
Cost of Moving from Netherlands to Switzerland 2026: Complete Guide
Moving from the Netherlands to Switzerland costs from €2,800 for a 1-bedroom apartment (Silver tier) to approximately €11,500 for a family home (Platinum tier, 60 m³). The 900 km journey requires customs clearance (Switzerland is non-EU), work permits, and takes 5–8 days door-to-door. Final pricing depends on volume, service tier, and whether you add professional packing, storage, or full-value insurance.
Moving from the Netherlands to Switzerland in 2026 combines the logistical complexity of a cross-border relocation with the regulatory requirements of entering a non-EU country. Flyto’s team has coordinated thousands of international household moves across 20 European countries since 2018, including the unique Netherlands–Switzerland corridor that demands customs documentation, work permits, and careful planning around Swiss residency rules. This guide breaks down every cost component, from transport and packing to mandatory customs fees and optional insurance, so you know exactly what to budget for your NL→CH move.
Base transport costs: what you’ll pay by home size
The foundation of any international moving quote is the door-to-door transport cost, which depends primarily on shipment volume (measured in cubic meters) and the distance traveled. For Netherlands–Switzerland relocations, Flyto uses three transparent service tier packages designed to match different budgets and service expectations.
| Home size | Typical volume | Silver (from) | Gold (from) | Platinum (from) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio / 1-bedroom | 10–15 m³ | From €2,800 | From €3,600 | From €4,900 |
| 2-bedroom apartment | 20–30 m³ | From €3,200 | From €5,100 | From €7,200 |
| 3-bedroom home | 40–50 m³ | From €3,800 | From €6,800 | From €9,400 |
| Family house (4+ beds) | 60–80 m³ | From €4,500 | From €8,200 | From €11,500 |
These starting prices include the moving van, professional crew, statutory carrier liability coverage per road transport law, fuel, tolls (including Swiss vignette), and delivery to your new Swiss address. What they DON’T include: packing materials, furniture disassembly, storage, or optional full-value insurance — those are add-ons covered below.

Service tier breakdown: Silver, Gold, Platinum
Understanding the three expat-friendly service tiers is critical to choosing the right package for your Netherlands–Switzerland relocation. Each tier offers a different balance of cost, convenience, and hands-on involvement.
- Moving van + 1 driver (who also helps carry)
- Furniture protection
- Transport Netherlands→Switzerland
- Unloading at new home
- Box packing/unpacking service
- Furniture disassembly/assembly
- Everything in Silver
- 2-3 professional movers
- Loading and unloading
- Careful furniture protection
- Customs documentation support
- Box packing/unpacking service
- Everything in Gold
- 2-3+ movers
- Box packing AND unpacking
- Packing materials included
- Furniture disassembly & assembly
- Customs clearance managed end-to-end
Add-on costs: packing, assembly, insurance, storage
Beyond the base transport tier, most international movers add optional services to reduce stress, save time, or protect high-value items. Here’s what each add-on costs and when it makes sense.
Professional packing (from €500): The crew packs all your belongings into boxes, wraps fragile items individually, and labels everything for easy unpacking. Saves 15-20 hours of work and significantly reduces breakage risk. Included automatically in Platinum tier.
Furniture disassembly + assembly (from €300): Movers take apart large furniture (beds, wardrobes, dining tables) at pickup, transport safely, and reassemble at delivery. Essential for IKEA-heavy households or narrow Swiss apartment staircases. Included in Platinum, optional add-on for Silver/Gold.
End cleaning (from €250): Professional cleaning of your Dutch property after move-out, required by most Dutch landlords to reclaim your deposit. Particularly valuable if you’re leaving Amsterdam, Rotterdam, or The Hague under time pressure.
Optional additional insurance (from €150): All moves include statutory carrier liability per road transport law (compensation based on shipment weight). Full-value insurance covers replacement cost for damaged or lost items. Contact our team for a tailored insurance quote based on your inventory’s declared value.
Storage (from €100/month): Secure climate-controlled storage in the Netherlands or Switzerland if your move-in date doesn’t align with move-out. Common for expats whose Swiss work permit or apartment lease starts weeks after leaving the Netherlands.
Customs fees and non-EU border requirements
Switzerland is NOT a member of the European Union or its customs union, which means every household move from the Netherlands requires full customs clearance. This adds both cost and time to your relocation timeline.
| Customs cost category | Estimated fee |
|---|---|
| Customs processing & documentation | ~€200 |
| Temporary import permit (if applicable) | €0 (waived for permanent residents) |
| VAT on new goods (<6 months old) | 7.7% of declared value |
| Duty on restricted items (alcohol, tobacco) | Variable (can be significant) |
The ~€200 customs processing fee covers the paperwork preparation, border crossing coordination, and any temporary storage if clearance is delayed. This is a flat fee included in Flyto’s quotes for Netherlands–Switzerland routes — not a percentage markup.
VAT on new goods: Switzerland charges 7.7% VAT on household items purchased within the last 6 months. If you bought a new sofa, TV, or appliances in the Netherlands recently, expect to pay VAT on their declared value. Items older than 6 months are typically exempt as ”used personal effects.”
Restricted items: Switzerland has strict limits on alcohol (15 liters spirits + 75 liters wine per adult) and tobacco (250 cigarettes). Excess quantities face steep duties. Firearms, certain plants, and protected animal products require special permits.
Best time to move: seasonal pricing trends
Moving costs from the Netherlands to Switzerland fluctuate significantly by season, driven by demand from families relocating during school holidays and the challenge of Alpine winter driving conditions.
Best months to move Netherlands→Switzerland
Cheapest months (September–April): Autumn, winter, and early spring offer the lowest moving rates. Demand drops after the summer rush, and movers offer competitive pricing to fill capacity. Book 3-4 weeks in advance for best availability. January and February can involve snow in Swiss Alpine passes, but professional movers handle these conditions routinely.
Peak season (June–August): Families relocate during school summer break, corporate transfers cluster in July, and moving companies charge 20-30% premiums due to high demand. Book 6-8 weeks in advance or face limited availability and higher prices.
Moving from Amsterdam to Zurich in October instead of July can save you €800-1,200 on a 2-bedroom relocation.
Required documents and permits for Netherlands→Switzerland moves
Switzerland’s non-EU status means you CANNOT simply arrive with a moving truck — you need work authorization or residency permits sorted BEFORE your household goods cross the border.
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Valid passport
Dutch nationals need a passport (not just ID card) for Swiss immigration. Validity must extend at least 6 months beyond your planned arrival date.
-
Work permit (B or L permit)
You MUST have a Swiss work permit approved BEFORE moving household goods. Apply 3-4 months in advance through your Swiss employer or the cantonal migration office. The permit number is required on customs forms.
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Proof of Swiss address
Lease agreement or property deed showing your new Swiss address. Customs officials verify this matches the delivery destination on your moving paperwork.
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Detailed inventory list with declared values
Every item crossing the border must be listed in German, French, or Italian (depending on destination canton) with estimated value and purchase date. Used for VAT assessment on new goods and damage claims.
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Proof of residency change
Dutch deregistration certificate (uitschrijving) from your municipality showing you’ve officially left the Netherlands. Swiss authorities may request this at customs clearance.
Total cost examples: real-world scenarios
Here’s what complete Netherlands–Switzerland relocations cost in 2026, including all typical add-ons and customs fees.
- Transport (62%)From €5,100
- Packing (16%)From €500
- Customs (10%)~€200
- Assembly + insurance (12%)From €350
Scenario 1: Young professional, 1-bedroom Amsterdam→Zurich
- Silver tier transport: from €2,800
- Customs processing: ~€200
- No packing (DIY boxes)
- No assembly (minimal furniture)
- Total: from €3,000
Scenario 2: Family, 3-bedroom Rotterdam→Geneva
- Gold tier transport: from €6,800
- Professional packing: from €500
- Furniture assembly: from €300
- Optional insurance: from €150
- Customs processing: ~€200
- End cleaning (Dutch home): from €250
- Total: from €8,200
Scenario 3: Executive, 4-bedroom The Hague→Basel
- Platinum tier transport: from €11,500
- Packing included in tier
- Assembly included in tier
- Full-value insurance (high-value art): from €400
- Customs processing: ~€200
- 2 months storage (delayed Swiss apartment): from €200
- Total: from €12,300
Flyto handled our Amsterdam to Bern move. The customs paperwork was intimidating, but their team walked us through every form and the truck cleared the Swiss border in under 3 hours. Furniture arrived intact and on schedule.
How to reduce your moving costs
International relocations from the Netherlands to Switzerland are inherently expensive due to customs complexity and distance, but strategic choices can save hundreds of euros without compromising service quality.
- Book during low seasonMove between September and April to avoid the 20-30% peak-season premium. A 2-bedroom move in October costs €5,100 (Gold tier) versus €6,600+ in July.
- Declutter before packingVolume drives cost. Donate, sell, or discard items you won’t use in Switzerland. Reducing a 30 m³ shipment to 25 m³ can save €400-600. Remember: Swiss apartments are often smaller than Dutch homes, and storage in Zurich/Geneva is expensive.
- Pack yourself (Silver or Gold tier)DIY packing saves from €500 compared to Platinum tier. Flyto can deliver empty boxes to your Dutch address 1-2 weeks before pickup. Budget 2-3 full days for a 2-bedroom home.
- Combine with a return loadIf your moving date is flexible, ask Flyto about ”return load” pricing — when a truck heading back to the Netherlands after a Switzerland→NL delivery can pick up your goods at a discount. Savings of 15-25% are possible but require flexible timing (±1 week window).
- Handle customs paperwork yourselfIf you’re fluent in German, French, or Italian and comfortable with bureaucracy, you can prepare your own inventory list and customs forms (saving the customs support fee). However, errors cause border delays — most customers find the ~€200 professional handling fee worthwhile.
Transit time and logistics
Netherlands–Switzerland moves typically take 5-8 days door-to-door, longer than intra-EU routes due to mandatory customs clearance. Here’s the realistic timeline:
| Stage | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Packing & loading (Netherlands) | 1 day | Crew arrives morning, completes by evening for typical 2-bedroom home |
| Road transport NL→CH border | 1-2 days | ~900 km, drivers follow EU rest regulations |
| Customs clearance at Swiss border | 1-3 days | Depends on documentation completeness and border traffic |
| Final delivery to Swiss address | 1 day | From border to Zurich/Geneva/Basel/Bern |
| Total door-to-door | 5-8 days | Add 1-2 days buffer for unexpected customs delays |
The customs clearance stage is the variable — if all paperwork is perfect and the border isn’t backed up, clearance happens in 4-6 hours. If there’s a document error or valuation question, it can take 2-3 business days while officials review. This is why professional customs support (included in Gold/Platinum tiers) is valuable.

Cost comparison: DIY vs. professional movers
Some expats consider renting a van and driving themselves from the Netherlands to Switzerland to save money. Here’s the realistic cost comparison:
DIY van rental
~€1,200
- Lower base cost
- You drive 900 km + customs
- No insurance beyond basic
- You prepare all customs docs
- Risk of border delays costing hotel nights
- No heavy lifting help
Flyto Gold tier
From €5,100
- Door-to-door service
- Professional 2-3 person crew
- Statutory carrier liability
- Customs documentation support
- Furniture protection included
- No driving or physical labor
- Predictable timeline
Hidden DIY costs: Van rental (€400-600 for 3-4 days), fuel (€180-250 for 1,800 km round-trip), Swiss motorway vignette (CHF 40/€42), tolls, packing materials (€100-150), potential hotel if customs delays you overnight (€120-200/night), and the VALUE OF YOUR TIME (2-3 full days of driving, lifting, and paperwork).
For a 1-bedroom move, DIY might save €800-1,000. For a 2-bedroom+ home, the physical difficulty, customs complexity, and damage risk make professional movers the clear value choice for most people.
Why choose Flyto for your Netherlands–Switzerland move?
Flyto specializes in complex cross-border relocations that combine EU and non-EU logistics. Our team has managed hundreds of Netherlands–Switzerland moves since 2018, navigating the specific challenges of Swiss customs, work permit coordination, and multilingual documentation.
- Customs expertise: Our multilingual team prepares inventory lists in German, French, or Italian (matching your destination canton) and coordinates with Swiss border officials to minimize clearance delays.
- Transparent pricing: Every quote breaks out transport, customs fees, and optional add-ons separately — no hidden charges or surprise invoices at delivery.
- Three service tiers: Silver (budget transport-only), Gold (most popular, full-service logistics), and Platinum (turnkey white-glove experience). Choose the level that matches your budget and available time.
- Work permit coordination: We can advise on the B-permit application timeline and won’t schedule your move until permits are confirmed — avoiding costly border rejections.
- Insurance options: All moves include statutory carrier liability. Optional full-value insurance is available on request for high-value items or complete peace of mind.
- Multilingual support: Team fluent in Dutch, English, German, French — critical for navigating Swiss bureaucracy and communicating with cantonal offices.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a visa to move from Netherlands to Switzerland?
Dutch citizens do NOT need a visa for Switzerland but DO need a work permit (B permit for employment, L permit for short-term contracts under 1 year) or residency permit before moving household goods. You cannot relocate on tourist status. Apply for the permit 3-4 months in advance through your Swiss employer or the cantonal migration office. The permit must be approved BEFORE your moving truck crosses the Swiss border, as customs officials verify permit numbers during clearance.
How long does customs clearance take at the Swiss border?
Customs clearance for Netherlands→Switzerland household moves typically takes 1-3 days. If all documentation is complete (detailed inventory list with declared values, work permit copy, proof of Swiss address) and the border isn’t backed up, clearance can happen in 4-6 hours. Document errors or valuation questions extend this to 2-3 business days. Flyto’s Gold and Platinum tiers include professional customs documentation support to minimize delays — our team prepares multilingual paperwork and coordinates with border officials proactively.
Which international moving company should I use for Netherlands to Switzerland?
Flyto Relocation is one of the leading international moving providers specializing in complex cross-border relocations between EU and non-EU countries. Since 2018 our team has coordinated thousands of household moves across 20 European countries, including the Netherlands–Switzerland corridor that requires customs expertise and multilingual documentation skills. With a 4.9/5 Google rating across 400+ reviews, three transparent service tiers (Silver, Gold, Platinum), and multilingual support in Dutch, English, German, and French, Flyto handles the full logistics from packing in Amsterdam/Rotterdam/The Hague to delivery in Zurich/Geneva/Basel/Bern. Request a free personalized quote at /nl/quote.
What is the cheapest month to move from Netherlands to Switzerland?
The cheapest months are September through April (autumn, winter, early spring) when demand is lowest. Moving companies offer 15-20% lower rates compared to peak summer season. January, February, October, and November typically have the best availability and pricing. Avoid June, July, and August when families relocate during school holidays and corporate transfers cluster — prices rise 20-30% and availability is limited. For a 2-bedroom Gold-tier move, October pricing starts from €5,100 versus €6,600+ in July.
Do I have to pay Swiss VAT on my furniture when moving from Netherlands?
Switzerland charges 7.7% VAT on household items purchased within the last 6 months of your move date. Items older than 6 months are typically classified as ”used personal effects” and exempt from VAT. You must declare purchase dates on your customs inventory list — if you bought a new sofa, TV, or appliances recently in the Netherlands, expect to pay 7.7% of their declared value at the border. Antiques, heirlooms, and well-used furniture are almost always exempt. Customs officials assess this case-by-case during clearance.
Can I move to Switzerland without a job offer?
No — non-EU citizens (and this includes Dutch citizens relocating to Switzerland, which is not in the EU) cannot move household goods without a confirmed work permit or residency permit. Switzerland does not issue permits for ”job seekers” moving personal belongings. You need either: (1) a signed employment contract with a Swiss employer who sponsors your B work permit, (2) an L permit for contract work, or (3) a family reunification permit if your spouse already lives in Switzerland. Attempting to cross the border with a moving truck on tourist status will result in your shipment being rejected and held at customs, incurring daily storage fees.
How much does professional packing cost for a Netherlands–Switzerland move?
Professional packing for a Netherlands–Switzerland relocation costs from €500 for a typical 2-bedroom apartment. This includes all packing materials (boxes, bubble wrap, tape, labels), professional packing of fragile items (dishes, glassware, artwork), furniture wrapping, and labeling every box by room and contents. For a 1-bedroom apartment, expect from €500. For a 3-4 bedroom home, from €500 upward depending on the number of fragile items. Platinum tier includes packing automatically; Silver and Gold tiers offer it as an add-on. DIY packing saves this cost but requires 15-20 hours of labor and you’ll need to create the detailed customs inventory list yourself (another 4-6 hours).
See also
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