Minimum Wage Switzerland 2026: No National One – but 7 Cantons Forge Ahead
Switzerland has no national minimum wage. 76.3% said no in 2014. Yet: Geneva pays CHF 24.59 per hour – the highest statutory minimum wage in the world. And more cantons are following suit. Here is the complete overview.

76.3% said no to the national minimum wage – yet the cantons are doing it anyway, one after another.
Popular vote of May 18, 2014
🗺️ Overview: Switzerland Without a National Minimum Wage
Switzerland is one of the few highly developed countries in the world without a national minimum wage. No statutory minimum applicable to everyone. No amount below which no employer may go. Instead, Switzerland regulates its wages through a system that is almost unique globally: collective labour agreements (CLAs) between employers and unions.
This works – for most. Over 600 generally binding CLAs cover around 50% of all employees and set industry-specific minimum wages. Those working in hospitality, construction or cleaning have a contractually guaranteed minimum wage – on average well above the median wage of CHF 7,024. But those in an industry without a CLA? They are on their own.
It is precisely this gap that has driven more and more cantons to act. Since Neuchâtel led the way in 2017, five cantons and two cities have introduced their own minimum wages. Those who work there and still earn little can at least save on their tax return. The trend is clear: what the people rejected nationally is being implemented cantonally.
🏛️ Cantonal Minimum Wages: Who Pays How Much?
Seven cantons and cities have introduced their own minimum wages – with different approaches and amounts. The overview shows: the differences are massive. Between the highest minimum wage in Geneva and the tiered model in Ticino lies almost CHF 6 per hour.
Geneva: CHF 24.59 per hour – the highest statutory minimum wage in the world. This equates to roughly CHF 4,400 per month for a full-time position. Geneva introduced the minimum wage in 2020 by popular vote and has adjusted it annually for inflation since. The high cost of living in Geneva puts the figure in perspective: a three-room apartment easily costs CHF 2,500 per month.
Lucerne (city): CHF 22.75 per hour – in effect since January 2026. The minimum wage applies only to the city of Lucerne, not the entire canton. Politically it is highly contested: a centre-right alliance wants to abolish it.
Basel-Stadt: CHF 22.00 per hour – in effect since January 2025. Basel was the most recent canton with a comprehensive cantonal minimum wage. The introduction was pragmatic, and initial experiences are predominantly positive.
Jura: CHF 21.40 per hour. The canton of Jura introduced its minimum wage in 2023 and indexes it to the national consumer price index.
Neuchâtel: CHF 21.31 per hour. Neuchâtel was the pioneer canton in 2017 – the first Swiss canton with a statutory minimum wage. The Federal Supreme Court confirmed its constitutionality in 2017, after the employers' association had filed a lawsuit.
Ticino: CHF 18.75 to CHF 20.25 per hour – tiered by industry. The Ticino model is unique: it differentiates between industries with and without CLAs and has different levels. The minimum wage was introduced by popular initiative and challenged in court multiple times.
Zurich and Winterthur: Both cities have voted for a minimum wage – but legally the situation is blocked. Complaints from employers' associations have delayed implementation. Whether and when the minimum wage will come remains uncertain.
Minimum Wage Quiz
2 questions – test your knowledge
1.Which canton has the highest minimum wage?
2.How did Switzerland vote on the national minimum wage in 2014?
📜 Initiative 2014: 76.3% Said No – Yet Everything Is Moving
On May 18, 2014, Switzerland voted on the popular initiative "For the protection of fair wages (minimum wage initiative)". The initiators – the Swiss Federation of Trade Unions (SGB), the SP and the Greens – demanded a national minimum wage of CHF 22 per hour, which would have corresponded to around CHF 4,000 per month full-time.
The result was devastating: 76.3% voted no. Not a single canton accepted the initiative. It was one of the clearest rejections in the history of Swiss popular votes. Even in traditionally left-leaning cantons like Basel-Stadt or Geneva, the initiative found no majority.
The supporters' arguments were clear: a minimum wage of CHF 4,000 per month was to ensure that every full-time employee could live on their salary. The initiators pointed to the high cost of living in Switzerland and the fact that around 330,000 people earned less than CHF 4,000 despite full-time employment. There was also the argument of pay equality: women earned less on average – the gender pay gap is currently 8.4% – and would have benefited disproportionately.
The opponents – led by the employers' association, the trade association and the centre-right parties – argued on three core points: first, a national minimum wage would destroy jobs, especially in peripheral regions and low-wage industries. Second, a uniform minimum wage was senseless in a country where living costs vary by a factor of two between Geneva and the Emmental. Third, the CLA system worked – and state intervention would undermine the proven social partnership.
The irony of history: exactly those cantons that most clearly voted no in 2014 are now introducing their own minimum wages – some higher than the CHF 22 demanded back then. Geneva requires CHF 24.59, Basel-Stadt CHF 22.00. What failed nationally is being implemented through federalism. Switzerland does it its own way: not from the top, but from the bottom.
⚖️ CLA Minimum Wages: The Invisible Net
Switzerland has no national minimum wage – but it has something else: over 600 generally binding collective labour agreements (CLAs). These industry contracts between employers' associations and unions set minimum wages, working hours and conditions. Around 50% of all employees are covered by a CLA. Those wanting to know what individual industries pay: the industry comparison shows it.
The system works on a simple principle: employers and unions negotiate industry-specific conditions. When the Federal Council declares a CLA "generally binding", the minimum wages apply to all companies in the industry – including those that are not members of the employers' association. This prevents wage dumping and creates a level playing field.
CLA minimum wages rose by an average of around +1% in 2025 – a sign that the social partnership works, even if adjustments don't always keep pace with inflation.
The catch: around half of all employees are covered by no CLA at all. Those in retail, small service companies or agriculture have no contractually guaranteed minimum wage. This is exactly where cantonal minimum wages fill the gap. How Swiss salaries 2026 are distributed across all industries is shown in our comprehensive comparison.
🌍 International Comparison: Where Does Switzerland Stand?
At first glance, Switzerland is a special case: no national minimum wage, but the highest regional minimum wage in the world. Geneva's CHF 24.59 per hour exceeds every national minimum wage on the planet. But: Geneva is a city with living costs that put any EU minimum wage into perspective.
The comparison with countries that also have no national minimum wage is interesting. Switzerland is not alone. Singapore regulates wages through industry-specific requirements. The Nordic countries – Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Finland – rely like Switzerland on strong social partnership and collective agreements rather than statutory minimum wages. The difference: in Scandinavia, over 70% of employees are unionised. In Switzerland it is under 15%.
Germany only introduced the minimum wage in 2015 – and has since raised it from EUR 8.50 to EUR 12.82. Experience shows: the feared job losses largely did not materialise. The German labour market actually grew after the introduction. France has had a minimum wage (SMIC) for decades, regularly adjusted for inflation. Luxembourg pays the highest national minimum wage in the EU at EUR 15.12.
📈 Effects: Does the Minimum Wage Destroy Jobs?
The main argument of minimum wage opponents was in 2014 and remains today: minimum wages destroy jobs. Companies could not afford the higher wages, would cut positions or relocate to cheaper regions. The theory sounds logical. But what do the data say?
Geneva: Probably the most fascinating real-world test worldwide. Since 2020 the world's highest minimum wage has been in effect – and the NZZ reports: all-clear for sceptics. There is no demonstrable increase in unemployment since the introduction. Hospitality and retail – the most affected industries – have not collectively cut jobs. However: Geneva also has extremely high living costs and a chronic labour shortage. Transferability to rural areas is limited.
Basel-Stadt: Initial experiences since January 2025 are predominantly positive. Retail and hospitality report no noticeable job cuts. Unions speak of improved purchasing power for low-wage earners.
Criticism: Employers' associations continue to warn about long-term effects. Small businesses in peripheral regions could come under pressure. A restaurant in the Jura operates with different margins than one in Geneva. A cantonal minimum wage of CHF 21.40 can be a different burden for a mountain bistro operator than for a big-city chain. This concern is valid – but the data to date do not support the apocalypse scenarios.
🔮 What's Next? The Trend Is Clear – So Is the Pushback
Switzerland has no national minimum wage. But it has something better: a system that adapts canton by canton.
The trend points in one direction: more and more cantons and cities are introducing minimum wages. After Neuchâtel, Jura, Ticino and Geneva, Basel-Stadt and Lucerne followed. Zurich and Winterthur have decided – even if implementation is legally blocked. Further cities are debating. The momentum is there.
But there is a counter-trend: in the National Council there is debate about whether collective agreements should override cantonal minimum wages. Employers' associations argue that a patchwork of cantonal minimum wages burdens the economy and distorts competition. When a company in the canton of Jura must pay CHF 21.40 but not in the neighbouring canton – is that fair?
Switzerland faces a fundamental question: should the minimum wage remain cantonal – with all the differences that federalism brings? Or is a national solution needed after all? In 2014 the answer was clear. But the world has changed. Living costs have risen. The discussion about fair wages has grown louder. And the cantonal patchwork is expanding – whether Bern wants it or not.
One thing is certain: Switzerland does not solve the minimum wage question with one big move, but with typically Swiss pragmatism – locally, step by step, with much debate and even more votes. And those who want to know how the 26 cantons differ on taxes, wages and quality of life will find our comprehensive comparison.
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❓ Minimum Wage Switzerland – Key Answers
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Geneva: CHF 24.59 per hour – the highest statutory minimum wage in the world. Yet Switzerland has no national one. 76.3% said no in 2014.
Discussion
4 voices from the community
Il modello ticinese con la differenziazione per settore è il più giusto. Ristorante ≠ banca. Il salario minimo di Ginevra è troppo rigido.
Basel-Stadt meldet bisher keine negativen Auswirkungen. Spannend. Bei uns im Aargau diskutiert man das Thema nicht mal.
Lebe in Genf. Mindestlohn klingt hoch, aber 3-Zimmer-Wohnung hier: 2'500 Franken. Ohne Mindestlohn wärs für viele in der Gastro noch übler.
Stimmt – die Mieten in Genf gehören zu den höchsten der Schweiz. Mehr zu den kantonalen Unterschieden in unserem 26-Kantone-Artikel.
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Economy · 23.03.2026