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    4/1/2026cv structure4 blog.minRead

    How to State Your Swiss Work Permit on a CV

    If you are not a Swiss citizen, one question runs through every recruiter's mind as they read your CV: can this person legally work here, and how much paperwork will it take to hire them? Your residence permit answers that question. Stating it clearly and correctly on your CV removes doubt, speeds up screening, and signals that you understand the Swiss system. This guide explains the permit types, the EU/EFTA versus third-country split, and exactly where and how to put your status.

    Why your permit matters to a Swiss employer

    In Switzerland, work authorisation is tied to your residence permit (Ausweis / permis / permesso), issued by the cantonal migration office. For employers, the permit is shorthand for a practical risk assessment: a candidate who already holds a B or C permit can usually start without any immigration formalities, while a candidate who needs a fresh permit may involve quotas, lead times, and cost โ€” especially for non-EU nationals.

    That is why "work authorisation: yes/no" is often a silent first filter. Leaving it off your CV does not make the question disappear; it just forces the recruiter to guess, and guesses rarely favour the applicant. A single clear line turns uncertainty into a green light.

    The Swiss permit types in plain terms

    You do not need to explain immigration law on your CV โ€” just name your status accurately. The most common categories are:

    • โ—Permit C (settlement permit): open-ended residence, full access to the labour market, no employer formalities. The strongest position to be in.
    • โ—Permit B (residence permit): longer-term residence, usually renewed annually. For EU/EFTA nationals it gives broad labour-market access; for third-country nationals it is tied to specific conditions.
    • โ—Permit L (short-stay permit): for stays usually under one year, linked to a specific job or assignment.
    • โ—Permit G (cross-border commuter): for people who live in the EU/EFTA border zone and commute to work in Switzerland, returning home weekly. Very common in Geneva, Basel, and Ticino.
    • โ—Permit Ci (residence with gainful employment): for family members of staff at international organisations or embassies.
    • โ—Swiss citizen / dual national: state it plainly โ€” no permit needed.

    If your permit is in process, say so honestly (for example, "B permit application submitted").

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    EU/EFTA vs third-country nationals

    The single biggest factor an employer weighs is your nationality bracket. EU/EFTA citizens benefit from the free movement of persons: hiring is straightforward, and a permit is largely a registration formality. Third-country nationals (everyone outside the EU/EFTA) face a stricter, quota-based system, and employers must show the role could not easily be filled locally.

    This is precisely why an existing permit is such a strong selling point for non-EU candidates. If you are, say, an Indian or American national who already holds a B or C permit, lead with it โ€” it tells the employer that the hard part is already done. If you are an EU/EFTA citizen, simply noting your nationality and any current permit is enough.

    Where to put it on your CV

    Keep it short and put it where it is found in a two-second scan. Two placements work well:

    1. 1.In the personal details block at the top, alongside nationality, e.g. Nationality: German | Work permit: C (settlement).
    2. 2.As a one-line entry near your contact details if you prefer a cleaner header.

    State nationality and permit together, because the two are read as a pair. If you are a cross-border commuter, mentioning the G permit also quietly confirms you can realistically reach the workplace. Use the Swiss CV structure so this sits naturally in the header rather than buried on page two.

    How to phrase it (with examples)

    Neutral, factual wording is best. A few field-tested formulations:

    • โ—Work authorisation: Swiss C permit (settlement) โ€” no formalities required.
    • โ—Nationality: Italian (EU). Holder of a valid B permit.
    • โ—Cross-border commuter (G permit), resident in France, Geneva area.
    • โ—Swiss citizen.
    • โ—Non-EU national; B permit application in progress.
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    Avoid vague phrases like "eligible to work in Europe" โ€” Switzerland is not in the EU, and recruiters want a Swiss answer. Never overstate your status; the permit is verified before any contract is signed, so accuracy protects you.

    A note on data privacy and honesty

    Swiss employers may legitimately ask about work authorisation because it is directly relevant to the job. You are not obliged to share your permit number, exact expiry date, or other sensitive details on a public CV โ€” naming the permit category is enough. If your permit is tied to a current employer or has an expiry that affects timing, you can address the specifics later in the interview rather than on the page.

    Make your permit status work for you

    A clearly stated permit can be the line that moves your CV from "maybe" to "invite". Build your Swiss CV with CVSwiss โ€” it places your nationality and work-permit status exactly where Swiss recruiters look, in clean Swiss formatting, and exports a recruiter-ready PDF in minutes.

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    Related Topics:

    B permit CVC permit SwitzerlandL permit Switzerlandcross-border G permit CVwork authorisation Swiss CVEU EFTA vs third-country Switzerlandhow to state permit on CV Switzerland

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