Swiss AHV Pension 2026: CHF 1,260–2,520, 13th Pension NEW & What Most People Get Wrong
The AHV pension (OASI – Old Age and Survivors' Insurance) is the most important source of retirement income for millions of Swiss residents. 2026 brings a historic first: in December, the 13th AHV pension will be paid for the first time. At the same time, the new reference age of 65 has applied since 2024. What you need to know about amounts, contribution gaps, and flexible withdrawal – and which mistakes cost you money for life.

🏛️ Overview: The AHV as the Foundation of Old-Age Provision
The AHV (Old Age and Survivors' Insurance, also known as OASI) is the first pillar of the Swiss 3-pillar system. Together with the occupational pension (2nd pillar) and private savings (pillar 3a), it aims to maintain the standard of living in retirement. In reality, the AHV alone covers only part of living costs for most people – the median salary of CHF 7,024 contrasts with a maximum pension of CHF 2,520.
2026 brings two major changes: the 13th AHV pension will be paid in December for the first time – a historic moment decided by popular vote in March 2024. And the new reference age of 65 for women is approaching (completed in 2028). Anyone who wants to maximize their pension needs to know the rules.
💰 AHV Pensions 2026: The Concrete Amounts
For the maximum pension, you need: 44 gap-free contribution years AND an average annual income of at least CHF 90,720. Reality: most people receive less. Those who spent years abroad, worked part-time, or raised children often receive a partial pension. Salary transparency matters here too – lower earnings mean lower pensions.
The married couple pension is capped: both pensions combined may not exceed 150% of the maximum pension – i.e., CHF 3,780 per month. This penalizes couples where both earned well.
FSIO, Factsheet 3.01
🎯 The 13th AHV Pension: What You Need to Know
On March 3, 2024, Swiss voters accepted the initiative for a 13th AHV pension. In December 2026, it will be paid for the first time – a historic first.
- When: first time in December 2026, then annually
- How much: 1/12 (8.33%) of all monthly pensions of the year
- Maximum: CHF 2,520 (with full maximum pension all year)
- Payment: automatic with the December pension – no application needed
- Who: everyone entitled to an old-age pension in December
- Couple cap: also applies to the 13th pension
Important: the 13th pension is calculated individually. Those who didn't receive a pension all year (e.g., pension start in June) receive a proportional amount. Children's and supplementary pensions are not included. The supplement for the transitional generation is also excluded.
🧮 How Your AHV Pension Is Calculated
Two factors determine the amount: contribution years and average annual income. Education and care credits are added on top.
All years between 21 and 65 in which AHV contributions were paid. For full pension: 44 years (men), 43 years (women, transitional).
Previous earnings are multiplied by a revaluation factor to compensate for inflation. Older salaries thus count equally.
Education credits (per child) and care credits (caring for relatives) increase the relevant income.
Sum of all revalued income + credits ÷ contribution years = relevant average annual income.
From the FSIO scale, the monthly pension is determined based on average income. From CHF 90,720 average: maximum pension.
AHV Quiz
2 questions – test your knowledge
1.How many contribution years does a man need for the full AHV pension?
2.What is the cap for married couples?
⚠️ Contribution Gaps: The Most Expensive Mistake of Your Life
Each missing contribution year reduces your AHV pension by 2.3% – roughly CHF 60 less per month. For life. Including the 13th pension. Three missing years cost almost 7% – over 20 years of retirement, that's over CHF 50,000.
AHV contributions can only be paid back for the last 5 years. If you spent 3 years abroad at age 35 and didn't report it within 5 years, you have a permanent gap. Check now: contact your compensation office and request an individual account statement (IK) – free of charge.
⏰ Flexible Withdrawal: Claim Early or Defer?
Since AHV 21, pension withdrawal is flexible by month between ages 63 and 70. Partial withdrawal (20–80%) is also possible. But: every month of early withdrawal costs – and every month of deferral brings a supplement. Both for life.
The rule of thumb: those who are healthy and can afford it benefit from deferral. Those who need the money or have health issues benefit from early withdrawal – despite the reduction. Important: from 2027, rates will be adjusted. Those who use the pillar 3a deduction (CHF 7,258) in their tax return can partially compensate.
📜 AHV 21 Reform: What Has Changed
Since 2025, women's reference age increases gradually from 64 to 65 (+3 months/year). From 2028: 65 for everyone.
Women born 1961–1969 receive a lifelong supplement of CHF 12.50 to CHF 160 per month – depending on income and birth year. Only without early withdrawal.
Before AHV 21: early withdrawal only in full years. Since 2024: monthly between 63 and 70. Partial withdrawal (20–80%) possible.
💡 5 Tips to Maximize Your AHV Pension
Request an individual account statement (IK) from your compensation office. Free of charge. Shows all contribution years and gaps.
Back-payment within 5 years – after that, the gap is permanent. Especially important after stays abroad or sabbaticals.
Those not working (studies, homemaking, sabbatical) must still pay AHV contributions. Minimum: CHF 514/year.
In case of divorce, AHV income earned during the marriage is split equally. Don't forget to apply!
Deferring 2 years gives 10.8% more – for life. Worth it from about 12 years of pension receipt.
When do you plan to retire?
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❓ Swiss AHV Pension – Key Answers
Based on FSIO, ahv-iv.ch and AHV 21
People also ask
Related questions from our magazine
This article is based on the official FSIO factsheets (3.01, 3.04, 31), the AHV 21 reform, the Federal Council decision on the 13th AHV pension, and the current pension scales for 2026. All amounts and percentages have been verified through online research.
Those who understand the AHV also want to know this
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Tax Return 2026
Pillar 3a CHF 7,258 deduction – every year
Switch Health Insurer
Save up to CHF 2,200 – even in retirement
Salaries by Sector
CHF 14,304 vs. CHF 4,496 – sector = AHV pension
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Up to CHF 23,000 difference – also in retirement
Salary Transparency
No law, no sanctions – also for pensions
ConvivaPlus Editorial
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Each missing AHV contribution year reduces your pension by 2.3% – for life. With 3 missing years over 20 years of retirement: over CHF 50,000 less. Back-payment: only 5 years retroactively.
Discussion
4 voices from the community
Hab meinen Kontoauszug bestellt – 2 Lücken aus der Zeit als Studentin. Konnte die neuere noch nachzahlen, die ältere ist verjährt. 58 Franken weniger Rente. Pro Monat. Für immer. Prüft das FRÜHZEITIG!!
Genau deshalb: Kontoauszug (IK) bei der Ausgleichskasse bestellen – kostenlos. Und: Wer bei der Krankenkasse spart (bis CHF 2'200/Jahr), hat mehr für die Säule 3a übrig.
13. Rente im Dezember – wird Zeit. Andere Länder haben das schon ewig. Frage mich nur wie das langfristig finanziert wird.
Arbeite Teilzeit 60% wegen der Kinder. AHV-technisch ein Desaster. Wenigstens gibt es die Erziehungsgutschriften, aber die kompensieren den Lohnausfall nicht annähernd.
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Economy · 23.03.2026