Alpine Cantons Unite Against Proposed Second Home Tax
Swiss mountain regions protest new property tax proposal, warning of CHF277 million revenue losses for alpine communities ahead of September 28 referendum.
Swiss mountain regions protest new property tax proposal, warning of CHF277 million revenue losses for alpine communities ahead of September 28 referendum.

"Unfair, ill-conceived and economically damaging."
"A false and ill-conceived solution."
A storm is brewing in the high country. With the September 28 referendum looming, Switzerland's mountain regions are mounting a fierce resistance against federal tax proposals that they claim threaten their economic survival. The Confederation of Alpine Cantonal Governments has issued a blistering critique of the proposed second home tax, labeling it a direct attack on the financial stability of tourist-heavy regions. This is not merely a bureaucratic disagreement; it is a full-scale political confrontation pitting the unique needs of the Alps against federal standardization.
The controversy centers on the proposed abolition of the imputed rental value tax—a system long debated in Bern. While the federal government pushes for simplification, the alpine cantons argue that the associated "special real tax" on secondary residences is a disastrous trade-off. They warn that this measure disproportionately targets regions that rely heavily on tourism and seasonal residency, effectively punishing them for their geography. As the vote approaches, the divide between the urban plateau and the mountainous periphery has never been starker.
The numbers are staggering. Alpine communities are staring down the barrel of a CHF 277 million cumulative revenue loss. This is not a rounding error; it is a fiscal crater that threatens to undermine public services in Switzerland's most iconic regions. The proposed tax shift, intended to balance the books following the abolition of imputed rental value, fails to account for the specific economic reality of the mountains.
The impact is heavily concentrated. The cantons of Graubünden, Valais, and Ticino alone face a projected shortfall of nearly CHF 150 million. For these regions, where municipal budgets are often tight and dependent on property-related income, such a drop is catastrophic. Local leaders argue that stripping this revenue without a viable replacement will force impossible choices: raising other taxes or slashing essential services. The alpine cantons are effectively being asked to subsidize a tax break that primarily benefits primary homeowners in the lowlands, creating a massive redistribution of wealth away from the mountains.
Authorities are not mincing words. The Confederation of Alpine Cantonal Governments has slammed the federal proposal as "unfair, ill-conceived, and economically damaging." They argue that the introduction of a new real tax to compensate for lost revenue is nothing more than a "false solution"—a bureaucratic band-aid applied to a gaping wound. The resistance is rooted in the belief that the mechanism for taxing second homes is fundamentally flawed and fails to respect the autonomy of the cantons.
This opposition highlights a critical flaw in the federal strategy: a lack of consultation with the regions most affected. By pushing a one-size-fits-all tax policy, Bern risks alienating the very cantons that drive the nation's tourism industry. The alpine governments assert that any tax reform must be approved by national and cantonal parliaments, and they are signaling a protracted legislative battle if their concerns are ignored. They demand a system that recognizes the high infrastructure costs borne by mountain communes, rather than one that drains their coffers.
At the heart of this turmoil is the long-awaited abolition of the imputed rental value tax. For decades, Switzerland has taxed homeowners on the theoretical rent they would earn if they leased their own properties—a system designed to balance the tax burden between renters and owners. The government, backed by Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter, argues that abolishing this tax will reduce household debt and simplify a notoriously complex system. However, the solution creates new winners and losers.
While the Federal Council campaigns for the change, the collateral damage to second-home regions has become the flashpoint of the debate. If the September 28 vote passes, rental values for property owners will fall, but the resulting revenue gap must be filled. The alpine cantons are effectively saying that the price of this simplification is too high if it is paid for by the mountain economy. As the referendum nears, voters must decide whether tax simplification is worth the potential destabilization of Switzerland's tourist heartlands.