Switzerland is considering legislation to extend the 3.8% reduced VAT rate for hotel accommodation until 1 January 2036, while the standard rate is set to rise to 8.8% in 2026. The current reduced rate expires on 1 January 2028 unless extended, and the Federal Assembly recently blocked any increase beyond 3.8%.
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Le News · 2 months ago
The Swiss federal government plans to increase VAT by 0.8 percentage points over a decade (2028‑2038) to raise CHF 31 bn for defence. The proposal requires a constitutional amendment, a new armaments fund law, and a national referendum in summer 2027. Consultation ends in May, with only the Centre party supporting the measure.
VatCalc · 3 months ago
Switzerland is considering a 0.8 percentage‑point increase in its standard VAT rate from 8.1% to 8.9% to raise about CHF 31 billion for defence spending over ten years. The proposal, announced by the Federal Council in January 2026, would need parliamentary approval and a 2027 referendum. A separate 0.7 percentage‑point VAT rise to 8.8% for pension reforms was approved in April 2024 and is expected to take effect on 1 January 2028, pending a 2027 referendum.
Meyka · 3 months ago
On 12 February 2026 the Swiss Federal Supreme Court ruled that Chalet AG, a single‑asset company holding a St Moritz chalet, was used to avoid VAT and ordered repayment of CHF 865,000 in input‑tax credits. The decision clarifies that private‑use assets cannot claim broad VAT input credits and signals stricter scrutiny of form‑over‑substance structures in Switzerland.
Le News · 3 months ago
Switzerland’s Federal Council proposes a temporary 0.8‑percentage‑point increase in VAT to raise CHF 31 billion over ten years, aimed at funding a substantial rise in defence spending. The detailed proposal is due in March, with voters expected to decide in summer 2027 and the hike taking effect in 2028.
Politico · 4 months ago
Switzerland will temporarily increase its VAT rate by 0.8 percentage points from 8.1% to 8.9% starting in 2028 for a decade to raise about 31 billion Swiss francs for defense spending. The change requires a constitutional amendment and a public consultation in spring, and the extra revenue will feed an armament fund with borrowing capacity.
The Invoicing Hub · about 4 hours ago
France's e-invoicing mandate will enter its first phase on 1 September 2026, requiring large companies to issue and receive electronic invoices and submit e‑reporting to the PPF, while small firms must only receive them. The latest External Specifications v3.2, published 30 April 2026, mandate hourly aggregation of PPF submissions by Accredited Platforms and clarify B2G, G2B, and G2G processing. AFNOR standards are slated for final updates by the end of May 2026 to cover additional use cases such as agriculture and food industry.
Key Takeaways
The standard VAT rate will increase by 0.7% to 8.8% effective 1 January 2026.
The 3.8% reduced rate expires on 1 January 2028 unless extended by new legislation.
The proposed extension would keep the 3.8% rate in force until 1 January 2036.
The Federal Assembly voted against raising the reduced rate beyond 3.8%, keeping it unchanged.
Primary source
Read the full article at VatCalcThis summary was published on VATfaqs.com on 14 May 2026. It relates to VAT developments in Switzerland. The original source is VatCalc.