
Mirroring the federal change, the Canton of Geneva published detailed guidance on 23 October 2025 telling employers that “a simple announcement now suffices” to hire people holding an S-permit. The cantonal labour inspectorate (OCIRT) outlines a three-step workflow: verify the candidate’s S-permit, notify the employment or self-employment via EasyGov (or a downloadable form) and file the same notification again if the employee changes jobs or ends the activity.
Geneva stresses that responsibility for notification lies with the employer in salaried cases and with the individual for self-employment. The cantonal migration office (OCPM) can audit payroll and working conditions after the fact, so companies must keep documentary proof that remuneration meets local collective bargaining agreements. Failure to notify may trigger fines and a temporary ban on hiring foreign nationals.
The notice emphasises that the reform aims to speed integration of Ukrainians who fled the war and currently receive status S. Holders of F (provisionally admitted) and B-refugee permits have enjoyed a similar notification regime since 2019; extending it to S-permits puts all protection categories on equal footing. The canton promises to publish multilingual FAQs and conduct webinars for HR managers in the coming weeks.
For businesses headquartered in Geneva—or those posting staff into the canton—the key practical takeaway is to register for an EasyGov account and test the functionality before 1 December. Multinationals using global mobility software should add Geneva-specific validation rules to flag missing notifications. Because Geneva hosts a large NGO community, the change also benefits international organisations that rely on short-term Ukrainian talent for humanitarian operations.
HR teams should note that remuneration rules remain unchanged: S-permit holders must receive salary and social-security coverage equivalent to Swiss or EU/EFTA workers performing comparable tasks in the same location. Random inspections by OCIRT are expected to continue, and violations may undermine future work-authorisation requests for third-country nationals.
Geneva stresses that responsibility for notification lies with the employer in salaried cases and with the individual for self-employment. The cantonal migration office (OCPM) can audit payroll and working conditions after the fact, so companies must keep documentary proof that remuneration meets local collective bargaining agreements. Failure to notify may trigger fines and a temporary ban on hiring foreign nationals.
The notice emphasises that the reform aims to speed integration of Ukrainians who fled the war and currently receive status S. Holders of F (provisionally admitted) and B-refugee permits have enjoyed a similar notification regime since 2019; extending it to S-permits puts all protection categories on equal footing. The canton promises to publish multilingual FAQs and conduct webinars for HR managers in the coming weeks.
For businesses headquartered in Geneva—or those posting staff into the canton—the key practical takeaway is to register for an EasyGov account and test the functionality before 1 December. Multinationals using global mobility software should add Geneva-specific validation rules to flag missing notifications. Because Geneva hosts a large NGO community, the change also benefits international organisations that rely on short-term Ukrainian talent for humanitarian operations.
HR teams should note that remuneration rules remain unchanged: S-permit holders must receive salary and social-security coverage equivalent to Swiss or EU/EFTA workers performing comparable tasks in the same location. Random inspections by OCIRT are expected to continue, and violations may undermine future work-authorisation requests for third-country nationals.





