The Swiss Federal Council is planning a temporary 0.8-percentage-point increase in Value-Added Tax (VAT) to finance a substantial CHF 31 billion boost in military and security spending over the next decade. The proposal aims to address national security preparedness, with a detailed plan expected in March.

"Switzerland is ill-prepared for an international conflict and could itself become a target."
"Security underpins political freedom, prosperity and democracy."
Switzerland is facing a staggering reality check. In a move that signals a definitive end to complacency, the Federal Council has unveiled a plan to raise an additional CHF 31 billion over the next decade to overhaul the nation's defenses. The governmentâs message is blunt and alarming: we are not ready. Defence Minister Martin Pfister has explicitly warned that the country is "ill-prepared" for international conflict, revealing that currently, only one-third of the armed forces are adequately equipped to defend Swiss soil.
This is not merely a budget adjustment; it is a fundamental restructuring of national priorities. While defense spending was already slated to hit 1% of GDP by 2032, the government has conceded that this trajectory is woefully insufficient against the backdrop of modern threats. The proposed solution is a temporary, yet significant, 0.8-percentage-point hike in Value-Added Tax (VAT). The administration argues that security is the bedrock of Swiss prosperity, and without this massive injection of capital, the very freedom that underpins the economy is at risk.
To generate billions without shattering the federal budget, the government has chosen the "least harmful" poison: taxing consumption. The plan rejects increasing payroll taxes or loosening the debt brake, opting instead to place the burden directly on the consumer. This 0.8-percentage-point surge is projected to generate roughly CHF 2.2 billion in 2028 alone, escalating to between CHF 3 billion and CHF 3.6 billion annually through 2038.
Ministers are acutely aware of the strain this places on households, yet they maintain that alternative measures would inflict deeper wounds on the economy. By funneling this revenue into a dedicated, time-bound armaments fund, the Federal Council aims to bypass the gridlock of annual budget fights. This fund will have the authority to borrow, provided every cent of debt is repaid by the 2038 deadline. It is a calculated financial maneuver designed to deliver immediate liquidity for a military playing a dangerous game of catch-up.
The military's purchasing power is being eroded by a brutal economic reality: inflation. Prices for critical military hardware have skyrocketed by as much as 40% in some sectors, driven by surging global demand and supply chain bottlenecks. The government is not just fighting potential adversaries; it is fighting a market where Switzerland is not a priority customer. To secure production slots for long-range defense systems and hybrid warfare tools, the state must pay advance installments immediately.
Nowhere is this crisis more visible than in the F-35 fighter jet program. The government has been forced to abandon its original plan to purchase 36 aircraft as total costs threaten to obliterate earlier estimates. A revised decision is imminent, but the message is clear: the cost of air superiority is climbing faster than the budget can keep up. The focus is now shifting aggressively toward weapons procurement to address "critical shortfalls," particularly regarding long-range attacksâthreats that officials now consider the most likely scenarios facing the Confederation.
The proposal is set to ignite a fierce political firestorm leading up to a decisive public vote in the summer of 2027. Because a VAT increase necessitates a constitutional amendment, the final word belongs to the Swiss people. The plan faces stiff resistance from a fractured political landscape: the Left opposes the burden on lower-income households, while factions of the Right balk at tax hikes of any kind. Currently, only the Centre Party has thrown its full weight behind the proposal, leaving the Green Liberals undecided and the outcome uncertain.
Despite the headwinds, the Defence Minister projects confidence. The timeline is tight: consultation ends this March, parliamentary debate heats up in autumn, and if the voters approve the measure in 2027, the tax hike hits in 2028. This would mark the most significant VAT increase since 1999, surpassing the recent 2024 hike used to shore up pensions. The government is betting that the electorate's fear of instability will outweigh their distaste for higher taxes.
Rolling back taxes is often a political myth, but Switzerland stands as a rare counter-example. In 2011, a temporary VAT hike for disability insurance was successfully removed after voters rejected its extension in 2017. The government is leveraging this history to promise that the military tax will indeed be temporary. However, the context has changed dramatically. The threats facing Switzerland today are not actuarial tables, but geopolitical upheavals.
This proposal represents more than a fiscal adjustment; it is a recognition that the era of low-cost security is over. By committing to a CHF 31 billion surge, Switzerland is signaling that its armed neutrality must be armed to the teeth to remain credible. As the nation grapples with the dual pressures of a 13th pension payment and soaring defense costs, the Swiss people must decide: is the price of a fortified Switzerland worth the hit to their wallets?