The canton of Basel-Country is exploring a proposal to eliminate naturalisation fees for foreign residents under the age of 25 who apply for Swiss citizenship, potentially following the example set by its sister canton, Basel-City.

"these applicants can become naturalised, regardless of their financial means"
"up to 80 percent of second- and third-generation immigrants want to become naturalised citizens"
Basel-Country stands at a critical legislative juncture, poised to dismantle a prohibitive financial wall that has long separated young residents from Swiss citizenship. In a bold move to prioritize integration over revenue, the canton is exploring a proposal to completely eliminate naturalisation fees for foreign residents under the age of 25. This decisive action follows a motion filed by Juliana Weber Killer, a deputy from the Social Democratic Party, who argues that the path to a Swiss passport should be paved with civic commitment, not gold.
The proposal strikes at the heart of a fundamental inequality. By scrapping these costs, Weber Killer asserts that "these applicants can become naturalised, regardless of their financial means." This is not merely an administrative tweak; it is a potential paradigm shift for the canton, signaling that young people who have grown up here belong here—regardless of their bank balance. As the debate heats up in the cantonal parliament, the message is clear: the price tag on identity may soon be history.
Currently, young adults in Basel-Country grapple with a staggering fee of 1,550 francs—the highest naturalisation cost in all of Northwestern Switzerland. For a young apprentice living on a vocational stipend or a university student balancing tuition with part-time work, this sum is not just expensive; it is often insurmountable. These prohibitive costs represent a significant financial burden, effectively locking out a generation of well-integrated young people from participating fully in the democracy they call home.
The contrast between the current reality and the proposed future is stark. If the motion passes, the financial landscape for these applicants would undergo a dramatic transformation. Instead of facing a four-figure bill, eligible youth would see the cantonal and municipal price tag drop to zero. This shift acknowledges a critical reality: penalizing young adults for their lack of disposable income actively hinders successful integration at the very moment they are most eager to commit to Switzerland.
Money matters, and the data proves it unequivocally. A revealing survey by the Bureau for Labour and Social Policy Studies exposes a massive gap between desire and reality. While a resounding 80 percent of second- and third-generation immigrants express a clear desire to become naturalised citizens, the system is failing to convert this enthusiasm into passports. The primary culprit? The cost.
The numbers paint an alarming picture of exclusion. Among potential applicants under the age of 25, a staggering 70 percent cite high costs as a decisive reason for not applying. This is not a matter of disinterest; it is a matter of affordability. As Lena Liechti, one of the study's authors, points out, the intent is there, but the financial barrier is blocking the way. By maintaining these fees, the canton is effectively telling the majority of its young foreign population that their citizenship is a luxury good rather than a civic right.
Basel-Country is not stepping into the unknown; it is looking to follow the trailblazing path of its neighbor. In 2025, Basel-City took the decisive step of abolishing both cantonal and municipal fees for young adults, setting a new standard for integration policy in the region. Today, young applicants in the city confront a radically different financial reality, paying only the mandatory federal fee of 100 francs.
This disparity between the two half-cantons has created an untenable situation where geography dictates opportunity. While a student in Basel-City can secure their passport for the price of a nice dinner, their peer a few kilometers away in Basel-Country faces a bill fifteen times higher. By aligning its policy with Basel-City, Basel-Country would not only harmonize the region but also send a powerful message of unity and support to its youth population. The blueprint for success exists; the question remains whether Basel-Country has the political will to build it.