Switzerland signed a
free-trade agreement with the then
European Economic Community in 1972, which entered into force in 1973. Switzerland is a member of the
European Free Trade Association (EFTA), and took part in negotiating the
European Economic Area (EEA) agreement with the European Union. It signed the agreement on 2 May 1992, and submitted an application for accession to the EU on 20 May 1992. However, after a
Swiss referendum held on 6 December 1992 rejected EEA membership by 50.3% to 49.7%, the
Swiss government decided to suspend negotiations for EU membership until further notice. These did not resume and in 2016, Switzerland formally withdrew its application for EU membership.
Bilateral I agreements (signed 1999, in effect 1 June 2002) • Free movement of people • Air traffic • Road traffic • Agricultural products • Technical trade barriers • Public procurement • Science
Bilateral II agreements (signed 2004, in effect gradually between 2005 and 2009) •
Security and asylum and
Schengen membership • Cooperation in fraud pursuits • Final stipulations in open questions about agriculture, environment, media, education, care of the elderly, statistics and services. This strand established the
Common Veterinary Area. The Bilateral I agreements are expressed to be mutually dependent. If any one of them is denounced or not renewed, they all cease to apply. According to the preamble of the EU decision ratifying the agreements: This is referred to as the "
guillotine clause". While the bilateral approach theoretically safeguards the right to refuse the application of new EU rules to Switzerland, in practice the scope to do so is limited by the clause. The agreement on the
European Economic Area contains a similar clause. Bilateral agreements are managed by joint Swiss-EU committees. They are responsible for ensuring that the agreements run smoothly, adapting them where possible, exchanging information and discussing any disputes. Twenty-one such committees existed in September 2021. This system is criticized by the European Union, which finds it too complex. Before 2014, the
bilateral approach, as it is called in Switzerland, was consistently supported by the Swiss people in referendums. It allows the Swiss to keep a sense of sovereignty, due to arrangements when changes in EU law will only apply after the
EU–Swiss Joint Committee decides so in consensus. It also limits the EU influence to the ten areas, where the EEA includes more areas, with more exceptions than the EEA has. From the perspective of the EU, the treaties contain largely the same content as the EEA treaties, making Switzerland a virtual member of the EEA. Most EU law applies universally throughout the EU, the EEA and Switzerland, providing most of the conditions of the free movement of people, goods, services and capital that apply to the member states. Switzerland pays into the EU budget. Switzerland has extended the
bilateral treaties to new EU member states; each extension required the approval of Swiss voters in a referendum. In
a referendum on 5 June 2005, Swiss voters agreed, by a 55% majority, to join the
Schengen Area. This came into effect on 12 December 2008. In 2009, the Swiss voted to extend the free movement of people to
Bulgaria and
Romania by 59.6% in favour to 40.4% against. While the EU
Directive 2004/38/EC on the right to move and reside freely does not apply to Switzerland, the Swiss-EU bilateral agreement on the free movement of people contains the same rights both for Swiss and EEA nationals, and their family members. By 2010, Switzerland had amassed around 210 trade treaties with the EU. Following the institutional changes in the EU–particularly regarding foreign policy and the increased role of the
European Parliament–
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and
Swiss President Doris Leuthard expressed a desire to "reset" EU-Swiss relations with an easier and cleaner way of applying
EU law in Switzerland. In December 2012, the
Council of the European Union declared that there will be no further treaties on
single market issues unless Switzerland and EU agree on a
new legal framework similar to the EEA that, among others, would bind Switzerland more closely to the evolving EU legislation.
José Manuel Barroso, the
President of the European Commission, later affirmed this position. However, a second referendum on Swiss EEA membership wasn't expected at that time,
Schengen Agreement In 2009,
Switzerland became a participant in the
Schengen Area with the acceptance of an association agreement by
popular referendum in 2005. This means that there are no passport controls on Switzerland's borders with its neighbours though customs controls continue to apply.
2014 referendum In a referendum in February 2014, the Swiss voters narrowly approved a proposal to limit the freedom of movement of foreign citizens to Switzerland. The European Commission said it would have to examine the implications of the result on EU–Swiss relations since literal implementation would invoke the guillotine clause. On 22 December 2016, Switzerland and the EU concluded an agreement whereby a new Swiss law (in response to the referendum) would require Swiss employers to prioritise Swiss-based job seekers (whether Swiss nationals or non-Swiss citizens registered in Swiss job agencies) whilst continuing to observe the free movement of EU citizens into Switzerland thus allowing them to work there.
Swiss financial contributions Since 2008, Switzerland has contributed
CHF 1.3 billion towards various projects designed to reduce the economic and social disparities in an enlarged EU. One example of how this money is used is
Legionowo railway station, Poland, which was redeveloped with CHF 9.6 million from the Swiss budget. The negotiated accord would cover five areas of existing agreements between the EU and Switzerland made in 1999: • free movement of persons • air transport • carriage of goods and passengers by rail and road • trade in agricultural products • mutual recognition of standards Notably, the accord would facilitate EU law in these fields to be readily transposed into Swiss law, and the
European Court of Justice would be the final and binding arbiter on disputes in these fields. If the accord were accepted by Switzerland, the country would be in a similar position with regard to imposition of EU law (albeit only in the above five fields) as that in the other EFTA countries which are members of the EEA. Further to matters of sovereignty, specific concerns raised in Switzerland include possible effect on state aid law on the
cantonal banks, the potential for transposition of them into Swiss law (and any resulting effect on social welfare, for example) and the possible effect on wages enjoyed in the country. Accepting the accord is considered by the commission to be necessary to allow Swiss access to new fields of the European single market, including the electricity market and stock exchange equivalence. The negotiations on the proposed framework accord between Switzerland the EU were restarted on 23 April 2021, when
Swiss Federal Councilor Guy Parmelin and
EU-commission president Ursula von der Leyen met in
Brussels. The meeting took place in a friendly atmosphere, but no agreement could be attained as the federal councilor insisted on excluding key issues such as protection of Swiss wages,
Citizens' Rights Directive, and state aid for cantonal banks from the agreement. The following week,
Stéphanie Riso, Deputy Head of Cabinet for the
EU commission, informed representatives of the 27 member countries of the progress with regard to the framework accord with Switzerland. The EU commission perceived the Swiss demands as an ultimatum, and the EU member countries expressed support for the EU-leadership in the negotiations. Foreign Minister
Ignazio Cassis told reporters that the impasse was due to a different interpretation of the "free movement of people" clause in the framework accord. In September 2020, Swiss voters clearly rejected a ballot measure by the
Swiss People's Party to limit the free movement of persons, and decided to favour bilateral agreements with the EU. According to internal reports by the Swiss Federal Council, failed negotiations with the EU-commission already took place on 11 November 2020 when chief negotiator
Livia Leu took the podium for Swiss-EU talks. On 26 May 2021, Switzerland decided to again suspend negotiations with the EU and not sign the drafted EU-Swiss Institutional Framework Agreement. The main disagreements were about freedom of movement, the level playing field and state aid rules. On 15 November 2021,
Maroš Šefčovič, EU Vice President responsible for Swiss-EU negotiations and
Brexit struck a more conciliatory tone with Swiss Foreign Minister
Ignazio Cassis, when they met in Brussels. The two sides agreed to establish a structured political dialogue at ministerial level, and re-open bilateral talks in early 2022. The Swiss Foreign minister in particular insisted that Switzerland be integrated back into the
Erasmus+ and the
Horizon Europe programmes. At stake were a number of agreements between Switzerland and the EU, including future access to EU's electricity market, as well as EU citizens' availability of Swiss social security benefits. In December 2023, the
Swiss Federal Council agreed to reinitiate negotiations with Brussels on bilateral relations with regard to the framework accord. The decision came after a two-year period of previously undisclosed preparations and reflects the opinion of the Swiss population to find a realistic approach for a stable relationship with the EU. The draft mandate was the result of numerous meetings on a diplomatic level as well as extensive internal discussions with unions and Swiss business representatives. With the choice of a new negotiating team, Switzerland expects that it will find a more effective strategy to create optimal conditions for a satisfactory result in the upcoming negotiations. Mainly the "super guillotine clause", which previously ended the discussion with the EU, was removed to avoid a premature failure of future talks, and the new draft, agreed upon by a joint statement, would allow an open-ended discourse on all levels including the free movement of people, land transport, air transport, which are completely revised, and technical barriers to trade and agriculture as well as electricity, food safety and health, with all three allowing for direct subsidies. The responsibility of the European court on Swiss legal questions includes more limitations. The new draft mandate was then to be ratified by the Swiss cantons, the federal parliament and approved by the
EU commission by the end of 2023. Both sides had come a long way to create the new draft, according to the Swiss foreign minister
Ignazio Cassis. On March 18, 2024, Swiss Federal Councilor
Viola Amherd and chief of the European Commission
Ursula von der Leyen met in Brussels for a first meeting. Von der Leyen warmly welcomed the Swiss delegation including chief negotiator Patric Franzen. The EU Commission president struck an optimistic tone and expressed hope that the agreement could conclude by the end of 2024, while Amherd stressed the qualitative criteria for Switzerland rather than the tempo of the negotiations. Amherd also met the vice-president of the European Commission
Maros Sefcovic and EU chief negotiator Richard Szostak during lunch. The EU and Switzerland are economically interconnected to a high degree, and both sides hope for more stability between the European trading zone and the export-oriented economy of the Swiss Confederation. Switzerland would benefit to reconnect with the Horizon academic program, and have better access to the European market, but other critical aspects such as the protection of Swiss wages are a serious concern for Swiss labour unions. On the right side of the Swiss political spectrum, many exponents of the conservative Swiss People's party (SVP) reject the negotiations for a framework accord altogether as they fear economic disadvantages and a loss of political independence from the
European Union. According to the
European Commission, the talks entered their sixth round in late August 2024. The progress of the discussions was described as slow but steady with the main sticking points remaining, namely the 'free movement of people' as well as the 'protection of Swiss wages'. The talks continued in mid-September and were presumed to be completed by the end of 2024. The "third bilateral package" was approved by the Swiss cabinet in June 2025. While the Swiss federal government has accepted the agreement, the consultation process lasts until the end of October 2025, when the measure will be decided in Swiss parliament. Switzerland sees the agreement as a 'strategic necessity' rather than a political approach. According to the principles of
direct democracy, a referendum will be held probably in 2028. ==Chronology of the Swiss votes==