Health Insurance in Switzerland: The Complete Guide 2026
Everything you need to know about mandatory health insurance (KVG/LAMal) in Switzerland: deductibles, premiums, alternative models, and switching insurers.
Switzerland has one of the best healthcare systems in the world — and one of the most complex insurance frameworks to navigate. Whether you’re a new resident, an expat, or simply reviewing your coverage, this guide explains everything you need to know about mandatory health insurance in Switzerland.
What is Mandatory Health Insurance (KVG/LAMal)?
Every person residing in Switzerland is legally required to take out a basic health insurance policy within three months of arriving in the country. This insurance is governed by the KVG (German) or LAMal (French) — the Federal Health Insurance Act.
Key facts:
- You choose your insurer freely from ~50 approved providers
- All insurers offer identical basic benefits (set by law)
- Premiums vary significantly between insurers — often 30–40% for the same coverage
- Children and young adults (under 25) benefit from reduced rates
What is covered
- Doctor visits (general practitioners and specialists)
- Hospital stays (general ward, in your canton of residence)
- Prescription medications on the approved list
- Laboratory tests
- Physiotherapy (by prescription)
- Maternity and childbirth
- Emergency care abroad (up to twice the Swiss rate)
What is NOT covered
- Routine dental care
- Eyeglasses and contact lenses (except special cases)
- Most alternative medicine
- Medical transport beyond certain limits
For uncovered services, supplementary insurance (VVG/LCA) exists — ask us for details.
The Deductible: How to Choose the Right Amount
The deductible (Franchise/Franchise) is the amount you pay out-of-pocket before your insurer starts covering costs. In 2026, available deductibles are:
| Deductible | For Adults |
|---|---|
| CHF 300 | Minimum (default) |
| CHF 500 | — |
| CHF 1,000 | — |
| CHF 1,500 | — |
| CHF 2,000 | — |
| CHF 2,500 | Maximum |
General rule:
- Frequent doctor visits or chronic medications → choose low deductible (CHF 300).
- Rarely see a doctor and in good health → choose high deductible (CHF 2,500). Your monthly premium drops significantly (savings of up to CHF 150/month).
Beyond the deductible, you also pay a 10% co-payment on remaining costs, capped at CHF 700/year for adults.
Alternative Models: Save on Your Premium
Choosing an alternative model means accepting restrictions on your choice of doctor in exchange for a premium reduction of 10–25%.
Family Doctor Model (Hausarzt/Médecin de famille)
You register with a chosen GP who acts as your first point of contact. Specialist referrals go through them.
HMO Model
You consult exclusively within a network of approved group practices. Often provides the largest premium reductions.
Telmed Model
Before every doctor visit, you call a medical hotline. Based on their advice, you’re directed to the appropriate care. Great for mobile, digitally-comfortable individuals.
Standard Model (Free Choice)
No restrictions — consult any doctor or specialist in Switzerland freely. The most expensive option.
Switching Insurers
You can switch health insurers once a year. The deadline for cancellation is 30 November (registered letter), effective 1 January of the following year.
Steps to switch:
- Compare premiums (primes.admin.ch or an independent broker)
- Apply to your chosen new insurer
- Cancel your current insurer by registered letter before 30 November
- Keep your new insurance certificate safe
Tip for expats: If you’ve recently moved to Switzerland, you have 3 months from your arrival to enroll. Don’t miss this window — late enrollment may result in retroactive premium payments.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
❌ Keeping the same insurer every year without comparing. Premiums change annually. A 10-minute comparison can save you CHF 500+ per year.
❌ Choosing the lowest deductible by default. For healthy individuals, a higher deductible with lower premiums is often more cost-effective.
❌ Missing the November 30 deadline. Miss it by one day and you’re locked in for another year.
❌ Confusing basic and supplementary insurance. Basic insurance (KVG/LAMal) covers essentials. Private rooms, dental care, and alternative medicine require supplementary coverage.
Get Independent Advice — Free
Navigating Swiss health insurance doesn’t have to be complicated. As an independent broker, I compare the full market for you — with no conflict of interest and at no cost to you (I’m paid by insurers, not clients).
Book a free 10-minute call and I’ll help you optimize your coverage today.
Need personalized advice?
Book a free 10-minute call with Marc-Antoine.
About the Author
Marc-Antoine Segui
Marc-Antoine Segui is an independent insurance broker based in Switzerland. Specializing in health, life, and car insurance, he helps clients find the best coverage at the best price.