (last 3 months), employment contract, and bank statements. Non-EU/EFTA sponsors must also provide proof of 3+ years’ uninterrupted residency.
Can an unmarried partner apply for family reunification in Switzerland?
An unmarried partner has no automatic right under Swiss law. Approval depends on demonstrating a long-term, stable relationship through evidence of cohabitation, joint financial ties, and a credible intention to continue the relationship in Switzerland. These applications are assessed at cantonal discretion and are more frequently refused than spouse applications.
Can I bring my parents to Switzerland through family reunification?
Sponsoring a parent is possible but rarely approved in the non-EU/EFTA context. It requires demonstrating genuine dependency on the sponsor and no other support available in the home country.
What integration obligations apply to non-EU/EFTA family members?
Family members from non-EU/EFTA countries must sign an integration agreement committing to language courses and achieving minimum language benchmarks (typically A1 oral on arrival; A2 or B1 within a set period). Failure to comply can be grounds for refusing permit renewal.
Get Expert Advice Before You File
Family reunification applications involve documents from multiple countries, income calculations, housing assessments, and integration commitments — all evaluated simultaneously by a cantonal authority with meaningful discretion.
A refusal is not always the end. Appeals are possible. But a well-prepared initial application is always preferable to remedying a refusal. If you are planning ahead or facing a complex case — a child over 12, a cohabiting partner, an income situation close to the threshold — take specialist advice before filing.
Request a Free Assessment — contact Morgan Hartley and the Lawsupport team:
- Phone: +41 44 51 52 592
- Email: info@lawsupport.ch
- Address: Grafenauweg 4, 6300 Zug, Switzerland
Related guides: Immigrate to Switzerland | B permit Switzerland | C permit Switzerland | Work permit Switzerland | Swiss citizenship
Lawsupport (Morgan Hartley Consulting GmbH) | Grafenauweg 4, Zug | +41 44 51 52 592 | info@lawsupport.ch