Personal Information on a Swiss CV: What to Include
The personal details at the top of your CV are the first thing a Swiss recruiter reads. In many countries this block is deliberately minimal, because date of birth, photo and marital status are seen as discrimination risks. Switzerland is different: a fuller personal section is normal and expected, and leaving out the usual items can make your application look incomplete. This guide walks through every field β what is standard, what is now optional, and what you should genuinely skip.
Why the personal section matters more in Switzerland
Unlike the United States, the United Kingdom or Canada, Switzerland has no rule against showing your age, nationality or a photo. Recruiters here are used to seeing them and read them quickly to picture the candidate. There is no central template, so two strong CVs can present this block slightly differently β but the items below are what hiring managers across Zurich, Geneva, Basel and Lugano look for. If you are coming from an "anonymised" CV culture, resist the urge to strip everything out; in Switzerland that reads as evasive rather than modern.
Name and contact details: get the basics right
Start with your full name, ideally a touch larger than the body text so it anchors the page. Below it, give a single mobile number in international format (+41 β¦), one professional email address, and your city plus canton β for example "8004 ZΓΌrich" or "1207 GenΓ¨ve". A clickable LinkedIn URL is welcome and increasingly expected; a portfolio or GitHub link is useful in creative and tech roles. Use an email that is clearly yours (firstname.lastname@β¦), never a shared or jokey address, and make sure your voicemail is set up β Swiss recruiters do call.
Date of birth, nationality and work-permit status
Three items mark a Swiss CV out from an Anglo-Saxon one, and all three help rather than hurt you here.
- βDate of birth. Write it as DD.MM.YYYY. Stating your age or birth date is completely standard and expected.
- βNationality. List it plainly ("Swiss", "German", "Italian"). For non-Swiss candidates it is closely tied to the next point.
- βWork-permit status. If you are not a Swiss or EU/EFTA citizen, naming your permit (B, C, L or G) immediately answers the recruiter's first practical question: may this person work here, and from when? Swiss/EU candidates can simply write "Swiss citizen" or "EU citizen β no permit required". Omitting permit status when it is relevant is one of the most common reasons a strong foreign CV gets passed over.
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Photo, civil status and address
These are the optional-but-common fields where judgement matters.
- βPhoto. A professional headshot is still the norm in Switzerland and most recruiters expect one. It should be a recent, well-lit business portrait β not a holiday snap or a passport photo. If you prefer not to include one, you can leave it off without much harm, but a good photo generally helps.
- βCivil status. "Single", "married" or "married, two children" is traditional and still widely seen, though it is fading among younger candidates and is entirely optional. Include it if you are comfortable; there is no obligation.
- βAddress. A full street address used to be standard. Today, city and postal code are enough for most applications β employers care that you live within a reasonable commute, not your exact door number. A full address is fine if you prefer it.
What to leave off completely
Some details add clutter or risk and belong nowhere on a modern Swiss CV: your AHV/social-security number, religion, political affiliation, salary history, ID or passport numbers, and the names of references (write "References available on request" instead). Skip the literal heading "Curriculum Vitae" β your name is the title. And never include bank details or your full date and place of birth as if it were an official form; a CV is a marketing document, not an identity record.
A clean header at a glance
Keep the whole block tight β four to six lines plus the photo. A typical layout reads: full name; date of birth; nationality and permit; phone; email; city and canton; LinkedIn. That is enough for a recruiter to know who you are, whether you can work in Switzerland, and how to reach you, all in the first three seconds.
Build your Swiss CV the right way
Getting the personal section right is the easiest way to look local from line one. Create your Swiss CV with CVSwiss and our builder will prompt you for exactly the right fields β date of birth, permit status, photo and the rest β formatted the way Swiss recruiters expect, so nothing important is missing and nothing risky slips in.
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