
Brussels took a decisive step toward reshaping the way people and goods move between Switzerland and the European Union on 24 February 2026. In a unanimous decision, EU ministers gave the European Commission the mandate to sign a sweeping bundle of 18 agreements—informally dubbed “Bilaterals III”—that update existing deals on free movement of persons, air and land transport and mutual recognition of conformity assessment, while opening entirely new chapters on food safety, public health and electricity cooperation. At the heart of the package is a modernised Free Movement of Persons Agreement. Draft texts seen by mobility consultants confirm that Switzerland will automatically align future residence-permit categories and social-security coordination rules with EU law, reducing administrative friction for intra-company transfers and frontier workers.
At this stage, businesses and individuals who want to stay ahead of the coming changes can rely on VisaHQ’s Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) to track implementation dates, verify document requirements and obtain the correct visas or residence permits. The platform’s real-time alerts and concierge services simplify applications for work, study or family reunification, ensuring travellers remain compliant as the new Bilaterals III measures roll out.
A parallel institutional protocol sets up a joint governance system with mandatory arbitration—something Brussels has long demanded to guarantee uniform application of rules at airports, rail terminals and cantonal migration offices. Corporate travel managers will welcome the revised Air Transport and Land Transport protocols. The air accord removes the last remaining restrictions on wet-leasing and grants Swiss carriers cabotage rights for cargo within the EU, provided reciprocal rights are offered on Swiss territory. The land-transport add-ons introduce digital-only CMR consignment notes and recognise EU smart-tachograph data for Swiss road-side inspections, simplifying compliance for logistics firms operating across the Rhine corridor. Entry into force still hinges on Bern. The Federal Council must submit the texts to Parliament and, if required, to a facultative referendum. Nonetheless, the Council of the EU’s green light provides the legal basis for provisional application of certain technical chapters as early as mid-2026. Multinationals headquartered in Switzerland are therefore advising mobile employees to monitor canton-by-canton implementation timelines, particularly for accompanying-family rights and recognition of professional qualifications. For globally mobile talent, the deal offers the prospect of seamless business travel, improved social-security portability and greater legal certainty—cementing Switzerland’s position as a regional talent hub while giving EU companies easier access to the Swiss market.
At this stage, businesses and individuals who want to stay ahead of the coming changes can rely on VisaHQ’s Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) to track implementation dates, verify document requirements and obtain the correct visas or residence permits. The platform’s real-time alerts and concierge services simplify applications for work, study or family reunification, ensuring travellers remain compliant as the new Bilaterals III measures roll out.
A parallel institutional protocol sets up a joint governance system with mandatory arbitration—something Brussels has long demanded to guarantee uniform application of rules at airports, rail terminals and cantonal migration offices. Corporate travel managers will welcome the revised Air Transport and Land Transport protocols. The air accord removes the last remaining restrictions on wet-leasing and grants Swiss carriers cabotage rights for cargo within the EU, provided reciprocal rights are offered on Swiss territory. The land-transport add-ons introduce digital-only CMR consignment notes and recognise EU smart-tachograph data for Swiss road-side inspections, simplifying compliance for logistics firms operating across the Rhine corridor. Entry into force still hinges on Bern. The Federal Council must submit the texts to Parliament and, if required, to a facultative referendum. Nonetheless, the Council of the EU’s green light provides the legal basis for provisional application of certain technical chapters as early as mid-2026. Multinationals headquartered in Switzerland are therefore advising mobile employees to monitor canton-by-canton implementation timelines, particularly for accompanying-family rights and recognition of professional qualifications. For globally mobile talent, the deal offers the prospect of seamless business travel, improved social-security portability and greater legal certainty—cementing Switzerland’s position as a regional talent hub while giving EU companies easier access to the Swiss market.