Switzerland moved a step closer this week to reshaping how foreigners become citizens, as backers of a national initiative pressed federal authorities to harmonize naturalization rules and cut waiting times. The proposal would lower the residency requirement from 10 years to 5 for qualified applicants across all cantons, a change designed to remove uneven practices and speed access to civic rights.
If adopted, people could apply after five years regardless of permit type, so long as they hold basic language skills and have no serious criminal record. Officials say the drive responds to long‑standing criticism that the system is fragmented.

Current ordinary naturalization: overview and requirements
Under current law, ordinary naturalization requires at least 10 years of residence in Switzerland. Years spent between ages eight and eighteen count double toward eligibility.
Other key current requirements and features:
– Applicants must usually hold a C settlement permit before filing.
– Language standards will require A2 spoken and B1 written in an official language from 2025.
– Decisions are taken at communal, cantonal, and federal levels — a multilayered process supporters say protects local input but critics say causes delays and unequal outcomes.
Supporters of the initiative argue a single national baseline would bring clarity and fairness without removing local checks.
Facilitated naturalization (family route)
A separate route, known as facilitated naturalization, is available for spouses of Swiss citizens. Requirements include:
– At least 3 years of marriage to a Swiss citizen.
– A total of 5 years’ residence in Switzerland.
– Proof the couple is living together and that the marriage is genuine.
– Evidence the applicant is integrated.
One often-missed limit: the Swiss spouse must have obtained citizenship through ordinary naturalization before the marriage. Supporters of the broader reform say these family rules would remain intact, while shortening the clock for ordinary cases would better match today’s mobile workforce.
Why reformers want change
Campaigners point to several concerns motivating the push:
– Roughly two million residents — more than a quarter of the population — live long term in Switzerland without full political rights.
– The patchwork of cantonal practices can produce arbitrary interpretations of national law and unequal outcomes.
– A five‑year track would provide firmer security for people born and raised in the country but not yet naturalized.
The Federal Council and the State Secretariat for Migration are overseeing policy work tied to the effort, while cantons maintain judicial competence for decisions. The aim is greater uniformity across cantons without stripping communities of their say in who joins them.
“A single national baseline would bring clarity and fairness without removing local checks.”
(paraphrase of supporters’ main argument)
What the initiative proposes
Under the initiative being prepared for a popular vote:
– Applicants could file after 5 years of residence, regardless of permit type (student, work, family, etc.).
– Sponsors say only basic knowledge of a national language and no serious criminal record would be required.
– The federal government would set the baseline and cantons would carry out checks.
– Ordinary applications would still be reviewed at three levels, but advocates expect shorter queues and clearer criteria.
The State Secretariat for Migration (SEM) has posted background on citizenship policy and ongoing simplification work at the State Secretariat for Migration (SEM).
Comparison: current thresholds vs. proposed baseline
| Topic | Current rule | Proposed initiative |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum residence | 10 years (years 8–18 count double) | 5 years |
| Permit required before filing | C settlement permit | Any permit (student/work/family) |
| Language requirement (from 2025) | A2 spoken, B1 written | Basic knowledge of a national language |
| Criminal record | No serious record (checked) | No serious criminal record |
| Levels of review | Communal, cantonal, federal | Same three levels, but with national baseline and faster processing expected |
Practical effects if adopted
If voters endorse the change, expected impacts include:
– Workers, students, and families could apply sooner — no need to wait for a C permit before filing.
– Highly mobile staff could settle status faster.
– Families with school‑age children could face less uncertainty because the same five‑year rule would apply across cantons.
– Communal and cantonal approvals would remain; authorities would still examine integration and criminal records.
Backers argue this balance answers concerns raised by the two million residents currently outside the franchise.
Timing and next steps
Because the plan stems from a popular initiative, the final word will come at the ballot box after federal review and scheduling. Switzerland’s tradition of direct democracy means:
– Voters decide on headline questions.
– Day‑to‑day rules are later drafted and applied by federal, cantonal, and communal authorities.
Supporters expect a vote soon, though officials have not set a date. Any subsequent legal drafting would take additional months. In the meantime:
– Applicants continue under current ordinary and facilitated channels.
– Lawyers advise people close to eligibility to map options carefully, since a future five‑year threshold could change planning for families who are mid‑process.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, momentum reflects everyday stories of settled residents who pay taxes and raise families but cannot vote locally or nationally. For the Federal Council and the migration secretariat, the task now is to prepare the ground so any shift can be applied evenly once adopted.
What has already changed — and what remains
The campaign has already shifted the conversation: instead of treating citizenship as a distant finish line reached only after a decade, the proposal places a 5‑year residency requirement at the center of policy talk and invites national standards that would apply the same way in Lausanne, Lugano, and Lucerne.
Federal officials have signaled they will continue supervising the file through the State Secretariat for Migration, while local authorities keep processing cases under existing law. For residents who have built lives in Switzerland, the prospect of a clearer, faster path to membership signals that the country is reassessing who gets to belong.
Voters will decide how soon that happens.
This Article in a Nutshell
A national initiative in Switzerland aims to lower the ordinary naturalization residency requirement from 10 to 5 years and set a national baseline requiring basic language skills and no serious criminal record. Applicants could file regardless of permit type, while communal, cantonal and federal reviews would continue. Facilitated naturalization for spouses stays intact. Supporters say harmonization will reduce disparities and speed processing; the proposal faces a popular vote and further legal drafting if approved.
