How to Register Your Child in a Swiss Private School: A 2026 Step-by-Step Guide
Applying to a Swiss private school is closer to a university application than to enrolling at your local one. Here is the 18-month timeline, the documents you need at each stage, and the five mistakes families make most.
AdmissionsBy Swiss Private Schools EditorialJune 1, 202610 min read
Registering a child in a Swiss private school is not a single form signed a few weeks before term. It is a multi-stage admissions process — closer to applying to university than enrolling at your local primary. The best schools receive far more enquiries than they have places, and they weigh each application on academic records, school references, an interview, and an admissions assessment.
Start early, work through the steps in order, and you give your child a strong chance at the school you want most.
The short version. Start 12–18 months ahead of your target entry date. Build a shortlist of five to eight schools using curriculum, language, day-or-boarding, and region. Send a focused enquiry, visit in person, submit the application packet with school references and reports, sit the assessment and interview, then pay the deposit within 30 days of the offer. For non-EU families, allow 8–12 weeks for the national visa after that.
Start 12 to 18 months ahead
The single biggest mistake families make is starting too late. For a September entry, the comfortable window opens twelve to eighteen months in advance. The most sought-after schools fill their priority places by January or February of the entry year, and a few year groups — notably 13+ and 16+ entry to top boarding schools — maintain rolling waitlists across multiple cycles.
If your target entry is less than six months away, do not panic — many excellent schools still have places. Move quickly and be ready to broaden your shortlist.
A typical timeline for September entry
18 months out — research the landscape, build a shortlist of five to eight schools
12 to 15 months out — send enquiries, book visits, attend autumn open days
9 to 12 months out — submit applications, gather school references, sit any required assessments
6 to 9 months out — interview, receive offers, pay the acceptance deposit
3 to 6 months out — visa and residency permit, uniform, travel logistics
1 month out — final medical paperwork, pre-arrival orientation, packing
Step 1 — Build a shortlist
Switzerland has more than 250 private schools, and the difference between two schools 30 minutes apart can be enormous. Before contacting anyone, narrow the field on the four filters that matter most:
Curriculum — IB, Swiss Matura, French Baccalauréat, British A-Levels, American High School Diploma, or a bilingual mix. Match the curriculum to where your child will go to university.
Language of instruction — English, French, German, Italian, or bilingual. Be honest about your child's current level.
Day or boarding — and if boarding, full, weekly, or flexi.
Region — Geneva, Vaud, Valais, Zurich, Ticino. Each has a distinct character and language environment.
Aim for five to eight schools on the initial shortlist. Enough to compare meaningfully, few enough that each application gets real attention. Use our school directory to filter on all four and build a working list in one sitting.
Step 2 — The first enquiry
Every school has an admissions office. Send a short, specific enquiry email — not a one-liner, not a five-page essay. Include:
Your child's name, current year group, and date of birth
Your target entry date and year group
Current school and country
Whether you are looking for day or boarding
Two or three honest sentences about why this school is on your list
You should receive a personal reply within a few working days. Most schools send a prospectus pack, an admissions form, and a list of dates for visits, open days, or assessments. If you do not hear back within a week, follow up — and read the silence as data.
Step 3 — The visit
Visit the campus in person whenever it is at all possible. A two-hour visit will tell you more than ten brochures. Take your child with you — their reaction matters.
Ask to:
Walk through a boarding house and a classroom in use
Eat in the dining hall — a tour without lunch is a half-tour
Meet two or three current students without a guide present
Speak to a houseparent if your child will board
See the facilities your child actually cares about — the music block, the labs, the sports fields
Many schools also offer trial days or taster weekends — a low-stakes way for your child to experience the school before committing. If offered, take it.
Step 4 — The application packet
Once you decide to apply, the formal packet typically requires:
Application form — the school's own, increasingly an online portal
School reports — the past two academic years, in English or with certified translation
Headteacher reference — sent directly from your child's current head
Standardised test results — where available (IELTS, TOEFL, ISEE, SSAT, or the school's own assessment)
Passport copies — for the child and both parents
Personal statement or short essay from the child, from around age 11
Recent photograph of the child
Registration fee — CHF 200 to 500, non-refundable
Some schools also request a family questionnaire covering health, learning support needs, languages spoken at home, and family circumstances. Answer honestly. A school that says yes to a child whose needs it cannot meet does nobody any favours.
Step 5 — Assessments and interviews
Most established Swiss private schools run their own admissions assessment alongside the documents above. Formats vary:
Online assessments in English, mathematics, and reasoning, taken under proctored conditions from home — increasingly common for international candidates
On-campus assessment days — usually a half-day combining written tests, a group activity, and an interview
Senior school interviews for the 16+ intake, often with a department head from the child's strongest academic interest
The interview is not a trap. Schools want to understand the child as a person — what they enjoy, what they read, what they would do with a free weekend. The strongest preparation is encouraging your child to talk freely about their interests; the weakest is over-rehearsing a script.
Step 6 — The offer and the deposit
An offer typically arrives by email within two to four weeks of the assessment. It will include the year group, the fee for the first year, any conditions (for example, an English-language summer course), and a deadline — usually 30 days — to accept and pay the deposit.
The deposit is normally CHF 5,000 to CHF 15,000 and is credited against the final term's fees. It is non-refundable after a set date. If you are still weighing two offers, ask each school for a brief extension; most accommodate a request that is reasonable and made promptly.
Once you accept, the school issues an enrolment confirmation letter. Keep it safe — you will need it for the visa application.
Step 7 — Visas, residency, and the Swiss authorities
For non-Swiss, non-EU families, your child will need a national D visa for stays longer than 90 days, applied for at the Swiss embassy or consulate in your country of residence. The school's admissions office provides the enrolment letter and usually some guidance, but the application itself is your responsibility.
Typical visa documents:
Completed national visa application form
Passport valid for at least three months beyond the planned stay
School enrolment confirmation and paid invoice
Proof of accommodation (the school's letter usually covers this for boarders)
Proof of financial means
Swiss health insurance certificate
Notarised, apostilled parental consent letter plus parents' passport copies
Allow 8 to 12 weeks for processing. EU and EFTA families face a far lighter process — typically a residence permit obtained after arrival rather than a visa beforehand.
Step 8 — Before the first day
In the final month, the school sends a pre-arrival pack covering uniform, packing list, term dates, and travel logistics. Use the checklist below to stay ahead:
Activate Swiss health insurance to start on the day of arrival
Book travel and confirm the airport transfer with the school
Order uniform with enough lead time for delivery
Set up a Swiss bank account or arrange a prepaid card for the personal allowance
Send medical records, vaccinations, and any prescribed medication to the school nurse
Register with the school portal — most use a parent app for messages, grades, and absence requests
Save the houseparent's phone number
Five mistakes families make in admissions
Starting too late. Top schools fill priority places by February of the entry year. A late start means your second-choice school becomes your first.
Sending the same generic email to every school. Admissions offices read hundreds. Two specific sentences about why this school made the list move you up the pile.
Skipping the campus visit. You cannot tell from a website which school has a warm dining hall and which feels institutional. Two visits beat ten brochures.
Hiding learning support needs. A school that admits a child it cannot support sets the child up to fail. Be honest on the family questionnaire.
Missing the visa lead time. Eight to twelve weeks for a national D visa is realistic. Start as soon as the offer is accepted, not the month before term.
What to do next
The Swiss private school admissions process rewards families who start early, stay organised, and ask the right questions of the right people. The schools want the same thing you do: a place that is the right match for the child.
To begin, browse our school directory and build your shortlist. For the financial side, read our guide to what Swiss boarding schools really cost. If you are relocating with the whole family, our relocation guide for parents covers the wider picture — work permits, healthcare, language regions, and life beyond the school gates.