Switzerland's Largest Free Newspaper Goes Digital-Only
20 Minutes, Switzerland's most-read print newspaper, announces end of physical edition by late 2025, marking significant shift in Swiss media landscape despite profitable operations.
20 Minutes, Switzerland's most-read print newspaper, announces end of physical edition by late 2025, marking significant shift in Swiss media landscape despite profitable operations.

"The move is less about failure than adaptation."
"The business case for print no longer holds."
Switzerlandâs morning ritual is about to change forever. In a move that sends shockwaves through the domestic media landscape, the iconic blue distribution boxes of 20 Minutes (20 Minuten) will vanish from railway stations and street corners by late 2025. This is not merely a formatting change; it is the end of Switzerland's largest print newspaper as we know it. For decades, the free daily has been a ubiquitous companion for commuters, but the TX Group has officially signaled that the era of physical news consumption is rapidly collapsing.
While traditional dailies have slowly bled circulation for years, 20 Minutes was an outlier, dominating the market with its aggressive free-distribution model. However, the physical paper is now on a definitive countdown. The decision marks a critical inflection point for Swiss media: if the country's most widely distributed paper cannot sustain a print run, the medium itself faces an existential crisis. The familiar sight of commuters grabbing a paper from the blue bin is destined to become a nostalgic memory.
This is not a story of failure; it is a calculated execution of print media. Paradoxically, 20 Minutes currently boasts the highest margins of any daily newspaper in the massive TX Group portfolio. Yet, even robust profitability cannot shield the publication from the ruthless economics of modern distribution. The paper is profitable today, but the trajectory of rising costs is undeniable.
Printing and logistics costs are soaring, squeezing the viability of a model that relies on physical distribution. Simultaneously, the advertising landscape has shifted dramatically. Advertisers are abandoning the broad, scattergun approach of print for the precise, measurable targeting of digital platforms. The TX Group has concluded that the business case for print "no longer holds," prioritizing long-term survival over current margins. It is a stark lesson in adaptation: even successful businesses must cannibalize their own products to survive the digital transition.
The transition to digital comes with a brutal human price tag. 80 full-time positions across the publishing and editorial departments face the axe as the company restructures for a screen-only future. This significant reduction in force will not only impact the headquarters but will see regional offices shuttered entirely, effectively centralizing content and reducing the geographic diversity that defined the paper's local appeal.
Syndicom, the media union, has voiced immediate dismay, pointing to the paper's current profitability as an argument against such drastic cuts. However, the corporate logic is unyielding. As regional offices close and the workforce shrinks, the pressure on the remaining Swiss printing infrastructure intensifies. With fewer clients to serve, printing plantsâmany of which have already closedâface an even darker future. The ripple effects of this decision will be felt from the newsroom to the press floor, further shrinking the Swiss media ecosystem.
The sheer scale of the logistical unwind is staggering. Every morning, the network currently distributes nearly 300,000 free copies to commuters, a massive physical footprint that will evaporate overnight in 2025. The challenge now lies in migrating this massive readership entirely to 20minutes.ch. While the digital platform already commands a healthy audience, converting casual print readers into loyal digital users is a high-stakes gamble.
Unlike the print edition, which relied on physical availability in commuter hotspots, the digital edition must fight for attention in a crowded notification economy. The TX Group is betting that the brand is strong enough to survive without its physical anchor. As Switzerland bids farewell to its largest print run, the move signals a definitive end to the era of mass-market print advertising. The future is efficient, digital, and screen-boundâwhether the readers follow remains the ultimate test.