A new survey reveals a fundamental conflict in Swiss public opinion: a majority (59%) agree there is a housing shortage, yet 68% oppose densifying urban areas, which is a key strategy for creating new living spaces.

"The demand for more housing while simultaneously preventing construction projects is contradictory."
Switzerland is sleepwalking into a housing catastrophe of its own making. While a staggering 59% of the population explicitly acknowledges a critical housing shortage, the nation remains paralyzed by a refusal to embrace the necessary solutions. We are staring down the barrel of a deficit exceeding 50,000 homes by 2026âthe most severe shortage in three decadesâyet the public sentiment is rife with contradiction.
This is not merely a supply chain issue; it is a crisis of will. Driven by high immigration rates and sluggish construction activity, the pressure on the market is intensifying daily. However, a new survey by Comparis exposes a baffling paradox: while the Swiss demand more roofs over their heads, they vehemently reject the construction required to provide them. As the shortage worsens, the gap between the desperate need for living space and the stubborn protection of the status quo threatens to lock the country into a long-term real estate freeze.
In the dense urban centers where the crisis bites hardest, the solution seems obvious: build upwards. Yet, the Swiss public is slamming the brakes on vertical expansion. A significant 50% of respondents flatly oppose the construction of buildings taller than six floors in their communities. This resistance creates an impossible geometry for urban planners who are running out of ground to cover.
In cities, where a crushing 66% of residents report a lack of available housing, the opposition to high-rises effectively handcuffs developers. Only a minorityâ45%âare willing to tolerate taller structures to alleviate the pressure. This 'Vertical Vertigo' means that even as rental prices soar and availability plummets, the skyline remains artificially capped. The refusal to embrace density is not just an aesthetic preference; it is an economic blockade that prevents the market from breathing, forcing demand to spill over into an already saturated suburban landscape.
If we cannot build up, surely we must build out? The answer from the Swiss public is a resounding 'Nein.' A massive 68% of those surveyed reject the densification of urban areas if it means sacrificing green space or reducing the distance between buildings. The protection of local aesthetics and greenery has superseded the fundamental need for shelter, creating a legislative and social gridlock.
Furthermore, two-thirds of respondents oppose rezoning farmland or green areas for new construction. This leaves the housing market in a stranglehold: blocked from the sky and barred from the land. Harry BĂźsser, a real estate expert at Comparis, bluntly characterizes this mindset as 'contradictory,' noting the impossibility of demanding more housing while simultaneously vetoing every viable method to create it. Without a radical shift in public opinion or policy, the preservation of open spaces will come at the direct cost of housing affordability and availability.
The burden of this paradox does not fall equally. It is the youngâthe 'No House Generation'âwho are paying the price for this stubbornness. The shortage is felt most acutely by those aged 18 to 35, with 65% of this demographic reporting a critical lack of options. Unlike the older, settled generations, the youth are crying out for change and are increasingly willing to compromise on tradition for the sake of a roof.
In a stark contrast to the general population, 52% of young people support building higher than six floors to solve the crisis. They are joined by 54% of city residents who see the writing on the wall. However, in the suburbs, support for taller buildings drops to a dismal 39%. As 2026 approaches, the tension between a younger generation desperate for entry into the market and an older demographic protecting their local aesthetics is set to become one of Switzerland's defining social conflicts.