
Switzerland Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)
Switzerland is part of the Schengen Area (passport-free travel within it) but is not an EU member — a distinction that matters for currency and some regulations, though not for the entry rule itself. Most Western nationalities (US, Canada, UK, EU/Schengen, Australia, New Zealand) currently enter visa-free for up to 90 days in any rolling 180-day period. From late 2026, non-EU visa-exempt travelers will also need to register for ETIAS, a low-cost online pre-travel authorization — not a visa, but mandatory once it goes live.
Switzerland's entry rules trip people up for one specific reason: it's Schengen but not EU, which is a distinction with almost no practical difference for tourists at the border, but a real one for currency, some regulations, and general assumptions people carry over from EU travel.
Schengen vs. EU — the distinction that matters here
The Schengen Area is a passport-control zone — 29 European countries (as of 2026) that allow free movement across their shared internal borders. The EU is a separate political and economic union. Switzerland joined Schengen in 2008 but has never joined the EU — so you'll clear passport control the same way you would entering France or Germany, but Switzerland uses its own currency (the Swiss franc, not the euro) and isn't bound by all EU regulations.
Visa-free stay by nationality (as of mid-2026)
| Passport | Current visa-free stay | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| United States, Canada | Up to 90 days per 180-day period | No visa needed; counts across the whole Schengen Area, not just Switzerland. |
| United Kingdom | Up to 90 days per 180-day period | Same Schengen 90/180 rule applies post-Brexit. |
| EU / Schengen countries | Unlimited (free movement) | EU/EEA/Swiss citizens have full freedom of movement — the 90/180 rule doesn't apply to them. |
| Australia, New Zealand | Up to 90 days per 180-day period | Same terms as US/Canada/UK. |
| India | No — a Schengen visa is required in advance | Apply through a Swiss consulate or visa center before your trip — budget several weeks for processing and a €90 fee. It's a full visa, not the future ETIAS form. |
| China | No — a Schengen visa is required in advance | Same process as India — apply well ahead of travel through a Swiss visa center. |
| Gulf states (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman) | Up to 90 days per 180-day period | All currently visa-exempt for short stays, same as US/UK/Australia — and all will need ETIAS once it becomes mandatory too. |
| South Africa | No — a Schengen visa is required in advance | South African passport holders need a Schengen visa; apply at a Swiss consulate or visa center well before your trip. |
| Brazil, most of Latin America | Up to 90 days per 180-day period | Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, and most of South and Central America are visa-exempt for tourism — ETIAS will apply to these nationalities once mandatory. Check your specific country, since a few exceptions exist. |
| Southeast Asia (Malaysia visa-free; Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam need a visa) | Mixed | Malaysia is visa-exempt (90/180 rule, ETIAS later). Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam passport holders need a Schengen visa arranged in advance — there's no single answer for the region. |
| Other nationalities | Varies | Check Switzerland's current visa-exemption list for your specific passport — some nationalities need a Schengen visa in advance. |
ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) is scheduled to launch in Q4 2026 and become mandatory roughly six months after that, likely around April 2027. Once mandatory, visa-exempt travelers (US, UK, Canada, Australia, etc.) will need to apply online before their trip — a low-cost, fast process, not a visa, but a required step. Check the official status close to your travel date, since timelines for EU-wide systems like this have shifted before.

The 90/180 rule, explained simply
The count is 90 days within any rolling 180-day window, across the entire Schengen Area — not per country. If you spent 30 days in France earlier in the year, you have 60 days left for Switzerland (or anywhere else in Schengen) within that same 180-day window, not a fresh 90.
Other entry basics
- Your passport should be valid for at least 3 months beyond your planned departure from the Schengen Area, and issued within the last 10 years.
- Border officers occasionally ask for proof of onward travel or sufficient funds for your stay — a return ticket and a hotel confirmation are usually enough.
- There's no separate Swiss customs/arrival form for short tourist stays under the visa-exemption rule — the Schengen entry stamp (or ETIAS check, once mandatory) is the main formality.
Crossing into neighboring countries
Because Switzerland is fully inside the Schengen Area, there are no passport checks at all when crossing overland into France, Germany, Austria, or Italy — a genuinely nice side effect if your trip also touches Chamonix, the Black Forest, or Lake Como. Just remember your total Schengen day-count keeps ticking regardless of which of these countries you're physically standing in.












































