Switzerland visa options for Spain passport holders
Tourist / short stay
Visa-free
Enter without a visa, usually for a set number of days.
Visa types & longer-stay routes for Switzerland
Freedom of movement
No visa or residence permit needed
As a Spain (EU/EEA/Swiss) citizen you have full free-movement rights in Switzerland: you can live, work, study and retire there indefinitely — no visa, no residence permit. You only register with the local authorities after about three months. The visa routes below are for non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals; you don’t need them.
For reference, the routes Switzerland offers non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals:
- Most nomadsTourist
Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C)
Up to 90 days in any 180-day period across the Schengen area.
- Insurance
- Requiredtravel medical insurance with minimum EUR 30,000 cover for emergency treatment, hospitalisation and repatriation, valid across the whole Schengen area for the entire stay.
- Good for
- Visa-required nationals visiting for tourism, family/friends, short business trips, short courses or medical treatment.
- Requirement
- Valid passport (issued within last 10 years, valid 3+ months beyond intended departure from Schengen), proof of accommodation, return travel and sufficient funds; does not permit work or residence.
- Business
Schengen Business Visit Visa (Type C)
Up to 90 days in any 180-day period; a short-stay visa, not a work permit.
- Insurance
- Requiredsame EUR 30,000 Schengen travel medical insurance as for any Type C visa.
- Good for
- Visa-required nationals attending meetings, conferences, negotiations or training while remaining employed and paid abroad.
- Requirement
- Invitation from a Swiss host company plus standard Type C documents; gainful local employment is not permitted under this category.
- Business
Self-Employed / Entrepreneur Residence Permit (B)
B permit, typically 1 year and renewable subject to the business remaining viable; counts against the same third-country quotas.
- Insurance
- RequiredSwiss compulsory health insurance (KVG/LAMal) once resident.
- Good for
- Non-EU/EFTA nationals founding or running their own business in Switzerland (FNIA Art. 19).
- Requirement
- Detailed (often 3-year) business plan demonstrating financial viability and a lasting economic benefit/interest to the canton and country; cantonal pre-approval then SEM review.
- Most nomadsWork
Work Residence Permit - B / L (employment)
L permit: initially up to 12 months, renewable up to ~24 months. B permit: typically 1 year, renewable while employment continues.
- Insurance
- Requiredresidents must take out Swiss compulsory health insurance (KVG/LAMal), generally within 3 months of arrival.
- Good for
- Non-EU/EFTA specialists, managers and qualified professionals with a confirmed Swiss job offer (L = short-term up to ~1 year; B = one year or longer).
- Requirement
- Employer-led application subject to annual federal quotas (unchanged for 2026: 8,500 total - 4,500 B and 4,000 L) and a labour-market test proving no suitable Swiss/EU-EFTA candidate; cantonal plus SEM approval (processing approx. 3-6 months).
- Study
Student Residence Permit (education)
Issued for the duration of the programme (commonly 1 year, renewable while enrolled).
- Insurance
- Requiredvalid Swiss health and accident insurance or an approved equivalent meeting cantonal standards (EU/EFTA students may use EHIC; non-EU students normally need Swiss cover).
- Good for
- Non-EU/EFTA students with an unconditional offer from an accredited Swiss university, school or vocational institution.
- Requirement
- Proof of enrolment, secured accommodation and sufficient funds (commonly around CHF 21,000 per academic year, more in some cantons such as Geneva/Zurich - verify); applied for at the cantonal migration office.
- Residence
Retirement Residence Permit (Article 28 FNIA)
B permit, renewable; no fixed end date while conditions remain met.
- Insurance
- Requiredapplicants must hold comprehensive health and accident insurance covering them in Switzerland.
- Good for
- Non-EU/EFTA nationals aged 55+ wishing to live in Switzerland without gainful employment, with particular personal ties to the country.
- Requirement
- Proof of sufficient financial means (no fixed federal threshold, but substantial assets/guaranteed income expected - cantons often look for roughly CHF 100,000+ annual income) and that you will not work; particular personal ties to Switzerland are typically required.
- Residence
Lump-Sum Taxation Residence Permit
B permit, renewable while the tax agreement and conditions are maintained.
- Insurance
- RequiredSwiss compulsory health insurance (KVG/LAMal) once resident.
- Good for
- Wealthy non-EU/EFTA nationals seeking residence without working in Switzerland, via a negotiated fixed tax arrangement with a canton.
- Requirement
- Negotiated taxable base with the canton - federal minimum CHF 434,700 for 2026 (or 7x annual rent/rental value, whichever is higher; many cantons set materially higher minimums); no gainful employment in Switzerland.
- Residence
Permanent Residence (Settlement / C Permit)
Indefinite (unlimited) settlement permit; the card is renewed periodically (typically every 5 years) as a formality.
- Insurance
- RequiredSwiss compulsory health insurance (KVG/LAMal) applies to all residents.
- Good for
- Long-term non-EU/EFTA residents progressing from a B permit toward indefinite settlement.
- Requirement
- Generally 10 years of continuous lawful residence (reducible to 5 for some nationalities with a settlement treaty or cases of strong integration), plus integration and language criteria - granted by cantonal authorities with SEM oversight.
- Transit
Airport Transit Visa (Type A)
Transit only - stay within the international transit zone; no entry into Switzerland.
- Insurance
- OptionalNot required - travel medical insurance is generally not mandated for airport transit; you would need Schengen cover only if you must actually enter the Schengen zone.
- Good for
- Nationals of a specific list of countries (e.g. Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Somalia, Eritrea, Sri Lanka and others) changing planes at a Swiss airport without entering the Schengen area.
- Requirement
- Onward flight booking and valid entry documents for the final destination; exemptions apply if you hold a valid Schengen/US/Canada/Japan/UK visa or residence permit.
General guidance only - confirm current rules with the Swiss State Secretariat for Migration (SEM), your competent cantonal migration office or the relevant Swiss embassy/consulate before you rely on it. Last checked: 2026-06.
Last verified June 2026
Visa-free isn’t insurance-free
Whatever route you take into Switzerland, your entry stamp never includes health cover. Many longer-stay visas also require proof of insurance before they’re granted. That part is on you — and it’s what we actually do.
Spain → Switzerland: frequently asked
- Do Spain passport holders need a visa to visit Switzerland?
- No. As a Spain (EU/EEA/Swiss) citizen you have freedom of movement in Switzerland and need no visa for any length of stay.
- Can a Spain passport holder live or work long-term in Switzerland?
- Yes — under EU/EEA/Swiss free movement you can live, work and study in Switzerland indefinitely with no visa or residence permit.
- Do I need travel insurance for Switzerland?
- Entry to Switzerland never includes health cover, so travel medical insurance is strongly recommended. Several Switzerland visas also require proof of insurance before they're granted.
Last updated
Visa rules can change at short notice and depend on your purpose of travel, length of stay and onward tickets. Always confirm with the destination’s embassy or the IATA Travel Centre before you book. Visa-free entry never includes travel health insurance. That’s still on you.