SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

HEALTH INSURANCE

What happens if you don’t pay your Swiss health insurance premiums on time?

Given significant rate hikes announced for 2024, you could find it difficult to pay your premiums on time. But penalties for missed or late payments are stiff in Switzerland.

What happens if you don’t pay your Swiss health insurance premiums on time?
Swiss employees have more money than European counterparts. Photo: Pixabay

As insurance rates will rise by 8.7 percent on average (and quite a bit more in some cantons), the budget of many households will be strained, especially with higher electricity charges to go into effect in 2024 as well.

It is perhaps understandable that you may be tempted to skip paying your health insurance premiums one month, planning to catch up the missed payment(s) in the future.

However, you should not do that.

Here’s why.

Hefty penalty fees

As is the case with any bills you don’t pay, the arrears are going to catch up with you.

Usually, you have 30 days to pay your invoices, with most companies giving you a few extra days of grace period before sending you reminders —  polite ones at first, and later on, less so.

In case of health insurance, your provider will typically send one ‘free’ reminder. From the second one (assuming you still haven’t made the payment), the carrier will charge you ‘late fees.’

According to Moneyland consumer platform, “each additional reminder is generally accompanied by a penalty fee. This penalty fee ranges between 10 and 50 francs, depending on the insurance provider. Penalty fees for compulsory health insurance premiums are typically higher than those for supplementary health insurance.”

If the premium is still not paid after several warnings have been issued, a debt collection claim is filed, adding additional costs to the process.

“Penalty interest on the unpaid premium at the rate of 5 percent a year is added to your health insurance bill. This penalty interest rate is stipulated by law and is identical across all insurance providers,” Moneyland said.

Other fees may be added to your bill in addition to penalty interest, ultimately turning into a huge debt — something you want to avoid at all costs (see below).

What if you just can’t afford to pay your premiums?

You would certainly not be alone in this predicament.

In Switzerland, between 20 and 30 percent of the population can’t pay for health insurance, and in Geneva this proportion is even higher — over 40 percent.

If you find yourself in this situation — that is, if your payment for health insurance will exceed 8 percent of your income in 2024 — you can have your premium reduced. 

All cantons have budgets allocated specifically for this purpose — to subsidise part of the health insurance payment for low-income households and individuals, as well as for families with many children.

And given much higher premiums in 2024, cantons are raising their contributions toward health insurance subsidies.

READ ALSO: Swiss cantons increase financial help towards health insurance premiums

So if your premiums eat up at least the aforementioned 8 percent of your income, you are eligible to have your premiums reduced, which is certainly a better option than paying your bills late or, even worse, not at all.

Before deciding whether you receive the assistance, however, your canton of residence will look not only at your earnings, but at any other financial assets you hold as well.

So if your income is low but you have plenty of money in the bank in the form of savings or other investments, you will not qualify.

Exact subsidy amounts may vary from one canton to another.

Will you receive government help?

Subsidies are available to anyone obligated to take out Swiss health insurance — that is, anyone living in Switzerland for more than 90 days, regardless of their nationalities — with just a few exemptions from this rule. 

Eligibility is based on your most current tax declaration, which allows the authorities to see not only how much you earn and how many children you have, but also your total assets.

Some cantons will notify those who are eligible automatically when you file your tax return. In others, you must apply for the reduction yourself every year.

This is a list of all the cantonal authorities responsible for subsidies.

This is why you must pay your premiums on time

As mentioned above, being late, or not paying at all, will trigger a debt collection process, which you want to avoid at all costs, especially if you a foreign national who is planning to apply for naturalisation..

The State Secretariat for Migration states that non-payment of health insurance premiums, and accumulation of debt in general, is a valid reason for denying citizenship.

READ ALSO: How personal debt could stop you from becoming Swiss
 

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

HEALTH INSURANCE

Could glasses and contact lenses soon be covered by Swiss health insurance?

The Swiss health system is ranked among the best in the world, but some essentials, like glasses, aren't automatically covered by health insurance. That could soon change, however

Could glasses and contact lenses soon be covered by Swiss health insurance?

Green Party Federal Councillor Katharina Prelicz-Huber revealed in an interview with newspaper 20 Minuten this week that the Federal Parliament had tabled a motion to include prescription glasses and contact lenses in Switzerland’s mandatory health insurance scheme. 

Prelicz-Huber stated: “The purpose of compulsory health insurance is to provide the services you need to get or stay healthy,”

The motion forms part of the legislation that will be voted on during the 2024 summer session of the Federal Council. 

Proposed changes 

According to Switzerland’s peak optician body, 4 in 5 Swiss wear glasses or contact lenses at some point. 

It’s no surprise that statistics repository, Statista, projects the Swiss eyewear industry to be worth €1.37 billion by 2028. 

Currently, glasses and contact lenses are covered for up to 180 francs for children until age eighteen, if they are proscribed by a doctor.

Adults can also claim money back for glasses and contact lenses – however, they must be suffering from one of a short list of specific conditions such as keratoconus – where the cornea is distorted – or severe myopia, otherwise known as near-sightedness.

They must also have been specifically prescribed them by a doctor or optometrist. 

Otherwise, supplemental optical insurance must be purchased in Switzerland to ensure you can recoup the cost. 

Under the Green Party proposal, glasses, contact lenses, and other visual aids would be covered, regardless of age. 

Rising premiums prompt opposition 

Not everybody agrees with the proposal. 

The right-wing SVP has already spoken out against it, with Federal Councillor Diana Gutjahr arguing: “If we seriously want to slow down the burdensome and constantly rising health costs for the benefit of the population, we [must] show the political will not to constantly expand the benefits of compulsory health insurance.”

A spokesman for the the health insurance advocacy group Santesuisse, Matthias Müller, echoed Gutjahr, claiming that insurance constitutes “financing for extraordinary events such as illness.”

“If almost everyone benefits from a certain service, it is no longer an insurance benefit.”

A date for the vote has yet to be announced. 

SHOW COMMENTS