Basel-City launches innovative environmental program offering CHF 1,500 credit for public transport or bikes to residents who permanently give up their cars.

"The campaign is intended to help achieve Basel’s climate protection target of 'net zero by 2037'."
Basel-City has officially pulled the trigger on a radical eco-strategy, offering a lucrative CHF 1,500 reward to residents who permanently ditch their vehicles. As of Monday, September 22, 2025, the canton is not just asking for change; it is financing it. This aggressive move by the Department of Construction and Transport (BVD) marks a pivotal moment in Swiss urban planning, transforming the abstract concept of sustainability into immediate financial gain for citizens.
The offer is straightforward and compelling: trade in your license plate for a credit equivalent to roughly $1,890. This credit empowers former drivers to embrace the city's extensive public transport network, join car-sharing schemes, or purchase a bicycle. It is a direct challenge to the status quo of private car ownership in the city center. By monetizing the transition to green transport, Basel is setting a bold precedent that other cantons will undoubtedly watch closely. The message is clear: the era of the private car is waning, and the city is willing to pay to accelerate its departure.
With a war chest of CHF 700,000 released from the transport fund this past March, the Basel government is putting serious capital behind its environmental rhetoric. However, this financial injection comes with a strict cap, creating a race against time for interested residents. The funds are sufficient to cover exactly 400 environmental bonuses, meaning this is a limited-time opportunity for the quick and the committed.
This scarcity adds a layer of urgency to the program. It is not an open-ended handout but a targeted strike designed to remove hundreds of cars from Basel’s streets immediately. The program is slated to run for two years, but given the attractive payout, demand is expected to surge, potentially exhausting the budget well before the 2027 deadline. This "first-come, first-served" approach underscores the government's desire for rapid, measurable action rather than gradual adoption. For the 400 residents who secure a spot, the financial relief is substantial; for the city, the return on investment is a cleaner, less congested urban environment.
The state demands a concrete sacrifice in exchange for its support: a binding three-year contract to live car-free. This is not a loophole-ridden scheme for temporary cash; it is a lifestyle ultimatum. To qualify, applicants must be between the ages of 18 and 80, reside in the canton, and—crucially—must have owned a private car for at least one year prior to applying. This ensures the program targets established car owners rather than those who never intended to drive.
Participants must sign a formal declaration of consent, legally agreeing to refrain from registering a new vehicle for 36 months. This requirement filters out the casual opportunists and zeroes in on residents ready to make a structural change to their mobility habits. By locking participants into a three-year cycle, Basel is betting that after 1,000 days of using bikes, trams, and car-sharing, these residents will never look back. It is a behavioral experiment on a municipal scale, designed to break the habit of car dependency once and for all.
This initiative is a critical cog in the machine driving toward Basel’s ambitious climate protection target: Net Zero by 2037. While other regions aim for 2050, Basel is sprinting, and this car deregistration scheme is a tangible accelerator. The transport sector remains one of the most stubborn sources of urban emissions, and the BVD knows that passive encouragement is no longer sufficient to meet these aggressive deadlines.
By directly removing vehicles from the road, the canton is attacking the emissions problem at its source. Every deregistered car represents a permanent reduction in CO2, noise pollution, and spatial congestion. This program signals a shift from "managing" traffic to actively reducing it. As Basel confronts the climate reality, this CHF 1,500 bonus serves as both a carrot for residents and a statement of intent to the world: the city of the future is being built today, and it has no room for the internal combustion engine.