Personal income tax
Flat 12% rate on all taxable income, with no progressive brackets.
| Taxable income | Rate |
|---|---|
| over 0 | 11.50% |
A worldwide-income jurisdiction with a progressive personal income tax and a statutory social-security charge — and a residency framework worth modelling before relocation.
Switzerland applies a progressive personal income tax with a top marginal rate of 12%, alongside the country's social-security charge. The effective burden on $120,000 settles at 17.9%, leaving $98,520 in hand.
A walk through the four statutory channels by which Switzerland claims part of a resident's gross compensation — followed by any special regime that overrides them.
Flat 12% rate on all taxable income, with no progressive brackets.
| Taxable income | Rate |
|---|---|
| over 0 | 11.50% |
On social security, employees pay 6.4%. Contributions are uncapped - high-income workers pay the full rate on every dollar.
| Party | Rate | Cap |
|---|---|---|
| Employee / self-employed | 6.40% | none |
| Instrument | $75k gross | $120k gross | $200k gross |
|---|---|---|---|
I. Statutory deductions | |||
Personal income tax Standard tax (no special regime) | −$8,625 | −$13,800 | −$23,000 |
Social security · employee 6.4% employee · uncapped | −$4,800 | −$7,680 | −$12,800 |
| Gross income | $75,000 | $120,000 | $200,000 |
| Total deductions | −$13,425 | −$21,480 | −$35,800 |
| Effective rate | 17.9% | 17.9% | |
Tax residency in Switzerland is established by the jurisdiction's headline test[1]: physical presence of more than 90 days in a rolling twelve-month period, supplemented by domicile or working 30+ days or present 90+ days without working. Spouses and unemancipated minors are typically presumed to share the residency of the principal earner unless rebutted.
Once resident, any special regime is not automatic. Most jurisdictions require a formal registration with the tax authority within a defined window following arrival, together with proof of qualifying activity and a lookback period of prior non-residency. Late registration forfeits the regime for the year in question and, in some cases, for the entire benefit window.[2]
The common pitfalls are predictable. Treaty interaction with the home state can override the local regime where the home jurisdiction asserts primary taxing rights — most relevantly, United States citizens remain subject to US federal tax on worldwide income, with foreign-tax-credit relief but no escape from the higher of the two bills. Activities undertaken before registration is approved may also fall outside the regime entirely.[3]
| PPP basis · NYC = 100 | Switzerland | New York · NY | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
Cost-of-living index Indicative · placeholder until COL table ships | 110.0 | 100.0 | +10.0 pts |
Nominal net (annual · $120k) From the engine — exact | $98,520 | $77,900 | +$20,620 |
| Real net · NYC basket | $89,564 | $77,900 | +$11,664 |
Every figure in this country reference traces to a primary instrument. We publish the model and welcome correction.
Read the full note ↗Healthcare financing on the resident side is normally embedded inside the social-security charge rather than carried as a separate payroll line. The Comparely engine models healthcare as part of the social contribution unless a country exposes a distinct line item — track additions in the schema for future surfacing.
| Instrument | Rate |
|---|---|
| Dedicated health levy | — |
| Long-term care levy | — |
| Embedded in social charge | included |
Lump-sum Taxation (Forfait Fiscal).
| Applies to employment | no |
| Applies to self-employment | no |
| 17.9% |
| Net take-home | $61,575 | $98,520 | $164,200 |
| Net · monthly equiv. | $5,131 | $8,210 | $13,683 |
Table 1 · Net take-home under the auto-picked regime, three income points, FY 2026 indicative. Highlighted column is the $120k worked example used elsewhere on the site. |
| Arrival (day 0) | Establish address; obtain tax ID |
| Day 0 – 90 | Visa application (if required) and bank account |
| Day 90 | Default residency threshold crossed |
| Year-end | Tax year closes |
| Year + 1 · Q1 | Special-regime registration window (if any) |
| Year + 1 · Q2–Q3 | First annual return |