Small Valais village near Zermatt becomes Switzerland's most internationally diverse community with highest proportion of foreign residents, predominantly Portuguese.

"Täsch, a Portuguese enclave in the heart of postcard Switzerland."
Forget the postcards. While Täsch may look like the quintessential Swiss idyll—complete with weathered wooden chalets and the looming shadow of the Matterhorn—the reality on the ground has shifted dramatically. This small Valais village, situated at 1,400 metres, has undergone a profound cultural transformation, emerging as Switzerland's most potent example of globalization in the Alps. Today, if you walk the streets of Täsch, you are far less likely to hear the guttural sounds of Wallisertitsch than you are the melodic cadence of Portuguese.
This is no longer just a gateway to Zermatt; it is a Portuguese enclave. The village has claimed the title for the highest proportion of foreign residents in the entire country. In a staggering shift that challenges traditional notions of Alpine identity, the local Swiss population has been eclipsed. Täsch is not merely hosting guest workers; it has been fundamentally redefined by them. As nearly 40 nationalities converge in this narrow valley, the village stands as a living testament to the changing face of rural Switzerland.
The statistics are nothing short of historic. In 2023, the Federal Statistical Office revealed that a massive 62% of Täsch's 1,366 year-round residents do not hold a Swiss passport. This figure obliterates the national average, where foreigners typically make up just over a quarter of the population. But the true headline lies in the specific breakdown of these demographics.
For the first time in history, the Portuguese community has surged past the local Swiss population. Portuguese nationals now command 41% of the village's demographic share, relegating Swiss nationals to second place at 38%. This is a unique phenomenon in the Swiss municipal landscape—a village where the 'host' population has become the statistical minority. With over 255,000 Portuguese nationals living across the confederation, the Zermatt valley has become a specific, magnetic hub, drawing a workforce that is reshaping the census maps of Canton Valais.
Zermatt is a tourism machine that runs on foreign fuel. As the third most visited municipality in Switzerland, the resort clocked a staggering 1.6 million overnight stays in 2024. This level of mass tourism requires an army of workers to keep the hotels pristine, the kitchens running, and the infrastructure functioning. The local Swiss workforce is simply insufficient to meet this colossal demand.
It is the Portuguese community that keeps Zermatt ticking. Hundreds of immigrants work tirelessly behind the scenes, often dominating the hotel and catering sectors along with maintenance services. These essential workers form the backbone of the resort's economy, yet they remain largely invisible to the wealthy tourists enjoying the slopes. Without this influx of foreign labor, the luxury experience of Zermatt would grind to an immediate halt. The economic symbiosis is undeniable: Zermatt provides the wages, but foreign hands provide the labor.
Why Täsch? The answer lies in a brutal economic reality: housing in Zermatt is a luxury few service workers can afford. With the resort village effectively banning cars and real estate prices soaring into the stratosphere, the workforce is forced into a daily migration. Täsch, along with neighboring Randa and Saas-Fee, has become the dormitory for Zermatt's labor force.
Workers are grappling with a lack of affordable housing near their jobs, turning Täsch into a commuter hub by necessity rather than choice. The train shuttle between Täsch and Zermatt is the lifeline of the valley, ferrying the staff that makes the resort function. This housing squeeze has inadvertently created the conditions for Täsch's unique demographic makeup. As Zermatt continues to cater to the global elite, its neighboring villages are left to house the international workforce that serves them, creating a stark divide between where wealth is spent and where the workers sleep.