The Federal Housing Office has announced a series of measures, including boosting a revolving fund for non-profit construction, to combat the growing shortage of affordable housing that is now affecting the entire country, not just urban centers.

"The shortage is no longer confined to the cities, but is affecting the whole country."
"This measure will enable us to meet the demand for loans, which has doubled in recent years."
The era of easy living in Switzerland is officially over. The Federal Housing Office (FHO) has sounded the alarm on a crisis that is no longer limited to the high-rent districts of Zurich or Geneva—it has metastasized across the entire nation. In a stark revelation this Thursday, FHO Director Martin Tschirren confirmed what thousands of house-hunters already feared: the national vacancy rate has plummeted to a suffocating 1% as of 2025, a sharp drop from 1.72% just five years prior.
This is not merely a statistical correction; it is a social squeeze tightening its grip on the Swiss populace. While low-income earners have long borne the brunt of the property market, the crisis is now aggressively encroaching on the middle class. Rents have surged by a staggering 23.7% between 2009 and 2023, far outpacing wage growth in many sectors. The message from Bern is clear: the shortage is systemic, nationwide, and demands immediate intervention before the social fabric begins to fray.
Facing mounting pressure, the Federal Council has finally played its hand, betting that a cash injection into the non-profit sector can cool the overheating market. The cornerstone of this new strategy is a significant boost to the revolving fund—the financial engine used to grant loans to non-profit building owners for construction and renovation. The government has committed to increasing this fund by CHF 150 million starting in 2030.
"This measure will enable us to meet the demand for loans, which has doubled in recent years," Tschirren stated, acknowledging the desperate thirst for capital among developers. In addition to the fund boost, the government has moved to protect existing support structures, deciding in December to maintain the funding envelope for public housing guarantees despite broader savings plans. It is a calculated move to incentivize the construction of affordable units without directly nationalizing the market, relying instead on non-profit partners to do the heavy lifting.
Despite the government's confident posturing, the numbers reveal a daunting chasm between policy and reality. Currently, the working capital provided by the state brings approximately 1,400 new homes to the market annually. However, FHO Director Tschirren admits the actual requirement is a staggering 5,000 to 6,000 homes per year just to tread water against soaring demand.
This discrepancy represents a shortfall of nearly 75%. Every year that production lags behind these targets, the pressure in the cooker intensifies. The 1,400 units currently being delivered are a drop in the ocean compared to the tidal wave of need driven by population growth and urbanization. While the new funds aim to close this gap, the timeline—with the CHF 150 million boost only kicking in from 2030—suggests that Swiss renters may face several more years of fierce competition and climbing prices before relief arrives.
Industry watchdogs are not applauding; they are demanding more. The Swiss Association of Public-Benefit Housing Developers has come out swinging, labeling the Federal Council's plan as woefully insufficient given the scale of the emergency. In a sharp rebuke, the association argued that the CHF 150 million increase is a half-measure, asserting that at least CHF 300 million is required to make a dent in the crisis.
The disagreement extends to credit guarantees as well. While the Federal Council estimates CHF 1.92 billion is needed to back construction, the federation places the figure at CHF 2.3 billion—a discrepancy of nearly 400 million francs. As the government pats itself on the back for avoiding cuts, housing advocates argue that maintaining the status quo is not enough when the market is breaking records for unaffordability. The battle lines are drawn: Bern believes in steady progress, while the housing sector warns that without a more radical financial commitment, the Swiss dream of affordable living may soon be out of reach for good.