A new poll indicates that over three-quarters of the Swiss populace are against a proposed increase in value-added tax (VAT) intended to either provide more funding for the army or to finance a 13th monthly pension payment.

"The increase in spending decided by Parliament is insufficient in the face of the deteriorating security situation."
The Swiss electorate has slammed the door on the government's latest fiscal proposals, delivering a stinging rebuke to plans for higher taxes. A comprehensive new poll reveals that more than three-quarters of the population vehemently oppose a Value Added Tax (VAT) increase intended to bolster the army. This isn't just a simple disagreement; it is a landslide rejection that signals deep-seated frustration with the federal government's reliance on VAT as a catch-all financial solution.
The survey, conducted by the Sotomo research institute for Blick, polled over 15,000 residents across German- and French-speaking Switzerland. The results are unambiguous: the public is not willing to shoulder a 0.8 percentage point hike to fill federal coffers. With a margin of error of just +/- 1.3%, these figures represent a concrete mandate against the current funding strategy. As the cost of living remains a concern, the idea of squeezing households for an additional CHF 31 billion over the next decade is proving to be politically toxic.
While global security tensions rise, the Swiss public remains unconvinced that throwing money at the armed forces is the answer. The government's proposal to hike VAT from 8.1% to 8.9% to generate billions for an armaments fund has been met with profound distrust. A staggering two-thirds of respondents indicated they do not believe the army would use these additional resources wisely or effectively.
This crisis of confidence poses a severe challenge for Defence Minister Martin Pfister, who has argued that current spending levels are "insufficient" given the deteriorating security landscape. The disconnect is palpable: while the Minister pushes for a budget surpassing 1% of GDP by 2032, 44% of voters view such increases as excessive. The public is not merely rejecting the tax; they are questioning the competency of the institution demanding it. Without a transparent roadmap to efficiency, the military's plea for a CHF 31 billion injection is falling on deaf ears.
The rejection of tax hikes extends beyond the barracks and into the pockets of retirees. Even the financing for the popular 13th monthly AHV/AVS pension payment is under fire. The poll indicates that two-thirds of the Swiss populace oppose a 0.7 percentage point VAT increase to fund this social benefit. While the 13th pension itself was approved, the method of paying for itâvia a regressive consumption taxâis facing a brick wall of opposition.
Only 13% of respondents were "clearly in favour" of the measure, a dismally low figure for a social security initiative. This creates a complex legislative deadlock. The public demands robust social security but refuses to sanction the specific mechanism the government has chosen to fund it. This "have your cake and eat it too" dynamic forces Parliament back to the drawing board, as the electorate signals that their limit for VAT contributions has been reached, regardless of the cause.
In a rare display of cross-party consensus, opposition to the VAT hike bridges the ideological divide from the far-left to the far-right. The survey data reveals that voters from the Social Democratic Party (SP), the Green Party, and the conservative Swiss Peopleâs Party (SVP) are united in their rejection. It is an unprecedented alignment where environmentalists and fiscal conservatives find themselves fighting the same battle against the federal government's proposal.
The Radical Liberals (FDP) and Liberal Greens (GLP) also show significant opposition, leaving the Centre party as the solitary political entity with majority support for the measure (45% in favour). This isolation of the Centre party highlights the fragility of the government's coalition on this issue. When the SVP's budget hawks and the SP's social defenders agree that a policy is flawed, the government faces a nearly insurmountable hurdle in the upcoming legislative sessions.
The clock is ticking toward a decisive showdown. With a popular vote scheduled for the summer of 2027, just prior to the federal elections, the government is on a collision course with the electorate. The Federal Department of Defence is expected to present a formal proposal by the end of March, but these poll numbers suggest the plan is dead on arrival unless drastic changes are made.
If the current sentiment holds, the administration risks a humiliating defeat at the ballot box. The requirement to raise CHF 31 billion is real, but the public's refusal to fund it via VAT is equally tangible. The government must now scramble to find alternative funding solutions or convince a skeptical public that the security threat outweighs the financial burden. As it stands, the Swiss people have drawn a line in the sand: national defense and social security are priorities, but not at the cost of an ever-expanding Value Added Tax.