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Can I travel to Switzerland if I’ve been vaccinated?

Both in Switzerland and abroad, vaccinations are picking up speed. Can vaccinated travellers visit Switzerland?

Can I travel to Switzerland if I've been vaccinated?
Vaccines in the background next to a paper-based vaccine booklet. Photo: Christof STACHE / AFP

Say you only had the first dose of the vaccine so far, with your second one scheduled only in four weeks, or if you have not had the shot at all.

Can you travel to Switzerland?

The simple answer is yes — but you must fulfil certain conditions.

For Swiss health authorities, “fully vaccinated” means both doses of Pfizer / Biontech, Moderna, or AstraZeneca vaccines. The only exception to the two-dose requirement is the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which is given in a single shot.

You must be able to prove your vaccination status with a EU-recognised Covid Certificate. If you don’t have one, or if you come from a country that is not issuing these health passes, then you should have an official proof of vaccination, which includes your name, date of birth, the name of the vaccine, batch numbers, and dates of first and second vaccination.

READ MORE: EU agrees to recognise Switzerland’s vaccination certificate

You are considered to be immune for up to 12 months after receiving your second shot.

Provided you can present this document and you travel at least 14 days after your second dose (or one dose, in case of Johnson & Johnson) — which is when immunity to coronavirus is believed to fully kick in — you can come to Switzerland with no restrictions.

What if you don’t meet these criteria?

If you only had one dose of the two-dose vaccine, or 14 days haven’t elapsed since the second shot, or if your vaccine is not one of the four mentioned above, or if you haven’t been inoculated at all, then you must fulfil other conditions.

In case you don’t come from one of the “high-variant” countries — currently India, Nepal and the UK — you must have a negative PCR or antigen test result taken within 48 hours of arriving in Switzerland.

If you do come from one of the three countries mentioned above, then you must also quarantine for 10 or seven days, which pretty much defeats the purpose of a vacation.

Does this mean full vaccination is the only way to enter Switzerland with no restrictions?

If you recovered from Covid within the past six months — and can prove it with official documents — you can come to Switzerland without any obligation to test or quarantine.

The same rules — that is, either the vaccination / immunity certificate, or negative test / quarantine — apply, even if the traveller arrives from a high-variant area like the UK, India or Nepal.

These are the rules and regulations right now, but they may change if the epidemiological situation in Switzerland and / or other countries worsens.

READ MORE: Who can travel to Switzerland right now?
READ MORE: What documents do tourists need to visit Switzerland?

Member comments

  1. Be careful with covid19 then! To share something very good, I watch this youtube channel myself: A Voice In The Desert And recommend to anyone wanting to learn more truth.

    Please get both doses of a vaccine and use a mask at least till everyone has both doses, to prevent covid-19 deaths, damage and hospitalizations.

  2. Bloomberg is reporting that Switzerland will begin accepting vaccinated American tourists starting June 28th – is that accurate?

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TRAVEL NEWS

Could new night trains from Zurich to Rome and Barcelona be derailed?

The planned new night trains from Zurich to Rome and Barcelona could be scuppered due to a lack of funding, media reports on Friday claimed.

Could new night trains from Zurich to Rome and Barcelona be derailed?

As the Swiss media reported on Thursday, there is good news and bad news concerning international night trains. 

The good news is that the national railway company, SBB, is committed to night trains connecting Zurich to Rome and Barcelona.

The first trains could be running as early as next year, SBB boss Vincent Ducrot told SRF media recently adding that it could also be 2026 before they start.

The bad news is that government funding is needed to get the project on the right track.

This money, however, could be difficult to obtain, because the Federal Council is looking into ways to cut spending, as Switzerland is facing a deficit of several billion francs.

Under Swiss law, no more than 30 million francs can be spent each year to promote international trains.

However, the law considers financing night connections as an optional provision, so the government is not obliged to spend any money on them.

And the problem for SBB and passengers keen on the night trains is that they are not very profitable and experts believe they won’t contribute much to Switzerland achieving its climate goals.

SBB boss Ducrot believes that if the promised subsidies are withdrawn the new night trains will simply not be feasible.

Existing night trains to and from Switzerland are popular. There are daily connections from Zurich to Berlin, Hamburg, Vienna, Graz, Amsterdam, Budapest, Zagreb and Prague.

But there are reasons they don’t make much profit.

Beds, sleeping compartments and toilets take up more space than seats on day trains so the maximum number of tickets that can be sold per train is therefore reduced. 

Normal daytime trains are in use for up to 18 hours a day but night trains are only used at night so spend much of the day unused.  

If subsidies do prove hard to come by there is hope cantons or cities that are interested in having night train connections could step in and help fund the services.

READ ALSO: The night trains to take from Switzerland around Europe

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