
In Brussels on 2 March 2026, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Swiss Confederation President Guy Parmelin put their signatures to the long-awaited “Bilaterals III” accords. The package updates the 1999 free-movement agreement, four existing internal-market treaties (land and air transport, mutual recognition of standards, and free movement of persons) and adds entirely new chapters on electricity trading, food safety, cross-border health security and Switzerland’s participation in EU space and research programmes.(ggba.swiss)
For globally mobile employers the biggest headline is legal certainty. Companies will again be able to post staff across the EU–Swiss border without the patchwork of cantonal exemptions that emerged after talks collapsed in 2021. Under the new rules work permits for intra-company transferees and service providers can be processed online in as little as five working days, while quotas for short-term assignments (up to 90 days) are scrapped altogether. A joint committee will monitor labour-market safeguards, but Brussels dropped its earlier insistence on automatic dynamic alignment—meaning Bern can still run its own labour inspections before issuing a residence permit.
The agreement also tackles a pain-point for cross-border commuters (Frontaliers). From 2027 a single digital social-security certificate will replace the paper A1 form, easing payroll compliance for employers with staff who live in France, Germany or Italy but work in Switzerland. The electricity chapter, meanwhile, allows Swiss utilities to bid into the EU internal market, reducing the risk of winter supply shortages that have prompted emergency plans in recent years.
The reforms will make mobility easier, but the evolving visa and permit landscape can still be daunting. VisaHQ’s dedicated Switzerland team (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) can guide companies and travellers through the online work-permit filings, social-security certificates and any remaining cantonal formalities, consolidating everything in one portal so HR departments stay compliant from day one of Bilaterals III.
Ratification is not a formality. The Swiss Federal Council will present the deals to Parliament this month; both chambers must approve them and opponents can still force a referendum. EU consent is required in the European Parliament. Even so, the signature ends five years of institutional limbo and is widely seen by business chambers as a breakthrough that restores Switzerland’s reputation for predictability.(miragenews.com)
Multinational HR teams should start mapping current assignment policies against the new timelines. Transitional measures mean most mobility-related provisions will enter into force in mid-2027, but early alignment on posted-worker notifications and health-insurance coordination begins as soon as the accords receive provisional application—likely in early 2027 depending on referendum risk.
For globally mobile employers the biggest headline is legal certainty. Companies will again be able to post staff across the EU–Swiss border without the patchwork of cantonal exemptions that emerged after talks collapsed in 2021. Under the new rules work permits for intra-company transferees and service providers can be processed online in as little as five working days, while quotas for short-term assignments (up to 90 days) are scrapped altogether. A joint committee will monitor labour-market safeguards, but Brussels dropped its earlier insistence on automatic dynamic alignment—meaning Bern can still run its own labour inspections before issuing a residence permit.
The agreement also tackles a pain-point for cross-border commuters (Frontaliers). From 2027 a single digital social-security certificate will replace the paper A1 form, easing payroll compliance for employers with staff who live in France, Germany or Italy but work in Switzerland. The electricity chapter, meanwhile, allows Swiss utilities to bid into the EU internal market, reducing the risk of winter supply shortages that have prompted emergency plans in recent years.
The reforms will make mobility easier, but the evolving visa and permit landscape can still be daunting. VisaHQ’s dedicated Switzerland team (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) can guide companies and travellers through the online work-permit filings, social-security certificates and any remaining cantonal formalities, consolidating everything in one portal so HR departments stay compliant from day one of Bilaterals III.
Ratification is not a formality. The Swiss Federal Council will present the deals to Parliament this month; both chambers must approve them and opponents can still force a referendum. EU consent is required in the European Parliament. Even so, the signature ends five years of institutional limbo and is widely seen by business chambers as a breakthrough that restores Switzerland’s reputation for predictability.(miragenews.com)
Multinational HR teams should start mapping current assignment policies against the new timelines. Transitional measures mean most mobility-related provisions will enter into force in mid-2027, but early alignment on posted-worker notifications and health-insurance coordination begins as soon as the accords receive provisional application—likely in early 2027 depending on referendum risk.