Swiss cantons and municipalities are anticipating substantial new costs, estimated at CHF300 million nationwide, as Ukrainians with S protection status start moving to regular social assistance from 2027, prompting calls for federal support.

"Without federal support, this would add about three percent to our municipal tax rate."
"The federal government had over five years to create a clear and sustainable regulation for status S. This has not yet been achieved."
A staggering CHF 300 million bill is looming over Switzerland’s local governments as the 2027 deadline for Ukrainian refugee transitions approaches. Currently, over 71,000 Ukrainians hold the special 'S' protection status, but as this temporary measure matures, the financial responsibility is set to shift violently from the federal government to the cantons and municipalities. This is not a distant concern; it is a present-day emergency for treasurers across the country. The transition marks a pivot from emergency asylum support to regular social assistance, a move that threatens to overwhelm local budgets that were never designed to absorb such a sudden influx of long-term welfare recipients. While the federal government has provided the initial safety net, the looming transfer of costs represents a massive decentralization of financial risk. Cantons are now sounding the alarm, warning that without a renewed federal commitment, the very fabric of local social services could be stretched to a breaking point.
In Canton Aargau, the numbers are already biting: municipalities expect an additional burden of CHF 25 million, a figure that has local leaders panicking. Bruno Tüscher, the mayor of Münchwilen, warns that his town faces a potential 3% spike in the municipal tax rate just to cover these new social costs. This is the reality of the 'S' status transition—it is a direct hit to the Swiss taxpayer's wallet. Meanwhile, in St. Gallen, the Association of Municipalities anticipates a CHF 16 million shortfall. The financial strain is not uniform, but it is universal. In Graubünden, the city of Chur alone expects to shell out CHF 2.2 million annually for roughly 900 refugees. Patrik Degiacomi of the Social Democratic Party calls these 'best-case scenarios,' suggesting the actual figures will likely be revised upward as the reality of long-term integration costs sets in. The disparity between current asylum support—averaging between CHF 13 and CHF 23 per day—and the much higher regular social assistance rates creates a fiscal gap that municipalities simply cannot bridge alone.
Canton Bern is leading a fierce ideological rebellion against the current transition plan, arguing that the shift to regular social assistance undermines the very principle of temporary protection. With 7,500 'S' status holders, Bern estimates that 5,000 will become eligible for B residence permits in 2027, triggering the costly move to the welfare system. Gundekar Giebel, spokesperson for Bern’s social services, has leveled a blistering critique at the federal government, stating they have had five years to create a sustainable regulation and have failed. Bern’s position is clear: these individuals should remain within the asylum social assistance framework to maintain the focus on their eventual return to Ukraine. This policy clash highlights a growing rift in Swiss governance, where the pragmatism of local administration meets the rigid legal frameworks of federal asylum law. The Conference of Social Directors of Central Switzerland has joined the fray, describing the consequences as 'drastic' and noting that welfare costs could nearly double in some regions without immediate federal intervention.
Beyond the balance sheets lies a critical question of human integration and the long-term viability of the Swiss labor market. Experts like Tobias Fritsche from Bern University of Applied Sciences warn that the current system's low daily allowances—often criticized by the Swiss Refugee Council as insufficient—may actually hinder the ability of refugees to enter the workforce. If refugees are trapped in a cycle of poverty-level support, their transition to regular social assistance becomes an inevitability rather than a temporary bridge. The stakes are high: if Switzerland fails to integrate those who can work, the CHF 300 million estimate may just be the tip of the iceberg. As 2027 approaches, the focus is shifting from emergency housing to long-term economic participation. The coming months will determine whether the federal government will heed the desperate calls from the cantons for a shared financial burden, or if the municipalities will be left to navigate this unprecedented fiscal challenge on their own. The Swiss model of federalism is facing a stress test that will define the nation's social policy for a generation.