Brexit: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
EU Settlement Scheme
Swiss citizens and their family members who were living in the UK up to 31 December 2020, and who wish to remain in the UK, have to hold a new residence status under the UK’s EU Settlement Scheme called settled or pre-settled status. The deadline for applications was 30 June 2021. It is possible to make a late application where there are ‘reasonable grounds’ for doing so.
For more detailed information on the Settlement Scheme, late applications and other changes for Swiss citizens after Brexit, please find Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) below. We appreciate your understanding that the EU Settlement Scheme is exclusively owned and run by the British government and the Embassy of Switzerland cannot give binding information or advice in individual cases.
FAQ last reviewed: 12.11.2024
Swiss citizens living in the UK: settled and pre-settled status
Swiss citizens and family members visiting/entering the UK
Swiss citizens working in the UK but living elsewhere (frontier workers)
With the end of the transition period on 31 December 2020, the Swiss-EU bilateral agreements, including the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons (AFMP), ceased to apply to the UK. To safeguard the rights of Swiss citizens who are resident in the UK (and vice versa), the two governments concluded the Swiss-UK Citizens’ Rights Agreement (see Question 2).
- Right of exit and of entry
- Right of residence for persons pursuing an economic activity
- Right of residence for persons not pursuing an economic activity
- Family reunification
- Frontier workers
- Rights of persons providing services
- Prohibition of discrimination on grounds of nationality
- Purchase of immovable property
- Coordination of social security systems
- Mutual recognition of professional qualifications
Following the end of the transition period on 31 December 2020, the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons (AFMP) is no longer applicable between Switzerland and the UK. To safeguard the rights of Swiss citizens who are resident in the UK (and vice versa), the two governments concluded the Swiss-UK Citizens’ Rights Agreement (CRA) which has been applied since 1 January 2021. The Swiss-UK CRA secures the rights acquired by Swiss citizens who were living in the UK (and vice versa) prior to the end of the transition period, i.e. on 31 December 2020. In order to secure entitlements under the CRA, Swiss citizens have to hold a new residence status (see Question 3). In terms of scope, the agreement covers the following areas:
In order to secure entitlements under the Citizens’ Rights Agreement, Swiss citizens and their family members living in the UK up to 31 December 2020 have to hold a new residence status under the EU Settlement Scheme, called settled or pre-settled status, to continue living in the UK after 30 June 2021. Acquiring settled or pre-settled status allows Swiss citizens to continue to live, study and work in the UK, to have access to public funds and services and to go on to apply for British citizenship if they wish to do so. Applications are free of charge. The deadline for applying, for those who had started living in the UK by 31 December 2020, was 30 June 2021. Qualifying individuals can also be joined by close family members (spouses, civil and unmarried partners, dependent children and grandchildren, and dependent parents and grandparents) who live in a different country at any point in the future, if the relationship existed on 31 December 2020 and still exists when the person wishes to come to the UK. See Questions 6 and 12 for further details and special situations. If you have missed the application deadline, please see Question 18.
Swiss citizens married to a British citizen also need to hold the new residence status. However, UK-Swiss dual nationals are not eligible. They already have full rights of residence in the UK.
The Settlement Scheme opened fully at the end of March 2019.
Apply to the EU Settlement Scheme (settled and pre-settled status)
- one period of up to 12 months for an important reason (e.g. childbirth, serious illness, study, vocational training or an overseas work posting)
- compulsory military service of any length
Settled and pre-settled status are the new UK permanent residence status post-Brexit. Swiss citizens (and their family members) wishing to remain in the UK beyond June 2021 need to hold this status.
Acquiring settled or pre-settled status allows Swiss citizens to continue to live, study and work in the UK, to have access to public funds and services and to go on to apply for British citizenship if they wish to do so.
Those who started living in the UK by 31 December 2020 and have lived there for a continuous five-year period (‘continuous residence’) should qualify for settled status provided that they apply in time (for late applications, please see Question 18). Continuous residence means that for five years in a row you have been in the UK for at least six months in any 12-month period, except for:
Once you have been granted settled status, you need to make sure that you keep your online status (eVisa) up to date (namely if you receive a new passport or a new identity card, or if you change your name, nationality, email address, phone number or UK address).
If you do not have five years’ continuous residence when you make an in-time application, you generally get pre-settled status instead. This means you can stay in the UK for a further five years from the date you get pre-settled status. As soon as you have five years’ continuous residence, you can apply for settled status. You lose your pre-settled status automatically if you spend more than five years in a row outside the UK. You will have lost your pre-settled status automatically if you spent more than two years in a row outside the UK by 21 May 2024, unless you acquired the right to live in the UK permanently. You need to maintain your continuous residence (see above) if you want to qualify for settled status in the future.
Please note that, while the above conditions continue to be valid, citizens with pre-settled status will have their pre-settled status automatically extended by five years shortly before the end of the initial five-year grant, if they have not already obtained settled status. The process will be automated and reflected in the person’s digital status (eVisa). They will be notified of the extension directly. This is to ensure that nobody loses their immigration status if they do not apply to switch from pre-settled to settled status. The Home Office also intends to take steps to automatically convert as many eligible pre-settled status holders as possible to settled status once they are eligible for it, without them needing to make an application. Automated checks of pre-settled status will be carried out to establish their ongoing continuous residence in the UK.
Furthermore, please note that you will be issued only with digital proof of your settled or pre-settled status in case of successful application through the scheme, known as an eVisa. No physical proof will be issued.
- be a Swiss citizen, or a family member of a Swiss citizen; and
- have been living in the UK prior to the end of the transition period on 31 December 2020.
In order to be eligible for settled or pre-settled status under the Swiss-UK Citizens’ Rights Agreement, you have to:
You may be able to apply for settled/pre-settled status from overseas. An application must be made for every eligible child in your family.
The deadline for applications was 30 June 2021. If you have missed the application deadline, please see Questions 13 and 18. For information about joining family members, for whom the deadline of 30 June 2021 may not apply, see Question 6.
- Those who are in a relationship with a Swiss national as their spouse, civil partner or unmarried partner
- Those who are related to a Swiss national, their spouse or civil partner as their:
- child, grandchild or great-grandchild under 21 years old
- dependent child over the age of 21
- dependent parent, grandparent or great-grandparent
- dependent relative with a relevant document to prove the relationship
Family members who were living with, or joined, Swiss citizens in the UK prior to 31 December 2020 are also eligible for settled or pre-settled status. The deadline for applications was 30 June 2021. If you have missed the application deadline, please see Questions 13 and 18.
However, certain family members who have not been living in the UK prior to 31 December 2020 are entitled to join a Swiss citizen living in the UK, who has been granted pre-settled or settled status, anytime in the future, provided that the relationship existed before 31 December 2020 and still exists and that they fulfil the necessary conditions. If they are from the EU, EEA or Switzerland, they can apply to the EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) from outside the UK if they hold either a valid passport or an identity card with a biometric chip. See also Question 12.
Spouses and civil partners may apply to join a Swiss citizen living in the UK, who has been granted pre-settled or settled status, until 31 December 2025 if the marriage/civil partnership took place after 31 December 2020 and by 31 December 2025, and is still in place when applying.
The rights of children born or adopted after 31 December 2020 are also protected. An application for the appropriate status (as a joining family member) needs to be made on their behalf within three months of their birth or adoption (unless they qualify for British nationality from birth/adoption).
Family members do not need to be from Switzerland or the EU to be eligible to apply for settled or pre-settled status; they can come from anywhere in the world.
For the purposes of the settlement scheme, family members are defined as:
For questions relating to your personal situation, please contact the EU Settlement Resolution Centre.
How to contact the EU Settlement Resolution Centre
Evidence of family relationship
An application for settled/pre-settled status has to be made for every eligible child in a family. You should check if you need to apply on behalf of your children, even if you have been granted settled/pre-settled status yourself. It should be possible to make a late application, after the deadline of 30 June 2021, for a qualifying child. See Question 18 for further information on late applications.
The rights of children born to or adopted by a Swiss parent with settled/pre-settled status after 31 December 2020 are protected. However, an application for the appropriate status (as a joining family member) needs to be made on their behalf within three months of their birth or adoption (unless they qualify for British nationality from birth/adoption).
Swiss citizens married to a British citizen need to hold settled/pre-settled status. The deadline for applications was 30 June 2021. If you have missed the application deadline, please see Questions 13 and 18.
Swiss-UK dual nationals are not eligible for settled/pre-settled status, as they already have full rights of residence in the UK. If you are a Swiss-UK dual national you must enter the UK with a UK passport (or, if you have become a British national since being granted settled status, a certificate of entitlement to the right of abode which can be placed in a valid Swiss passport), as proof of your rights of residence, to avoid potential problems or delays at the border.
Indefinite Leave to Enter or Remain (ILR) status is, as a matter of principle, not affected by the UK leaving the EU, and ILR holders can continue to live in the UK without applying for settled status.
However, in practice it is advantageous for holders of an ILR status to apply for settled status, because it guarantees that your immigration status will be electronically registered with the Home Office while allowing you to spend up to four years in a row outside the UK without losing your settled status. The application for settled status is subject to verification of identity, a criminality check and confirmation of ongoing residence. It further provides you with secure, digital evidence of your immigration status (electronic visa / eVisa). The application to the scheme is free of charge.
In line with UK Home Office guidance, you can make a late application to the scheme if you have ‘reasonable grounds’ for missing the 30 June 2021 deadline. See Question 18 for further information on late applications.
Alternatively, you can apply to have your immigration status electronically registered by applying to create a UK Visas & Immigration (UKVI) account (sometimes called a ‘No Time Limit’ application). This gives you access to an eVisa. As with your current ILR, it allows you to spend up to two years in a row outside the UK without losing your status, compared with four years if you have settled status. The application is free of charge.
If you have lived in the UK before 1973 and were automatically granted ILR, but you do not have a document confirming your ILR status, you can either make a late application for settled status or an application to the Windrush scheme to get digital proof of your ILR status (eVisa).
If you are planning to apply for a job, please note that new rules introduced after the UK’s departure from the EU require employers to carry out right-to-work checks on new employees. To pass such checks, ILR holders must have a valid eVisa.
Furthermore, to prepare for the introduction of the UK’s Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) for Swiss citizens on 2 April 2025, you are strongly advised to have your immigration status electronically registered in order to avoid potential difficulties at the UK border. You can do so by obtaining an eVisa via one of the routes mentioned above. See Question 26 for more information on ETA.
If you do not hold settled status or another form of electronic immigration status, you must ensure that you have sufficient proof of your ILR status and that you carry original documents with you when entering the UK, such as an endorsement in an expired passport stating ‘indefinite leave to enter or remain’. From 1 October 2021, holders of an ILR status are no longer permitted to enter the UK with an ID card; a valid passport is mandatory.
Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR): your rights and status
Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR): late applications to the EU Settlement Scheme
Get an eVisa: create a UK Visas & Immigration (UKVI) account
ILR is a permanent residence status under the UK’s immigration rules, which remains valid following the UK’s departure from the EU. Settled status is, technically, a new form of ILR known as Indefinite Leave to Remain under the EU Settlement Scheme. Settled status allows Swiss nationals to spend up to four years in a row outside the UK without losing their settled status, compared with only two years for holders of ordinary ILR.
GOV.UK: Indefinite leave to remain in the UK: your rights and status
Yes, if you have a ‘document certifying permanent residence’, you still need to hold settled status. The deadline for applications was 30 June 2021. If you have missed the application deadline, please see Questions 13 and 18. ‘Documents certifying permanent residence’ are no longer valid.
- Swiss settled status is more generous with regards to family reunification of future spouses. For example, a person who becomes the spouse or civil partner of a Swiss national with settled/pre-settled status after 1 January 2021 can apply to join the Swiss national already living in the UK until 31 December 2025 (if the relationship still exists when applying), whereas the UK-EU Withdrawal Agreement does not provide for this.
- EU settled status is more generous with regards to the authorized period of absence from the UK. With Swiss settled status you can be absent from the UK for a period of up to four years without losing your settled status; with EU settled status you can be absent from the UK for a period of up to five years without losing your settled status.
The differences between settled status under the Swiss regime and settled status under the EU regime are as follows:
The application deadline was 30 June 2021. If you have not yet applied, please see Question 18 on late applications. It is your decision whether you use your Swiss or your EU nationality when applying. However, you can register your second nationality after you have been granted settled or pre-settled status by adding your second passport to your digital EU Settlement Scheme account (eVisa). Please note that you can only access your account using the last travel document that you uploaded.
Update your EU Settlement Scheme details
Please note that Swiss-UK dual nationals are not eligible for the Settlement Scheme, as they already have full residence rights as UK nationals.
Swiss-Irish dual nationals do not have to hold settled status
The application for settled/pre-settled status is an online application. Please note that if you already have pre-settled status and are applying to switch to settled status, you must a) make sure that you have already updated your identity document where relevant in your existing digital account and b) start a fresh application including all the steps described below, and not by signing in to your digital account. The application consists of three initial steps:
1. Identity Check: There are three ways to complete the Identity Check.
Option 1: Use the ‘EU Exit ID Document Check’ App on your phone and scan your passport with the App. To be able to do this, you need to have an Android smartphone which has NFC technology or an iPhone.
Option 2: Choose the ‘online + by post’ method, which means you start your application online on the gov.uk website and at the end you will be asked to send in your passport or ID card to the Home Office. Please note that if you only have a Swiss ID card you have to use the ‘online + by post’ method.
Option 3: Start your application by going to one of the local council scanning locations, where they will scan your passport and complete the Identity Check together with you.
Start your application to the EU Settlement Scheme (settled and pre-settled status)
Find locations offering ID document scanning
2. Residence Check: You can complete the Residence Check by using your National Insurance Number. The Home Office will then make an automated check with your tax and benefits records to help confirm your UK residence. If you do not have a National Insurance Number, or if you do not want to use yours, or you do not agree with the result that you receive from the automated check, you can prove your residence by submitting additional documents. The Home Office has published a list of documents accepted as evidence of UK residence. Please be aware that you do not need to provide evidence for your entire UK residence. You only need to show that you qualify for settled or pre-settled status.
EU Settlement Scheme: UK tax and benefits records automated check
3. Criminality Check: The Criminality Check is completed during the application to the EU Settlement Scheme.
Proof of ‘reasonable grounds’
In addition to the three steps above, you will be asked to provide evidence that you have ‘reasonable grounds’ for making a late application if you are an applicant for whom the application deadline was 30 June 2021. From August 2023, these grounds are checked first as part of the validity requirements of an application, and evidence explaining the grounds and covering the whole period since the deadline must be submitted. If they are considered to be insufficient, the application will be rejected as invalid (and will not proceed to the residence and criminality checking stages). Therefore, it is important that you carefully consider how to complete this section of the application – please consult the relevant link below. For further information about late applications, see Question 18.
The UK Home Office provides support over the phone or in person if you need help during the online application process (see Question 14).
No physical document evidencing your status will be issued. Instead, successful applicants will get proof of their status through an online account (eVisa).
Apply to the EU Settlement Scheme (settled and pre-settled status)
If you encounter any problems during your application or if you have questions about the status of your application, you can contact the Resolution Centre.
How to contact the Resolution Centre by phone
How to contact the Resolution Centre by email
There is also a service provided by the Home Office, called Assisted Digital Service, if you do not have the appropriate access, skills or confidence to complete the online application form.
How to contact the EU Settlement Scheme: Assisted Digital service
Free events across the UK where information on the EU Settlement Scheme is provided
Advice and support services published by Mayor of London/London Assembly
The UK government has published guidance for applicants whose period of ‘continuous residence’ in the UK has been broken by absences due to the coronavirus pandemic. The six-month and twelve-month absence rules can be relaxed in some circumstances. You will be asked to submit evidence of how the pandemic affected your ability to return to the UK.
Guidance on applications affected by coronavirus absence from the UK
The deadline for applying to the EU Settlement Scheme was 30 June 2021. For information about late applications, see Question 18.
From August 2023, holders of pre-settled status do not have a deadline to apply to switch to settled status after the initial five-year grant of pre-settled status. However they can do so as soon as they have accumulated five years of continuous residence, and this is highly recommended since a grant of settled status is the easiest way to prove their permanent right to live and work in the UK. See also Question 19.
All applications submitted by the deadline of 30 June 2021 are considered in the usual way. Large numbers of applications were submitted in the period immediately before the deadline and could take time to process. Provided that a valid application has been submitted in time and the applicant has confirmation that it has been received, then if the applicant has existing rights acquired under the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons (AFMP) (and therefore qualifies for settled/pre-settled status) these rights should be safeguarded until the application process and any valid appeal process has been completed. After 30 June 2021, should a question arise about your immigration status pending receipt of your decision – for example from an employer, landlord, mortgage provider, university, NHS or benefits authority - you may refer to the confirmation that your application is being processed (‘Certificate of Application’) and to the fact that existing rights are safeguarded in these circumstances.
If you have questions about the progress of your application, you should contact the Resolution Centre.
How to contact the Resolution Centre
It is possible to submit a late application for settled/pre-settled status after the deadline of 30 June 2021. However, in addition to the standard application (see Question 13) it is necessary to demonstrate that you have ‘reasonable grounds’ for failing to meet the deadline. The UK Home Office has published examples of scenarios where evidence of ‘reasonable grounds’ may be accepted. The scenarios are not exhaustive and each case is considered in light of its particular circumstances. Please consult the first two links below for further details. In general, the later the application is made, the harder it becomes to satisfy the requirements. From August 2023, these grounds are checked first as part of the validity requirements of an application and evidence explaining the grounds and covering the whole period since the deadline must be submitted. If they are considered to be insufficient, the application will be rejected as invalid (and will not proceed to the residence and criminality checking stages). Therefore, it is important that you carefully consider how to complete this section of the application – please consult the relevant links below.
Should a question arise about your immigration status pending receipt of your decision – for example from an employer, landlord, mortgage provider, university, NHS or benefits authority - you may refer to the confirmation that your application is being processed (‘Certificate of Application’) and to the fact that existing rights are safeguarded in these circumstances.
Who can apply – ‘reasonable grounds’
UK Home Office guidance on ‘reasonable grounds’ p.37-49
Apply to the EU Settlement Scheme
Late applications: information and advice links from the3million
- one period of up to 12 months for an important reason (e.g. childbirth, serious illness, study, vocational training or an overseas work posting)
- compulsory military service of any length
You will be issued only with a digital proof of your settled or pre-settled status (eVisa). No physical proof will be issued. The letter sent by the Home Office to successful applicants (by email), explaining how to access the digital status, does not count as proof in itself.
Once you have been granted settled or pre-settled status, it is advisable to print out the Home Office letter and keep it safe for future reference. We suggest that you keep a copy on your phone or carry a printout when travelling abroad, as airlines may need to verify your status at the check-in or before boarding (and as a backup if you have difficulty accessing your digital profile on your phone at an airport).
We recommend that you log in to your digital profile and familiarise yourself with it. It is important that you keep your digital status up to date (e.g. if you receive a new passport or a new identity card, or if you change your name, your nationality, your email address, your phone number or your UK address). You can add further valid travel documents as well, including passports of second and third countries. This will ensure that your digital residence status (eVisa) can be checked quickly and easily at the UK border and will help to avoid delays when entering the country. Please note that you can only access your account using the last travel document that you uploaded.
Update your EU Settlement Scheme details
People with pre-settled status will have their pre-settled status automatically extended by five years shortly before the end of the initial five-year grant, if they have not already obtained settled status. The process will be automated and reflected in the person’s digital status. They will be notified of the extension directly. This is to ensure that nobody loses their immigration status if they do not apply to switch from pre-settled to settled status. The Home Office also intends to take steps to automatically convert as many eligible pre-settled status holders as possible to settled status once they are eligible for it, without them needing to make an application. Automated checks of pre-settled status will be carried out to establish their ongoing continuous residence in the UK.
However, it is highly recommended that holders of pre-settled status should actively apply to switch to settled status as soon as they have accumulated five years of continuous residence, since a grant of settled status is the easiest way to prove their permanent right to live and work in the UK. Automated Home Office processes may not be able to access all relevant data.
Continuous residence means that for five years in a row you have been in the UK for at least six months in any 12-month period, except for:
You lose your pre-settled status automatically if you spend more than five years in a row outside the UK. You will have lost your pre-settled status automatically if you spent more than two years in a row outside the UK by 21 May 2024, unless you acquired the right to live in the UK permanently. You need to maintain your continuous residence (see above) if you want to qualify for settled status in the future.
Please see Question 15 for information about applications that are affected by extended absences from the UK due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Detailed information from the3million about pre-settled status extensions
From 1 July 2021 Swiss citizens in the UK with settled/pre-settled status can be asked for proof of their immigration status for a range of purposes. The UK government has published guidance on how to view and prove your digital status (eVisa), how to update it, and how to get help to access and share it if necessary.
By accessing your digital immigration status, you can generate a unique ‘share code’ to give to a potential employer who will carry out a Right to Work check, or to a new landlord when renting a property (Right to Rent check), or to a UK government agency or university. Each share code lasts for 30 days and is designed to pass on relevant information only; for example a new employer will receive information which relates to your right to work, but not to other rights. Please note that you can only access your digital status using the last travel document that you uploaded.
The guidance also contains information about checking your immigration status when crossing the UK border, and direct access to digital immigration status information for public authorities such as HM Revenue and Customs and the Department for Work and Pensions.
UK government guide: your immigration status: an introduction (leaflet)
UK government guide: your immigration status: an introduction (accessible version)
Swiss citizens who were living in the UK prior to 1 January 2021, and whose rights are safeguarded by the Swiss-UK Citizens’ Rights Agreement (CRA), can apply for a new UK European Health Insurance Card (UK EHIC) which is valid for visits to EU countries, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein. Dual Swiss/UK nationals should be eligible for the new UK-issued EHIC provided they meet all of the following requirements: they acquired British citizenship through naturalization; they were a citizen of Switzerland before also becoming a British citizen; and they have retained their Swiss nationality.
Swiss citizens who are not eligible for this card but who are ordinarily resident in the UK (and not insured in Switzerland or an EU/EEA country) should be entitled to the new UK Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC) which is valid for visits to EU countries and Switzerland. UK EHICs issued before 31 December 2020 are valid in EU countries and Switzerland until they expire.
Please visit the sections ‘Who can apply for a new UK EHIC’, ‘Dual Nationals’ and ‘People born in the UK’ on this NHS website for further information. If you are eligible, during the application process you can also add your eligible family members who meet certain criteria. You can start your application here.
If your healthcare costs in the UK are covered by an EEA country or Switzerland because you live in the UK and receive either a state pension or certain ‘exportable’ benefits from that country, or you live in the UK and work in an EEA country or Switzerland (frontier worker), or you are posted to work in the UK by an employer in an EEA country or Switzerland, you should contact the relevant authority in the country you are insured by and request an EHIC.
NHS Business Services Authority: Overseas Healthcare Services (EHIC/GHIC enquiries)
The Swiss-UK Citizens’ Rights Agreement (CRA) provides for the co-ordination of social security systems, so that the existing social security rights of Swiss citizens resident in the UK prior to 31 December 2020 are protected (and vice versa).
For Swiss citizens coming to live in the UK from 1 January 2021, Switzerland and the UK have negotiated and signed a new social security coordination agreement effective provisionally from 1 November 2021 and fully from 1 October 2023. This strengthens social security coordination, ensures easier reciprocal access to healthcare and social security benefits, and prevents double insurance and insurance gaps for those who use the social security systems of both countries.
For further information on healthcare entitlements when travelling abroad, please see Question 21.
- they must be a Swiss national, or hold the nationality of a European Union (EU) member state;
- they must reside outside of the EU or EFTA, which means that they must have established residence in the UK on or after 1 January 2021;
- they must have been insured under the Swiss OASI/DI scheme for at least five consecutive years at the time of leaving Switzerland;
- they must submit their membership application form within 12 months after leaving the compulsory OASI/DI.
The Swiss-UK Citizens’ Rights Agreement (CRA) provides for the co-ordination of social security systems, so that the existing social security rights of Swiss citizens resident in the UK prior to 31 December 2020 are protected (and vice versa). This includes the rights of persons who have contributed to a UK pension scheme. Contribution periods in the other state continue to be taken into account for purposes of calculating the minimum insurance periods and pensions will be paid out if the claimant moves to the other state. In such cases, health insurance is guaranteed by one of the two states.
Further information from the Federal Social Insurance Office
OASI Bulletin No. 430 (available in French, German and Italian)
There has been no change in relation to the voluntary old-age, survivors’ and disability insurance scheme (OASI/DI, AHV/IV, AVS/AI) for Swiss citizens who were resident in the UK before 31 December 2020 and whose acquired rights are safeguarded by the CRA. However, from 1 January 2021 Swiss citizens who move to the UK after 1 January 2021 and take up residence there can join the voluntary OASI/DI if they comply with the restrictive cumulative conditions, which are as follows:
The assessment is done on a case-by-case basis by the Swiss Central Compensation Office in Geneva. Further information in relation to individual cases can be obtained from the Swiss Central Compensation Office.
The Government of Gibraltar has published information on Brexit and issues relating to citizens’ rights on its website.
Gibraltar’s European Union (Withdrawal Agreement) Act 2020
Gibraltar: Getting Ready for the End of the Transition Period
- Information on settled/pre-settled status
- Translations of the guidance on settled status for EU citizens and their families in European languages
- Resolution Centre
- EU Settlement Scheme: UK tax and benefits records automated check
- EU Settlement Scheme: evidence of UK residence
- EU Settlement Scheme: Employer Toolkit
- EU Settlement Scheme: Community Groups Toolkit
- Information on the new Brexit rules for citizens and businesses
- List of government-funded organisations providing support
List of charitable and other organisations providing support: the3million, Settled, Here for Good
- Information on social security from the Swiss Federal Social Insurance Office
- Information for ‘European Londoners’ (valid for everyone)
- IMA: Independent Monitoring Authority for the Citizens’ Rights Agreements
- Unsuccessful applications, appeals and other challenges
- Refusal/rejection decisions, Administrative Reviews, appeals, applying again
Swiss citizens continue to enjoy visa-free travel for short-term trips for up to six months to the UK from 1 January 2021. However, please see below for information about the UK’s Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA).
From 1 January 2021 onwards, Swiss citizens can enter the UK using a passport that is valid for the duration of the stay; there is no need for any additional period of validity on the passport beyond this.
From 1 October 2021, the UK no longer accepts Swiss national ID cards for entry into the UK except in the case of Swiss citizens with pre-settled or settled status under the EU Settlement Scheme, who are entitled to use their Swiss national ID card to enter the UK until at least 31 December 2025. For travel documentation required by Swiss and non-Swiss joining family members under the EU Settlement Scheme, please see the links below.
If a Swiss national’s residence status in the UK is not derived from their Swiss nationality but from another nationality, they are strongly advised to use the appropriate national travel document when entering the UK. For example, Swiss-UK dual nationals should use a UK passport to enter the UK, as proof of their rights of residence, in order to avoid potential problems or delays at the border.
The UK is introducing a new travel requirement known as the Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA). It gives digital permission to travel, and is electronically linked to the travel document. All visitors (including babies and children) who do not currently need a visa for short stays or who do not have any other UK immigration status will need an ETA to travel to the UK or transit through the UK. The scheme will be extended to EU/EEA and Swiss citizens on 2 April 2025. Swiss citizens can start applying for an ETA from 5 March 2025. The ETA will cost £10 and lasts up to two years, or until the holder’s passport expires, whichever is sooner. Please check the link below for the latest news about the scheme and information about who does not need an ETA (e.g. citizens who have settled or pre-settled status in the UK, or a UK visa).
GOV.UK: Visiting the UK after Brexit
GOV.UK: Swiss citizens/family members with/applying for EUSS entering UK
GOV.UK: Non-Swiss citizens/family members with/applying for EUSS entering UK
GOV.UK: Applying for EUSS travel permit from abroad to replace lost BRC
According to the Swiss-UK Citizens’ Rights Agreement, Swiss citizens who exercised their rights as frontier workers in the UK in accordance with the Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons (AFMP) before 31 December 2020 can continue to do so after that date. Their status and rights with regard to social security, including existing healthcare entitlements, are guaranteed.
However, you have to apply for a frontier worker permit in the UK. This permit is a formal requirement to enter the UK as a frontier worker from 1 July 2021.
Frontier workers intending to take up employment in the UK while being resident outside of the UK will need to apply using a route under the new immigration system (PBS).
- GOV.UK: New immigration system: what you need to know
- The UK’s points-based immigration system
- Check if you need a UK visa
- List of UK work visas
- Au pairs, business travellers, Erasmus students, internships
- Youth Mobility Scheme
- UK Visa Application Centre in Switzerland
- Get help from an immigration adviser
- Service providers from Switzerland visa for contracts started before 31.12.2020
- Global Business Mobility Service Supplier visa for contracts in specified sectors
For now, there is no bilateral agreement between Switzerland and the UK which regulates migration and labour market access. Switzerland and the UK signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on 21 December 2020, which is a non-legally binding instrument in which both countries reaffirm their commitment to explore ways to strengthen cooperation and to develop their bilateral relations in the field of labour migration, mobility and asylum.
From 1 January 2021, Swiss citizens who wish to take up employment in the UK must comply with the rules of the UK’s new immigration system. According to this, economically active persons who intend to work in the UK will have to fulfil the requirements under the UK’s new Points-Based System (PBS) for which the UK government launched different routes on 1 December 2020.
There is currently no specific immigration route for au pairs, internships or for Swiss nationals under the Youth Mobility Scheme.
For information on social security and joining the voluntary old-age, survivors’ and disability insurance scheme (OASI/DI, AHV/IV, AVS/AI) see Questions 22 and 23.
Since 1 January 2021, animals and animal products from Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) are subject to the conditions for imports from third countries. Animals and animal products from Northern Ireland are subject to the conditions for imports from the EU.
Entries or returns to Switzerland with pets when travelling from Great Britain are now subject to the rules for third countries. Direct entry by air with dogs, cats and ferrets is now possible only via the airports of Geneva, Zurich and Basel. Direct entry by air with birds is possible only via the airports of Geneva or Zurich.
In the case of entry by land via the EU, checks will be carried out upon entry into the EU, for example in France. Travellers may then enter Switzerland with the animals as usual.
GOV.UK: Guidance about pet travel to Europe from 1 January 2021
Swiss Federal Food Safety and Veterinary Office: Travelling with cats, dogs and ferrets
To drive in Switzerland you do not need an international driving permit (IDP) as Switzerland continues to recognize the UK photocard driving licences.
However, you may need an IDP to drive in some countries in order to reach Switzerland. If you are taking your own vehicle, you may also need a ‘Green Card’ (international motor insurance certificate) or valid proof of insurance. Please check the requirements for EU/EEA countries. You must display the UK identifier when driving a UK-registered vehicle abroad.