Swiss municipalities are raising alarm bells about the sustainability of the current asylum system, with 31% citing it as a major challenge amid housing shortages and declining public acceptance.

"Qualified people to look after refugees are very difficult to find."
"They are living in a holding pattern and are blocking places that are urgently needed."
The warning lights are flashing red across Switzerland. In a stark revelation that exposes the fragility of our current infrastructure, a staggering 31% of Swiss municipalities now identify the care of asylum seekers as one of their primary operational crises. This is not merely a logistical hiccup; it is a systemic emergency. Claudia Kratochvil, the director of the Association of Swiss Municipalities, has issued a blunt warning of an impending collapse, signaling that local governments are reaching their breaking point.
The situation on the ground remains extremely tense. As housing shortages plague the nation and public acceptance begins to waver, local leaders are left grappling with an equation that no longer balances. The pressure is mounting, and the message from the municipalities is clear: the current trajectory is unsustainable. Without immediate intervention, the administrative backbone of Swiss asylum support risks fracturing under the weight of unprecedented demand.
Desperate times have forced desperate measures. The era of conventional housing for asylum seekers is effectively over in many regions. Municipalities, cities, and cantons are no longer asking if they should use underground civil defense facilities, but how many they can fill. What was once a rare exception has solidified into common practice, a grim testament to the severity of the space shortage.
Compounding this physical lack of space is a sharp decline in social infrastructure. The number of host families has plummeted, removing a vital safety valve for the system. Simultaneously, a critical shortage of skilled workers is hampering efforts to provide adequate care. "Qualified people to look after refugees are very difficult to find," Kratochvil admits. This dual shortage of physical space and human resources has created a perfect storm, leaving local authorities scrambling to fulfill their mandates in increasingly inhospitable conditions.
As municipalities struggle to keep their heads above water, the federal government is threatening to pull the plug on essential funding. The proposed austerity policy, which aims to slash the integration lump sum by half a billion francs annually, has been met with fierce resistance. Kratochvil unequivocally labels this reduction as "not manageable."
Such a massive withdrawal of financial support would land a devastating blow on the budgets of cantons and municipalities already stretched thin. This is not just about numbers on a spreadsheet; it is about the capacity to integrate arrivals and maintain social cohesion. Stripping resources at the precise moment they are most needed demonstrates a disconnect between federal planning and municipal reality. If these cuts proceed, the financial fallout will likely force local governments to make impossible choices between essential services and asylum obligations.
A massive administrative logjam is clogging the arteries of the Swiss asylum system. Currently, over 22,000 asylum applications are pending, creating a paralysis that ripples through every level of government. This figure includes approximately 17,000 people in the standard asylum procedure and another 5,000 in the process for protection status S.
These individuals are stuck in what Kratochvil describes as a "holding pattern," occupying housing and resources that are urgently needed for new arrivals. They are blocking places simply because the paperwork cannot move fast enough. The demand is simple: the federal government must accelerate the examination of applications within federal centers. Until this backlog is cleared, municipalities will continue to bear the burden of a system that is failing to process cases with the necessary speed and efficiency.
Tensions have flared over the federal government's communication—or lack thereof. The recent closure of nine temporary federal asylum centers was executed with inadequate warning, leaving municipalities and cantons in the dark. This lack of transparency has only deepened the rift between local implementers and federal strategists.
However, amidst the chaos, there is a glimmer of strategic realignment. Municipalities are finally being more closely involved in the "overall asylum strategy," a necessary pivot to ensure reality informs policy. All eyes are now on the national asylum summit planned for the fall. This gathering must be more than a talking shop; it needs to produce concrete efficiency measures between the federal government, cantons, and municipalities. The clock is ticking, and the municipalities have made their stance clear: the system must evolve, or it will collapse.