Deducting work clothing from taxes: the two rules almost everyone gets wrong

You buy a nice suit, just for the office, never wear it privately, and still cannot deduct a single franc. Your colleague in overalls, on the other hand, deducts her work clothes without even noticing: they have long been part of a flat-rate deduction she gets anyway. The tax deduction for work clothing is one of the biggest misunderstandings in the Swiss tax return. Here are the two decisive rules, plus a calculator that shows you in 10 seconds whether a separate deduction is even worth it for you.

Key takeaway
In Switzerland you can only deduct work clothing if it is job-specific, meaning not wearable privately (protective clothing, uniform, lab coat, chef's jacket). A suit or business outfit is never deductible, even if you buy it solely for work. And even deductible work clothes usually bring no extra deduction: they are already included in the flat-rate deduction for other professional expenses (3% of net salary, at least 2,000, at most 4,000 francs per year, Professional Expenses Ordinance Art. 7). A separate deduction only pays off if your total other professional expenses exceed the flat rate, with receipts.
·Sources: DBG Art. 26, Professional Expenses Ordinance (Fedlex/FTA), cantonal tax guides·
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Work clothing tax deduction Switzerland 2026: tradesman's overalls and business suit compared, with franc notes, tax return and the flat-rate deduction for other professional expenses
3%
of net salary
flat rate other professional expenses
4,000
francs ceiling
of the flat rate per year
0 CHF
for the office suit
privately wearable = not deductible
2,000
francs minimum
of the flat rate per year

🧥 The basic rule: can you wear the clothing privately, or not?

A single question determines every work-clothing deduction: can you wear the garment outside of work? If yes, it is private for tax purposes and you cannot deduct it. If no, because it is a protective suit, a coat or a uniform, it belongs to other professional expenses. The price, your intention or whether you really only wear it on the job plays no role. Only the objective question counts: privately wearable or not.

This is exactly where the big misunderstanding lies. Many believe that an expensive suit, bought specially for a new office job, is deductible because they only wear it to work. The tax authorities see it differently: a suit is objectively privately wearable, hence private, full stop. This so-called representation clothing, common in banks, law firms and insurers, is generally not recognised.

Generally deductible (job-specific)
Protective and safety clothing (heat, chemicals, injury)
Overalls, work coveralls, boiler suit
Lab coats and professional aprons
Chef's jacket and apron
Mandatory uniform (police, railways, airline)
Safety shoes, hard hat, high-visibility clothing
Not deductible (privately wearable)
Suit, shirt, tie
Business outfit, blazer, dress
Tailored suit (even if expensive)
'Nice' clothing bought just for the office
Ordinary trousers, sweaters, shoes
Representation clothing (bank, law firm, insurer)
Context
Key point: neither the price nor your intention decides, but whether the garment is objectively privately wearable. A 2,000-franc tailored suit is private, a 40-franc safety trouser is job-specific.

🔍 Is my clothing deductible? The ConvivaPlus checker

Tap a garment and immediately see whether it counts as work clothing for tax purposes, and why. The checker applies the basic rule (privately wearable or not) to the most common cases.

The ConvivaPlus deductibility checker classifies each garment according to the basic rule of the DBG (Art. 26): job-specific and not privately wearable = other professional expenses; privately wearable = no deduction.

Choose a garment:
Business suit: Not deductible

Privately wearable. A suit is representation clothing and is never deductible, even if bought only for the office.

ℹ️

Important: 'counts as work clothing' does not yet mean 'brings an extra deduction'. Work clothes are part of other professional expenses and are therefore usually already included in the flat rate. Whether a separate deduction pays off is shown by the calculator in the next section.

🧮 The flat-rate trap: professional expenses calculator (flat rate vs. actual)

Now comes the part almost everyone overlooks. Even if your clothing is job-specific and deductible, in most cases you get not a single extra franc. The reason: work clothes belong to 'other professional expenses', for which there is an automatic flat-rate deduction: 3% of your net salary, at least 2,000, at most 4,000 francs per year. You get this flat rate without a single receipt.

Your 80-franc protective trousers, your specialist books, your tools: all of this is already included in this flat rate. You only get a separate, higher deduction if you waive the flat rate and prove all your other professional expenses with receipts, and provided they exceed the flat rate. The calculator shows you in seconds whether that is worth it for you.

According to the ConvivaPlus professional expenses calculator (based on Professional Expenses Ordinance Art. 7), the flat rate for other professional expenses is 3% of net salary, at least 2,000 and at most 4,000 francs; an actual deduction only pays off above this threshold.

Does the actual deduction pay off for you?
Clothing + tools + specialist literature + home office, etc.
Flat rate (automatic)CHF 2'400
Threshold (flat rate)
Your actual costsCHF 500
CHF 500
💡The flat rate is better

Your actual costs are below the flat rate. Take the flat rate, your work clothes bring no extra deduction. You are short of the threshold by: CHF 1'900

Indicative calculation for the federal direct tax under Professional Expenses Ordinance Art. 7 (3%, min. 2,000, max. 4,000 CHF). Travel and meal costs are deducted separately and not included here. Cantonal values may differ slightly; the cantonal guide is decisive. All information without guarantee, not tax advice.

Context
Example: with a net salary of 80,000 francs, 3% is 2,400 francs of flat rate (between minimum and maximum). Anyone who only buys an 80-franc pair of safety trousers will never reach these 2,400 francs, so the separate deduction for work clothing yields exactly zero.
🧠

Quick tax check: what really counts?

2 questions – test your knowledge

1.You buy a 900-franc suit, just for the office, and never wear it privately. Deductible?

2.Your job-specific protective trousers cost 80 francs. What extra deduction do they bring?

👔 Which job can deduct what?

Whether your clothes count depends almost entirely on the job. Here are the most common cases from the Swiss working world, with the verdict according to the basic rule. Remember: 'counts' means via the flat rate; an extra deduction only arises with high actual costs.

JobTypical clothingDeductible?
Painter / tradespersonCoveralls, safety shoesYesJob-specific, clearly deductible (via the flat rate)
Nursing staffScrubs, coatYes, if paid yourselfDeductible, but often provided or washed by the hospital
Cook / chefJacket, apronYesJob-specific, deductible
Construction workerHelmet, hi-vis clothingYesProtective and safety clothing, clearly deductible
Bank employeeSuit, business outfitNoRepresentation clothing, never deductible
LawyerBusiness attireNoPrivately wearable, no deduction
Train driver / pilotUniformYes, if paid yourselfJob-specific, usually provided by the employer
HairdresserProfessional apronYesJob-specific, deductible
Sales assistantCompany shirt with logoYes, if paid yourselfDeductible with logo, but often provided by the employer

🏢 The employer trap: whoever provides the clothing can deduct nothing

A point easily forgotten: only costs you have borne yourself are deductible. If the employer provides the work clothing, launders it or reimburses the costs, you have no expenses of your own, and there is nothing to deduct. This affects precisely the jobs where job-specific clothing is mandatory: nursing, public transport, airlines, many industrial companies.

Paid yourself or provided?

Check your salary certificate and regulations: do you receive a clothing allowance, a free uniform or a laundry supplement? Then these amounts are already covered and cannot be deducted a second time as professional expenses. Only what you can prove you paid out of your own pocket remains deductible.

📝 How to declare it correctly

The tax return has no separate line for 'work clothing'. It is part of other professional expenses. You choose one of two paths, never both at once:

1
Path A: the flat rate (standard)

You enter nothing itemised; the flat rate (3% of net salary, min. 2,000, max. 4,000 francs) is taken into account automatically. For the vast majority of employees the simplest and best path.

2
Path B: actual costs

You waive the flat rate and list all your other professional expenses one by one: clothing, tools, literature, home office. Only sensible if the total exceeds the flat rate.

3
Collect receipts

For path B you must be able to prove each item with a receipt. The tax authority can request the evidence, and it looks closely at work clothing.

4
No double counting

What the employer paid or reimbursed, you subtract beforehand. And you choose either the flat rate or actual costs, never both.

Neither the price nor your intention decides, but a single question: can you wear it privately? The 2,000-franc suit: yes, hence not deductible. The 40-franc safety trousers: no, hence work clothing.

ConvivaPlus, basic rule of the work clothing deduction

🗺️ Federal and cantonal: almost the same for work clothing everywhere

Unlike many other tax questions, for work clothing you don't have to watch your canton. Thanks to tax harmonisation (StHG), practically all cantons adopt the federal formula for the flat rate on other professional expenses: 3% of net salary, at least 2,000, at most 4,000 francs. The tax guides of Solothurn, Bern, Basel-Landschaft, Aargau or Graubünden show exactly the same values.

Where cantons really differ

The big cantonal differences do not concern work clothing, but travel costs (different caps) and meals eaten away from home. For other professional expenses, including clothing, you can rely on the federal value. In individual cases, the guide of your canton of residence is always decisive.

📊
Quick poll50 votes

Did you know that an office suit is not tax-deductible?

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Frequently asked questions on the work clothing deduction

The key answers on work clothing, the flat rate and the tax return, based on the DBG and the Professional Expenses Ordinance.

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People also ask

Related questions from our magazine

ConvivaPlus perspective

The work clothing deduction is a prime example of how tax myths arise. Almost everyone believes expensive office clothing is deductible and cheap work clothing pays off franc for franc. In reality it is the opposite, and usually irrelevant: the suit never counts, the overalls almost always, but both disappear into a flat rate you get anyway. Those who understand this spare themselves the collecting of clothing receipts, and know the effort only pays off with genuinely high professional expenses.

ConvivaPlus Editorial

Taxes

Researched and verified. Facts, not opinions.

Last updated:

Sources & methodology
As of: As of: 2 July 2026
01
DBG, Art. 26 (professional expenses)Federal Act on Direct Federal Tax: deductible professional expenses of employees.
02
Professional Expenses Ordinance, Art. 7EFD Ordinance: flat-rate deduction other professional expenses, 3% of net salary, min. 2,000, max. 4,000 francs.
03
TaxInfo Canton of Bern (work clothing)Cantonal practice: deductible clothing, representation clothing, employer's share.
04
Tax guide Canton of SolothurnOther professional expenses and scope of the flat-rate deduction.

All information without guarantee. Found an error? → support@conviva-plus.ch

💡Did you know?

A tailored suit for 2,000 francs is not tax-deductible, high-visibility trousers for 40 francs are, because they are unusable privately. What decides is never the price, but whether you can wear the garment privately.

Source: Berufskostenverordnung Art. 7, taxinfo.be.ch

Discussion

5 voices from the community

T
Thomasfrom Olten

Der Rechner ist Gold wert. Ich sehe jetzt schwarz auf weiss, dass meine 150 Franken Werkzeug und Kleider niemals an die Pauschale rankommen. Spare ich mir das Belege-Sammeln.

CP
ConvivaPlus Editorial

Genau dafür ist er da, Thomas. Für die grosse Mehrheit ist die Pauschale schlicht das bessere Geschäft.

S
Sandrafrom Chur

Als Pflegefachfrau bekomme ich die Kasacks vom Spital gestellt. Gut zu wissen, dass ich da gar nichts abziehen kann, hätte ich fast falsch gemacht.

M
Marcofrom Winterthur

Ich habe jahrelang meine Büro-Hemden abgezogen und dachte, das sei okay. Jetzt verstehe ich, warum das nie durchging. Der Artikel erklärt es endlich verständlich.

CP
ConvivaPlus Editorial

Danke, Marco. Genau das ist der häufigste Irrtum: privat tragbar heisst privat, ganz egal wie beruflich man es meint.

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This article does not replace individual tax advice. Amounts and rules per the DBG and the Professional Expenses Ordinance, as of July 2026.