Swiss Housing Vacancy Rate Hits 1% Amid Growing Shortage
Switzerland's housing crisis deepens as national vacancy rate falls to 1%, with Geneva recording lowest availability at 0.34% and significant declines in 19 cantons.
Switzerland's housing crisis deepens as national vacancy rate falls to 1%, with Geneva recording lowest availability at 0.34% and significant declines in 19 cantons.

"Across Switzerland, 48,455 flats were vacant in June. This means that the vacancy rate has fallen to 1%."
"The supply of vacant rental flats has fallen continuously over the past five years."
Switzerland has officially hit a critical psychological and physical limit. As of June 2025, the national housing vacancy rate has plummeted to a staggering 1%, confirming that the country is grappling with a severe and deepening housing crisis. The Federal Statistical Office (FSO) revealed on Tuesday that only 48,455 flats remain vacant across the entire nationāa sharp 6.8% drop compared to just one year ago.
This is not a sudden blip; it is a systemic contraction. We are witnessing the fifth consecutive year of decline, with availability erasing 0.72 percentage points since 2021. The market is tightening its grip with unprecedented speed, leaving prospective tenants and buyers with fewer options than ever before. With nearly 3,500 fewer flats available than last year, the window of opportunity for finding a home in Switzerland is closing fast. The era of easy relocation is over; the era of scarcity has arrived.
If you are hunting for an apartment in Switzerland's economic hubs, the statistics are nothing short of grim. Geneva has recorded the country's lowest availability, with a suffocating vacancy rate of just 0.34%. This is effectively zero vacancy, meaning the market is paralyzed. Following closely behind are the financial powerhouses of Zug at 0.42% and Zurich at 0.48%.
In these cities, the housing shortage is no longer a riskāit is the reality. Overall, less than 1% of flats are vacant in 15 different cantons, creating a 'red zone' of unavailability that covers the majority of the country's economic engines. The competition is fierce, immediate, and unrelenting. Zurich, often touted for its quality of life, is now cementing its reputation as the world capital of housing shortages, forcing residents to compete in 'Hunger Games' style viewings for the few remaining units.
For the vast majority of Swiss residents who rent, the situation is deteriorating at an alarming pace. The number of unoccupied flats offered for rent has crashed by 8% in a single year. On June 1, 2025, only 37,194 rental flats were on the marketāa reduction of over 3,200 units compared to the previous year.
This contraction is hitting families the hardest, as the FSO notes that most vacant flats are three or four-room units, yet even this supply is evaporating. Furthermore, the pipeline of relief is drying up. The availability of new-build flatsāthose less than two years oldāhas also fallen by 6%, leaving just 3,959 modern units available nationwide. The message to the market is clear: construction is not keeping pace with demand, and the rental trap is tightening.
While the major cities suffocate, a stark divide has emerged across the Swiss landscape. In contrast to the urban squeeze, the cantons of Jura and Solothurn stand as the only regions with vacancy rates surpassing the 2% mark. Jura leads with a 3.03% vacancy rate, followed by Solothurn at 2.05%.
However, these outliers are the exception, not the rule. In 19 cantons, the vacancy rate has decreased significantly compared to the previous year, while only six saw a marginal increase. Graubünden remains unchanged, holding its ground. This data paints a picture of a two-speed Switzerland: a frantic, overcrowded center and a periphery that still has room to breatheāthough for how long remains the question as the pressure from the cities inevitably spills outward.