Swiss Federal Council Salary 2026: How Much the Swiss Government Really Earns

A member of the Swiss Federal Council (Bundesrat) – Switzerland's seven-member executive government – earns a gross salary of CHF 478,000 per year in 2026, plus CHF 30,000 in flat-rate expenses. After at least four years in office, former Federal Councillors receive a lifelong pension of CHF 239,000 per year. They also get two official cars, an unlimited first-class rail pass (GA), and personal security.

·Sources: admin.ch, parlament.ch·
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Swiss Federal Palace in Bern at sunset with Swiss franc banknotes – Federal Council salary CHF 478,000 per year: salary, pension and privileges of the Swiss government
478'000
Gross Salary/Year
CHF, as of 2026
239'000
Pension/Year
50% of salary, lifelong
30'000
Expenses/Year
Flat rate, tax-free
12'000
Presidential Bonus
During presidential year

A Federal Councillor earns CHF 1,309 per day – more than many Swiss workers take home net in an entire week.

Source: admin.ch, Income and Pensions 2025/2026

💰 The Federal Council Salary in Detail

All seven Federal Council members receive the same uniform salary of CHF 478,000 gross per year (as of 1 January 2026, according to admin.ch). On top of that come CHF 30,000 in flat-rate expenses as well as a first-class SBB rail pass and a telecommunications allowance. The salary is adjusted annually – the latest adjustment was decided by the Federal Council on 19 December 2025. How this compares to other Swiss salaries is shown in the comparison below.

Salary Breakdown
CHF 478'000
Gross Salary/Year
CHF 30'000
Expense Allowance
CHF 12'000
Presidential Bonus
GA 1st Class
SBB Rail Pass (unlimited)
Salary Calculator

How much does a Federal Councillor earn per hour? The breakdown:

478’000
Per year
gross
39’833
Per month
≈ 4× median salary
9’192
Per week
over 52 weeks
1’838
Per day
over 260 working days
184
Per hour
at ~10h/day

Basis: CHF 478,000 gross/year, 260 working days, estimated 10h/day (70-80h/week)

🏛️ What Does the Federal President Earn on Top?

The Federal President receives a bonus of CHF 12,000 during the presidential year. Switzerland has no head of state in the traditional sense: the Federal President is "primus inter pares" – first among equals – and continues to run their department.

The office rotates annually by seniority – whoever has served longest on the Federal Council becomes the next president. In Swiss federalism, this rotation is a deliberate choice: no single individual should accumulate too much power. By contrast: in countries with presidential systems, a single head of government can rule for decades. In Switzerland, the presidency changes every year – and the CHF 12,000 bonus reflects that the role is primarily ceremonial, not political.

Context
Unlike in Germany (Federal President: purely ceremonial, EUR 267,000), the Swiss Federal President has real governmental responsibilities – for a bonus of just CHF 12,000. A symbolic amount for Switzerland's highest-ranking protocol position.

📋 Pension: The Retirement Package After Office

After at least four years in office, a lifelong pension of 50% of the current salary is paid – currently around CHF 239,000 per year. This is not a pension fund model but a legally enshrined retirement pension under the Federal Act on the Salaries and Occupational Pensions of Magistrates.

A Federal Councillor who serves 8 years and lives to 80 collects over CHF 5 million in pension payments.

NZZ, 2024
Warning
The pension is only paid in full if no other lucrative activity is taken up. The National Council committee requested its abolition in 2024 – the Council of States rejected the proposal.
Pension Calculator

How much does a Federal Councillor earn in total? Move the sliders.

Years in office8 years
1Avg. 10Record: 32 (K. Schenk)
Years of pension received20 years
02040
Salary (tenure)
CHF 3’824’000
8 × CHF 478,000
Pension (cumulative)
CHF 4’780’000
20 × CHF 239,000
Total income
CHF 8’604’000
Salary + Pension

Simplified calculation. Pension = 50% of current salary (CHF 239,000/year). Reduced if earning significant income afterwards.

🎯 All Privileges at a Glance

🚗
2 Official Cars
With chauffeur, for official and private use
🚆
GA 1st Class
SBB general rail pass, unlimited travel
📱
Telecommunications
All subscription and connection costs covered
🛡️
Personal Security
Police protection when required
🏛️
Federal Council Office
Personal office + secretariat
✈️
Travel Expenses
All official travel within Switzerland and abroad

A detail rarely mentioned: the Federal Council's vehicle fleet. Each member has two official cars with a chauffeur – one in Bern, one at their home. Since 2020, the Federal Chancellery has increasingly switched to electric vehicles: several Audi e-tron and Mercedes EQS models have been added to the fleet, while armoured limousines remain in service for security-relevant trips. The entire fleet is managed by the Federal Office for Buildings and Logistics (FOBL). The cost per vehicle including chauffeur is estimated at CHF 150,000 to 200,000 per year – a figure absent from any salary statistics but part of the overall package. By international standards, the fleet is modest: the French President has a convoy of over 60 vehicles, the US President travels with an armoured motorcade. Seven Federal Councillors share around 14 vehicles.

🧠

Federal Council Quiz

2 questions – test your knowledge

1.How much does a Federal Councillor earn per year?

2.How much is the pension?

⚖️ Comparison: Federal Councillor vs. CEO vs. Median Salary

Annual Salary in CHF (gross)
UBS CEO Sergio Ermotti14'400'000CHF
Nestlé CEO10'200'000CHF
Federal Councillor478'000CHF
National Councillor (full-time)~130'000CHF
Swiss Median Salary~80'000CHF
Context
A UBS CEO earns 30 times more than a Federal Councillor. A Federal Councillor earns 6 times the Swiss median salary. Relative to the responsibility (8.9 million residents, CHF 80 billion budget), the salary is moderate – relative to the average, it's enormous.

🌍 International Comparison

Head of Government Salary (purchasing power adjusted, CHF)
🇸🇬 Singapore (PM)1'500'000CHF
🇨🇭 Switzerland (Federal Council)478'000CHF
🇩🇪 Germany (Chancellor)~380'000CHF
🇺🇸 USA (President)~365'000CHF
🇦🇹 Austria (Chancellor)~340'000CHF
🇬🇧 UK (PM)~280'000CHF
🇫🇷 France (President)~180'000CHF
🇯🇵 Japan (PM)~170'000CHF

Only Singapore pays its head of government more – but there it's a single Prime Minister. In Switzerland, 7 Federal Councillors share power equally. Notably: the US President – the most powerful job in the world – earns less than a Swiss Federal Councillor. The US President receives the equivalent of CHF 365,000, Emmanuel Macron only CHF 180,000. Swiss federalism with its 26 cantons puts this in perspective: cantonal governments often have more influence on daily life than the federal government.

The figures are impressive. But how has the salary evolved over the years? The answer is surprising.

📜 Historical Development

Federal Council Salary Since 2000
2000CHF 380'000
2008CHF 420'000

After the financial crisis debate

2015CHF 445'000
2020CHF 456'854

Covid – no reduction

2024CHF 472'000
2026CHF 478'000

Adjustment as of 1 January

Tenure Records

Longest tenure: Karl Schenk – 32 years (1863–1895, died in office). Average: ~10 years. Nickname for Philipp Etter (25 years): "L'éternel" – the eternal one. The longer the tenure, the higher the cumulative pension: 20 years in office + 20 years of pension = CHF 4.8 million.

The Federal Council's history also includes dramatic departures. The most spectacular: Christoph Blocher was not re-elected in 2007 – the United Federal Assembly elected Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf (then BDP) in his place. It was only the fourth non-re-election in Swiss history, triggering a political earthquake that led to a split in the SVP party. Even rarer than non-re-elections are forced resignations: Ruth Metzler (CVP) was voted out in 2003 when Blocher took her seat. Both cases show: the office is not guaranteed. The Federal Assembly has the last word – theoretically at every renewal election following parliamentary elections. Voluntary mid-term resignations, however, have become more frequent. Didier Burkhalter resigned in 2017 after just seven years, officially for personal reasons. Ueli Maurer left in 2022 after 14 years. The reasons vary, the pattern remains: the office takes its toll, and those who stay too long risk being perceived as tired.

🔍 What the Numbers Don't Show

Despite a salary of CHF 478,000, a Federal Councillor earns 30 times less than a UBS CEO – yet bears responsibility for 8.9 million people and a CHF 80 billion budget. Despite a lifelong pension, there is no job protection: the United Federal Assembly can remove any Federal Councillor by vote.

What no spreadsheet shows: the personal cost. Federal Councillors work 70–80 hours per week according to SRF, face constant media and security pressure, and lose much of their privacy. Their families live in the spotlight. Leisure time barely exists. For comparison: in the private sector, a CEO with this workload and responsibility (8.9 million "customers", CHF 80 billion budget) would earn 10 to 30 times more.

On top of that: unlike Swiss citizens who can enjoy affordable day trips on weekends, Federal Councillors have hardly any free time. Every weekend is filled with events, conferences, and representational duties. Even a walk in Bern becomes a security incident when personal protection has to accompany them.

The debate around the Federal Council's salary is therefore more complex than "too much" or "too little". Those who look at CHF 478,000 as a mere number forget the context. Those who know the context often reach a different conclusion.

The question isn't whether CHF 478,000 is a lot – but whether anyone would be willing to govern Switzerland for less.

🧮 Taxes: How Are Federal Councillors Taxed?

Federal Councillors pay perfectly normal taxes – just like any other Swiss citizen. No tax privileges, no special status. With a residence in Bern and a gross salary of CHF 478,000, the estimated net salary is CHF 300,000 to CHF 320,000, depending on family situation and deductions. Those wanting to optimise their own 2026 tax return will find a detailed guide with a deduction calculator on our site.

The cantonal differences are fascinating: if a Federal Councillor lived in Zug instead of Bern, their tax burden would be an estimated CHF 40,000–60,000 lower per year. This shows how strongly tax competition between the 26 cantons affects net pay – even for the highest-ranking civil servants. In practice, most Federal Councillors live in the federal capital Bern during their tenure.

Tax Estimate 2026
CHF 478'000
Gross
CHF ~310'000
Net (estimated, Bern)
Saving tip
The pension is also taxable. A former Federal Councillor residing in Zurich pays an estimated CHF 50,000 to CHF 60,000 in taxes per year on CHF 239,000 in pension. Moving to Zug or Schwyz could halve that amount – which some former Federal Councillors actually do.

👤 What Happens After Leaving Office?

Former Federal Councillors don't simply disappear. Some remain influential, others make headlines. Parliament regularly debates the privileges. Concrete examples:

Christoph Blocher
Initially waived his pension, then retroactively claimed CHF 2.7 million. Sparked a national debate in 2020.
Doris Leuthard
Joined several corporate boards (Coop, Bell, Stadler Rail). Pension was reduced accordingly.
Johann Schneider-Ammann
Returned to the private sector. His case showed: those who earn well receive less pension.
Ueli Maurer
Resigned in 2022 after 14 years – one of the longest-serving Federal Councillors. Full pension.

The pension for former Federal Councillors has been politically controversial for years. Several parliamentary motions have tried to reform the system. In 2020, a motion demanded tying the pension to actual need – it failed. The Young Socialists briefly floated the idea of a popular initiative to abolish the lifelong pension, then dropped it. The core of the debate: why should a former Federal Councillor who then earns millions as a board member still receive CHF 239,000 per year? The current regulations do provide for reductions when post-office income exceeds a certain threshold. But even with reductions, a substantial amount remains. The Blocher case made the absurdity visible: he first publicly waived his pension – only to retroactively claim it years later. Parliament has since discussed a time limit or converting it into a one-off severance payment. Little has changed so far. Cutting privileges that one might benefit from oneself one day is politically delicate.

Context
The pattern is clear: those who earn well after office receive less pension. Those who retire quietly get everything. The system penalises activity – a contradiction debated politically for years.

📊 The Federal Council 2026

WBF (Economic Affairs)
Guy Parmelin
SVP (Swiss People's Party) · Federal President 2026
EDA (Foreign Affairs)
Ignazio Cassis
FDP (Liberals) · Vice President
EFD (Finance)
Karin Keller-Sutter
FDP (Liberals)
UVEK (Environment & Transport)
Albert Rösti
SVP (Swiss People's Party)
EJPD (Justice & Police)
Beat Jans
SP (Social Democrats)
EDI (Home Affairs)
Élisabeth Baume-Schneider
SP (Social Democrats)
VBS (Defence)
Martin Pfister
Die Mitte (The Centre) · Since March 2025
📊
Quick poll60 votes

Is CHF 478,000 too much, appropriate, or too little for a Federal Councillor?

One click – anonymous, no sign-up required.

❓ Everything About the Federal Council Salary – Honest Answers

Based on admin.ch and parliamentary documents

Context

Political articles on ConvivaPlus present facts, not opinions. All figures come from admin.ch, parlament.ch, and verified media reports. We deliberately refrain from making political judgements about the Federal Council's salary.

ConvivaPlus Editorial

Politics

Researched and verified. Facts, not opinions.

Last updated:

Sources & methodology
As of: 22 March 2026

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

💡Did you know?

A Federal Councillor who serves 8 years and reaches 80 collects over CHF 5 million in pension. For life. Even if they go on to earn millions in the private sector.

Source: admin.ch, NZZ

Discussion

5 voices from the community

S
Stefanfrom Wettingen

Was mich überrascht hat: im CEO-Vergleich ist das Gehalt fast bescheiden. Klar, verglichen mit dem Medianlohn ist es absurd. Aber verglichen mit Vasella oder Ospel? Ein Witz.

CP
ConvivaPlus Editorial

Zum Vergleich: Die AHV-Maximalrente beträgt CHF 2'520 pro Monat. Ein Bundesrat erhält das 8-fache – lebenslang. Mehr dazu im AHV-Artikel.

A
Alban K.from Wil

In Kosovo verdient ein Parlamentarier 1'500 Euro. Hier 478'000 Franken. Bin seit 20 Jahren Schweizer, aber die Zahlen überraschen mich immer noch.

C
Corinnefrom Genf

Merci pour l'analyse factuelle. Savoir si 478k est approprié ne se résume pas en une phrase. Mais la transparence, c'est déjà un bon début.

U
Ursfrom Bern

Ruhegehalt-Rechner ausprobiert. Ergebnis: über 5 Millionen CHF wenn ein Bundesrat 80 wird. Verstehe jetzt wieso das politisch heiss diskutiert wird.

⚖️

Government Salaries – International Comparison

Swiss Federal Council vs. other heads of state

Interactive
478’000CHF
Annual Salary
385’000CHF
9.05
Population (million)
84.4

Green = better in comparison. Choose two options and compare directly.

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Politics · 22.03.2026