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← All answers · Updated 2026-05-26 · By Selvir Suke, CEO + Founder
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What are the rights of tenants in Switzerland?

Swiss tenants are well protected. The main rights: your deposit is capped at three months' net rent and held in a separate blocked account in your name; you can challenge a rent you think is too high at the local conciliation authority within 30 days; you are protected from retaliatory eviction while a dispute is running; the landlord must give at least three months' notice for an ordinary termination; you can reduce the rent for serious defects after notifying the landlord in writing; and you can contest a rent increase. Joining the tenants' association (Mieterverband, about CHF 80 a year) gets you legal advice and help. aptari helps before you ever sign: one open feed of listings and a Tenant Passport you fill once, so you can compare flats and apply without re-sending the same dossier everywhere.

Core tenant protections in Swiss law

Swiss tenancy law is firmly on the tenant's side. Here are the rights that matter most:

Deposit - Capped at three months' net rent - Held in a separate blocked account (Sperrkonto) in your name - Returned about a year after move-out if no claim is filed against it

Protection from unfair termination - The landlord must give at least three months' notice for an ordinary termination - A termination without a valid reason can be contested - You are protected from a "revenge eviction" after you assert your rights

Challenging the rent - You can challenge a new rent at the conciliation authority within 30 days if it seems clearly too high - The conciliation process is free - A rent increase mid-lease can also be contested

Defects and rent reduction - Notify the landlord in writing - Give a reasonable window to repair - After that, you can reduce the rent in proportion to how serious the defect is

Right to sublet - You need the landlord's consent, but it cannot be unreasonably refused - See can I sublet

Help from Mieterverband

The Mieterinnen- und Mieterverband is the tenants' association (ASLOCA in French-speaking Switzerland, ASI in Ticino). For around CHF 80 a year, membership includes: - Legal advice (phone, in-person) - Letter templates - Representation at Schlichtungsbehörde - Local chapters in every canton

Most disputes are settled at conciliation; only about 5% go to court.

Where aptari fits in

Knowing your rights matters most once you have a flat. aptari helps you get there: one open feed of listings from across the market, and a Tenant Passport you fill once so you can apply without re-sending the same dossier to every agency. The Match Score even shows which flats you realistically fit before you apply.

See can landlord raise rent and what is Mieterverband.

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