The number of people utilizing assisted suicide services reached 1,421 in German and Italian-speaking Switzerland in 2025, a notable increase from the previous year. The organization Exit attributes the trend to an aging society facing serious illnesses.

"Attributes the growing number of assisted suicides to, among other things, an ageing society, which is confronted with seriously disabling illnesses or disabilities."
1,421 lives. That is the definitive number of individuals in German and Italian-speaking Switzerland who chose to end their lives with the assistance of Exit in 2025. This figure represents a stark and undeniable escalation from the previous year, where 1,235 cases were registered. The trajectory is clear: the demand for self-determined death is not merely persisting; it is accelerating.
Switzerland is witnessing a societal shift. The organization Exit attributes this upward momentum directly to the demographic reality of an aging population grappling with serious, debilitating illnesses. As the calendar turned to 2026, the urgency did not dissipate. In January alone, a staggering 2,400 people applied for membership cards in the German-speaking region. This is not a fringe movement; it is a mainstream phenomenon reflecting a profound change in how the Swiss populace views the end of life.
The average age of those seeking a dignified exit has hit a new milestone: 80 years old. This marks a slight but symbolic increase from 79.5 in 2024, signaling that the decision to end one's life is increasingly becoming a consideration for the octogenarian demographic. The gender divide remains pronounced, with women continuing to outnumber men in utilizing these servicesâ818 women compared to 603 men in 2025.
The sheer scale of Exit's reach is becoming impossible to ignore. By the end of 2025, the organization boasted a massive membership base of 195,836 people across the German and Italian-speaking cantonsâan 8% jump in just twelve months. Over the course of a single year, 14,189 new members joined the ranks, solidifying Exit's position as a critical pillar in the Swiss healthcare and ethical landscape.
While terminal cancer remains the primary driver for assisted suicide, accounting for 32% of all cases (461 individuals), a more complex crisis is emerging. Polymorbidityâthe presence of multiple chronic conditionsâis driving a significant portion of the increase. In 2025, 326 elderly individuals cited multiple disorders as their reason for choosing death, a dramatic leap from 205 cases the year prior.
This 23% share of total cases highlights a critical challenge for the Swiss healthcare system: patients are not just dying of singular diseases; they are suffering from the cumulative burden of age. These are individuals worn down by a combination of ailments that, while perhaps not immediately fatal on their own, collectively render life unbearable. The sharp rise in polymorbidity cases suggests that quality of life, rather than just terminal diagnosis, is becoming the decisive factor.
Overwhelmingly, the Swiss are choosing to die within the sanctuary of their own walls. A massive 75% of all assisted suicides in 2025 took place in private homes, reinforcing the desire for comfort and familiarity in one's final moments. In contrast, only 20% (278 cases) occurred within nursing homes, highlighting a potential gap between institutional care and patient preference.
Regionally, the figures present a study in contrast. While the national trend is skyrocketing, the southern and eastern regions remain stable. Ticino recorded 28 casesâactually one fewer than the previous yearâwhile GraubĂźnden held steady at 35. This disparity suggests that while the national conversation is shifting rapidly, local cultural or demographic nuances still play a pivotal role in the adoption of assisted suicide services.