Zurich expat guide
A handbook for moving to Zurich without learning every lesson the hard way.
This page is built for repeat visits. Scan the sections when you need the next task, then come back when the move gets more real and the details matter more.
Typical 1BR
€2,200
Registration office
Kreisbüro
Deposit norm
3 months rent
Before you move
The biggest wins happen before you arrive: understanding rent reality, lining up temporary housing if needed, and collecting the paperwork that landlords actually want.
- • Budget around CHF 2,200 for a typical 1-bedroom and assume stronger competition in popular lakeside districts like Seefeld.
- • Prepare one clean application pack with ID, income proof, a Betreibungsauskunft (debt enforcement extract), and a short tenant intro.
- • If you are searching from abroad, treat serviced or furnished short stays as a practical landing option rather than a failure.
Your first two weeks
Once you move in, Anmeldung becomes urgent because it unlocks downstream admin steps quickly.
- • Have your signed Mietvertrag ready as soon as keys are confirmed.
- • Book your Kreisbüro or Einwohnerkontrolle appointment immediately rather than waiting until you feel settled.
- • Store your lease, registration documents, and employer paperwork together so each next step is faster.
Housing decisions that matter
Do not optimize for prestige first. Optimize for commute, fit, and whether the contract terms are manageable for your first year in the city.
- • Bruttomiete vs Nettomiete matters: your Mietvertrag may look reasonable until Nebenkosten (utilities) are added.
- • Three months' deposit remains normal, usually held in a Mietkautionskonto (blocked deposit account).
- • Choose three realistic neighbourhoods instead of chasing one dream district and missing better listings.
Settling in without avoidable friction
The first month gets easier when you sequence tasks instead of trying to solve everything at once.
- • Apply for your Aufenthaltsbewilligung (residence permit) early if you are relocating under a work visa or employer-sponsored path.
- • Use a direct transit line into your routine rather than assuming every district is equally convenient.
- • Treat admin follow-up as a checklist, not background noise; small delays stack quickly in Switzerland.
Want the short version instead?
The FAQ is faster when you only need a direct answer about rent, paperwork, or neighbourhood fit.