
The Swiss State Secretariat for Migration (SEM) has confirmed that 104 Ukrainian nationals have been refused the special S-protection status since new regional criteria took effect on 1 November 2025. Under the revised rules, only people whose last residence was in territories occupied by Russian forces or active combat zones qualify automatically; applicants from comparatively safer western regions are now deemed returnable.
Individuals and employers looking for practical guidance on Switzerland’s tightening entry requirements can turn to VisaHQ, which offers up-to-date information, document checklists, and application support for visas and residence permits. The service streamlines the process for those affected by policy changes, helping them stay compliant and prepared; full details are available at https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/
SEM spokesperson Magdalena Rast told public broadcaster SRF that, in many cases, applicants withdrew their requests once officials explained the low probability of success. Of the 104 formal refusals, eight individuals subsequently obtained temporary admission on humanitarian grounds because return was judged impossible. The tightening follows parliamentary pressure to curb Switzerland’s intake after more than 83,000 Ukrainians arrived in 2022-25. Cantonal authorities complained that accommodation and integration budgets were under strain, while the right-wing Swiss People’s Party argued that blanket protection encouraged ‘refugee shopping’. Human-rights NGOs warn that differential treatment based on region of origin risks violating the EU-wide Temporary Protection Directive, which Switzerland mirrors through Schengen association agreements. They also fear a shift of responsibility onto neighbouring countries as rejected Ukrainians move on. For employers, the change complicates workforce planning. Many Ukrainian S-status holders have been filling acute labour shortages in IT and healthcare; future recruits from safer regions may now face longer asylum procedures or outright refusal, reducing the available talent pool.
Individuals and employers looking for practical guidance on Switzerland’s tightening entry requirements can turn to VisaHQ, which offers up-to-date information, document checklists, and application support for visas and residence permits. The service streamlines the process for those affected by policy changes, helping them stay compliant and prepared; full details are available at https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/
SEM spokesperson Magdalena Rast told public broadcaster SRF that, in many cases, applicants withdrew their requests once officials explained the low probability of success. Of the 104 formal refusals, eight individuals subsequently obtained temporary admission on humanitarian grounds because return was judged impossible. The tightening follows parliamentary pressure to curb Switzerland’s intake after more than 83,000 Ukrainians arrived in 2022-25. Cantonal authorities complained that accommodation and integration budgets were under strain, while the right-wing Swiss People’s Party argued that blanket protection encouraged ‘refugee shopping’. Human-rights NGOs warn that differential treatment based on region of origin risks violating the EU-wide Temporary Protection Directive, which Switzerland mirrors through Schengen association agreements. They also fear a shift of responsibility onto neighbouring countries as rejected Ukrainians move on. For employers, the change complicates workforce planning. Many Ukrainian S-status holders have been filling acute labour shortages in IT and healthcare; future recruits from safer regions may now face longer asylum procedures or outright refusal, reducing the available talent pool.