Switzerland will introduce a transit tax for vehicles crossing the country without stopping, following parliamentary approval. The measure, aimed at curbing traffic on the congested north-south axis through the Gotthard, will have its fee adjusted based on traffic density and time of day.

"Even if such a tax could be designed to comply with international law, it would be unconstitutional."
"The Federal Constitution provides for motorway use to be tax-free, with the exception of the vignette and the heavy vehicle fee."
In a crushing display of political will, the House of Representatives has voted 173 to 13 to impose a controversial transit tax on foreign vehicles, signaling a definitive end to Switzerland's era as a free thoroughfare for Europe. Defying the Federal Council's cautious advice, lawmakers have delivered a landslide mandate that prioritizes Swiss quality of life over open borders. This aggressive legislative move targets drivers who treat the nation merely as a shortcut, crossing from border to border without contributing a single franc to the local economy beyond the annual vignette.
The sheer scale of the majorityâover 90% of the chamberâunderscores the boiling frustration within the Federal Palace regarding unchecked transit traffic. While the government and the Liberal Greens urged restraint, citing international complexities, the parliament's message is undeniable: Switzerland is no longer willing to absorb Europe's traffic burden for free. This decision marks a pivotal shift in Swiss transport policy, placing immediate pressure on the administration to implement a system that distinguishes between a tourist bringing value to the cantons and a transient driver clogging the arteries of the nation.
The legendary Gotthard tunnel, long the suffocating bottleneck of Europe's north-south axis, is the primary target of this radical new fiscal weapon. The approved measure introduces a dynamic, density-based fee structure designed to break the chokehold of holiday traffic. No longer a flat rate, the cost of crossing Switzerland will surge during peak hours and high-density days, hitting drivers where it hurts mostâtheir walletsâexactly when traffic is heaviest.
This is not just a tax; it is a behavior-modification tool. By linking the fee to real-time traffic density and the time of day, authorities aim to flatten the curve of the notorious multi-hour jams that plague the Alps. The logic is ruthless but necessary: if you want to drive through the heart of Switzerland during the busiest exodus of the year, you must pay a premium. This 'smart tolling' approach mirrors congestion pricing seen in major global metropolises but applies it on a massive, alpine scale, forcing foreign drivers to reconsider their routes or their timing before they even reach the border.
The driving force behind this legislative earthquake is Marco Chiesa, the Ticino parliamentarian who has successfully championed the frustrations of Switzerland's Italian-speaking canton. For decades, Ticino has functioned as the waiting room for the rest of Europe, its highways paralyzed by caravans of Dutch, German, and French tourists. Chiesa's motion, now ratified by the House, is a direct counter-attack against this logistical siege.
The political narrative here is clear: Ticino refuses to be collateral damage in Europe's vacation plans. By pushing this motion through, the southern canton has successfully leveraged federal power to address a local crisis. The overwhelming support from fellow lawmakers suggests a unified national front, acknowledging that the gridlock in the south is a Swiss problem, not just a Ticinese one. This victory for Chiesa is a significant assertion of cantonal rights, demanding that the federal government prioritize the mobility of its own citizens over the convenience of international transit.
Despite the parliamentary triumph, a constitutional storm is brewing. Critics, led by the Liberal Greens and backed by the Federal Council, warn that the measure is a legal minefield. "Even if such a tax could be designed to comply with international law, it would be unconstitutional," argued Barbara Schaffner, pointing to the Federal Constitution's guarantee of tax-free motorway use. The government now faces the Herculean task of reconciling this popular mandate with the rigid framework of Swiss law.
Furthermore, the logistical implications are staggering. Opponents predict an administrative nightmare at the borders, requiring a system capable of distinguishing a 'transit' vehicle from a 'tourist' vehicle instantly. Every border crossingâfrom major highways to quiet country roadsâwould theoretically require monitoring to enforce the tax. While the parliament has waved the green flag, the practical reality of implementing such a complex, potentially discriminatory system could tie the administration in knots for years, turning border control into a bureaucratic bottleneck rivaling the traffic jams themselves.