Swiss Driving Licence 2026
The Complete Guide
Everything you need to know about getting your driving licence in Switzerland — theory test format, driving school costs, speed limits, Via Sicura fines, mountain driving rules, and the 3-year probationary licence system.
250
Road deaths in Switzerland (2024)
Worst in a decade — up 34% from 2019 (187)
~2.8
Deaths per 100,000 population
Similar to UK (2.6), far below USA (12.9)
CHF 3,000
Average cost for Category B licence
Ranges CHF 2,000–4,000 across cantons
Click any card to copy the stat with source attribution
Key Findings
50 multiple-choice questions in 45 minutes. You need 135 out of 150 points (90%) to pass. Each question has up to 3 correct answers. You earn 1 point per correct sub-answer, for a maximum of 150 points. The test fee is CHF 30–45 depending on the canton. Administered at cantonal Strassenverkehrsamt offices.
Approximately CHF 2,000–4,000 (average ~CHF 3,000): driving school lessons CHF 80–120 per 45 min, Nothelferkurs CHF 100–200, eye test CHF 10–20, learner permit application CHF 60–120, theory test CHF 30–45, VKU (traffic theory course, 8 hrs) CHF 150–250, practical test CHF 120–140, WAB course CHF 350–500, licence issuance CHF 50–80.
250 fatalities in 2024 (~2.8 per 100K), the worst figure in a decade. This reversed a long declining trend — 2019 had only 187 deaths. ASTRA attributes the increase partly to more motorcyclist and e-bike fatalities.
0.5 promille (0.05%) general limit. Novice drivers during the 3-year probationary period: 0.1 promille (effectively zero). Professional drivers: 0.1 promille. Criminal threshold at 0.8 promille — automatic licence withdrawal.
Switzerland's Via Sicura road safety programme introduced severe penalties for extreme speeding: exceeding the limit by +50 km/h in 50 km/h zones (or +40 km/h in 30 km/h zones), +60 km/h on rural roads, or +80 km/h on motorways is a criminal offence (Raserdelikt) carrying a minimum 1-year licence revocation and possible imprisonment.
Switzerland has one of Europe's safest road networks. Death rate ~2.8/100K vs USA 12.9, UK 2.6, Germany 3.3. Licence cost (CHF 2,000–4,000) is among the highest globally, reflecting comprehensive mandatory training including the WAB further education course.
Switzerland Road Safety: 6-Year Trend (2019–2024)
According to ASTRA and BFS, road fatalities in Switzerland have fluctuated over recent years. The 2024 figure of 250 deaths represents the highest since 2015, prompting renewed focus on Via Sicura measures.
2019→2020
+21.4%
2020→2021
-11.9%
2021→2022
+20.5%
2022→2023
-2.1%
2023→2024
+5.9%
Deaths per 100,000 Population
Source: WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety, BFS/ASTRA. Per-capita rates are estimates and may vary by methodology.
Swiss Theory Test Format#
The computerized theory test is administered by the cantonal Strassenverkehrsamt (road traffic office)
The Swiss driving theory test (Theorieprüfung) for Category B consists of 50 multiple-choice questions to be completed within 45 minutes. Each question has up to 3 correct answers — you earn 1 point per correct sub-answer, for a maximum total of 150 points. To pass, you must achieve at least 135 points (90%). The test fee ranges from CHF 30 to CHF 45 depending on the canton. Tests are available in German, French, Italian, and English. The question pool is maintained by ASTRA (Federal Roads Office) and covers traffic rules, road signs, right of way, vehicle safety, and eco-driving. A learner permit (Lernfahrausweis) is valid for 2 years and is issued after passing the theory test.
Questions
50 MCQs
3 points each (3 sub-answers)
Duration
45 Min
~54 sec per question
Pass Mark
135/150
90% required to pass
Test Fee
CHF 30–45
Varies by canton
What the Theory Test Covers
- Traffic signs (Verkehrstafeln) & signals
- Right of way (Vortritt / Rechtsvortritt)
- Speed limits (Innerorts, Ausserorts, Autobahn)
- Stopping & parking rules
- Roundabout rules
- Vehicle technology & maintenance
- Tyre requirements & winter driving
- Vehicle inspection (MFK / Motorfahrzeugkontrolle)
- First aid basics (Nothelferkurs)
- Eco-driving (EcoDrive)
- Motorway rules & tunnel driving
- Mountain road priority rules
- BAC limits & probationary licence rules
- Via Sicura extreme speeding provisions
- Motorway vignette requirements
How to Get Your Swiss Driving Licence#
From Nothelferkurs to Führerausweis — the complete 6-step process
Complete a First Aid Course
Take the mandatory Nothelferkurs (emergency first response course)
10-hour course costing CHF 100–200. Certificate valid for 6 years. Must be completed before applying for learner permit.
Eye Test
Get an eye test from a recognised optician or doctor
CHF 10–20. Visual acuity must meet minimum requirements. Certificate valid for 24 months.
Apply for Learner Permit
Submit your application to the cantonal Strassenverkehrsamt
Application fee CHF 60–120 depending on canton. Processing takes 1–4 weeks. Learner permit valid for 2 years.
Pass Theory Test
Pass the computerized theory exam at the Strassenverkehrsamt
50 questions, 45 minutes, 135/150 points to pass. Fee CHF 30–45. Available in DE/FR/IT/EN.
Practical Driving Lessons
Complete driving lessons with a licensed instructor
No mandatory minimum hours, but typically 25–40 lessons at CHF 80–120 per 45 min. Accompanied driving (L plate) allowed from age 17.
Practical Test & WAB Course
Pass the practical driving test and complete the WAB further education course
Practical test: 45–60 min, CHF 120–140. After passing, you receive a 3-year probationary licence. WAB course (1 day, 7 hours) must be completed within 12 months of receiving the probationary licence.
VKU Traffic Theory Course
8-hour mandatory traffic awareness course (Verkehrskundeunterricht).
CHF 150–250 · Covers road users, traffic dynamics, driving forces, and eco-driving
Receive Probationary Licence
After passing the practical test, you receive a 3-year probationary licence.
3-year Probezeit · 0.1‰ BAC limit · Cascading sanctions for violations
Complete WAB Course
Mandatory further training course within 12 months of receiving your probationary licence.
1 day (7 hours) · CHF 350–500 · Required to convert to permanent licence
Swiss Driving Licence Fees#
Total cost typically CHF 2,000–CHF 4,000 — average approximately CHF 3,000
Costs vary significantly by canton. Urban areas (Zürich, Geneva) tend to be more expensive than rural cantons. TCS reports an average of ~CHF 3,000. Additional costs apply if you fail and must retake tests.
Licence Categories & Minimum Age
M — Mopeds up to 30 km/h
14
years
A1 — Motorcycles up to 125cc / 11 kW
15
years
A limited — Motorcycles up to 35 kW
16
years
B — Cars up to 3,500 kg
17 with accompanied driving (L plate)
17
years
A — Motorcycles unlimited
Requires 2 years on A limited
18
years
C — Trucks over 3,500 kg
Requires professional CZV qualification
18
years
D — Buses (8+ passengers)
Requires professional CZV qualification
20
years
C1 — Vehicles 3,500–7,500 kg
Professional driver qualification required
18
years
D1 — Minibuses up to 16 seats
Requires professional CZV qualification
21
years
BE/CE/DE — Trailer combinations
Separate trailer licence add-on required
21
years
Licence Validity Periods
Driving right is permanent; card must be renewed
Medical exam required for renewal
Medical exam required for renewal
Converted to permanent if no serious violations and WAB completed
Probationary Licence (Führerausweis auf Probe)
- 3-year probationary period for all new Category B licence holders
- 0.1 promille BAC limit during probationary period (effectively zero)
- One serious violation (Widerhandlung): licence revoked for minimum 1 year, must restart with new learner permit
- WAB course (Weiterausbildung — 1 day, 7 hours) mandatory within 12 months of receiving the probationary licence
- Failure to complete WAB: probationary licence expires and is not converted to permanent
WAB Course (Further Training)
- 1-day course (7 hours) at an approved WAB training centre
- Must be completed within 12 months of receiving the probationary licence
- Covers advanced driving skills, eco-driving, and self-assessment
- Cost: CHF 350–500 depending on provider and region
- Failure to complete: probationary licence expires and is not converted to permanent
- After successful completion, permanent licence is issued automatically
Switzerland enforces strict speed limits across all road types. Urban areas (Innerorts) are limited to 50 km/h, with widespread 30 km/h zones in residential areas. Outside urban areas (Ausserorts), the limit is 80 km/h. Expressways (Autostrassen) have a 100 km/h limit, and motorways (Autobahnen) are limited to 120 km/h. Speed enforcement is rigorous with both fixed and mobile cameras. Under Via Sicura, exceeding the limit by +50 km/h in 50 km/h zones (+40 km/h in 30 km/h zones), +60 km/h on rural roads, or +80 km/h on motorways constitutes a Raserdelikt (extreme speeding offence) carrying criminal penalties including imprisonment.
| Road Type | Cars | Trucks (>3.5t) | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Urban (Innerorts) | 50 | 50 | Tempo-30 zones: 30 km/h |
| Rural (Ausserorts) | 80 | 80 | Single carriageway |
| Expressway (Autostrasse) | 100 | 80 | Green signs; slower than motorway |
| Motorway (Autobahn) | 120 | 80 | Vignette required |
| Tempo-30 Zone | 30 | 30 | Residential areas, near schools |
Urban (Innerorts)
50
Cars
50
Trucks
Tempo-30 zones: 30 km/h
Rural (Ausserorts)
80
Cars
80
Trucks
Single carriageway
Expressway (Autostrasse)
100
Cars
80
Trucks
Green signs; slower than motorway
Motorway (Autobahn)
120
Cars
80
Trucks
Vignette required
Tempo-30 Zone
30
Cars
30
Trucks
Residential areas, near schools
Via Sicura extreme speeding thresholds: +50 km/h in 50 km/h zones (+40 km/h in 30 km/h zones), +60 km/h rural, +80 km/h motorway = Raserdelikt (criminal offence). Minimum 1-year licence revocation (since 2023 reform).
Traffic Fines & Penalties#
Swiss traffic fines — Via Sicura introduced severe penalties for extreme speeding
Switzerland has a two-tier penalty system: Ordnungsbussen (fixed penalties) for minor violations paid on the spot, and administrative/criminal proceedings for serious offences. Via Sicura, the federal road safety programme introduced in 2013, dramatically increased penalties for extreme speeding. Minor speeding fines are fixed: 1–5 km/h over the limit costs CHF 40 in urban areas, 6–10 km/h over costs CHF 120. More serious violations lead to licence withdrawal (Führerausweisentzug) by the cantonal authority. Criminal speeding (Raserdelikt) carries a minimum 1-year licence revocation, criminal record, and possible imprisonment of 1–4 years.
| Violation | Fine | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Speeding urban 1–5 km/h over | CHF 40 | Ordnungsbusse |
| Speeding urban 6–10 km/h over | CHF 120 | Ordnungsbusse |
| Speeding 11-15 km/h over (urban) | CHF 250 | Ordnungsbusse |
| Speeding urban 16–20 km/h over | CHF 240 | Ordnungsbusse |
| Speeding urban 25+ km/h over | Criminal | Criminal |
| Red light violation | CHF 250+ | Ordnungsbusse |
| Phone use while driving | CHF 100 | Ordnungsbusse |
| No seatbelt | CHF 60 | Ordnungsbusse |
| Drunk driving 0.5–0.79 promille | CHF 600+ | Criminal |
| No motorway vignette | CHF 200 | Ordnungsbusse |
| Tailgating (serious) | Criminal | Criminal |
Speeding urban 1–5 km/h over
Speeding urban 6–10 km/h over
Speeding 11-15 km/h over (urban)
Speeding urban 16–20 km/h over
Speeding urban 25+ km/h over
Red light violation
Phone use while driving
No seatbelt
Drunk driving 0.5–0.79 promille
No motorway vignette
Tailgating (serious)
Ordnungsbussen (fixed fines) apply to minor violations only. Serious violations trigger administrative proceedings (licence withdrawal) and/or criminal prosecution under the SVG. Via Sicura Raserdelikt: minimum 1-year licence revocation + imprisonment 1–4 years.
Know These Rules Before Your Theory Test
Traffic fines, speed limits, and BAC rules are heavily tested in the Swiss Theorieprüfung. Practice with real exam-style questions.
Start Practicing for FreeImportant Driving Rules in Switzerland
Mountain Road Priority
On narrow mountain roads, the ascending vehicle has priority. If one vehicle must reverse, the descending vehicle reverses to the nearest passing place. PostBus (yellow) always has absolute priority.
Rechtsvortritt (Priority from Right)
At unmarked intersections, the vehicle coming from the right has priority. This is the default rule throughout Switzerland and is heavily tested in the theory exam.
PostBus Priority
Yellow PostBuses with a three-tone horn have absolute priority on mountain roads. When you hear the horn, you must stop and yield, even if you have the right of way.
Motorway Vignette
A CHF 40/year vignette is required for all motorways and expressways. E-vignette available since August 2023. Driving without one incurs a CHF 200 fine plus the vignette cost.
Stick'Air / Environmental Zones
Geneva requires a Stick'Air environmental sticker during high-pollution periods. Other cities may follow. Check local cantonal regulations before driving in city centres.
Winter Tyres
Winter tyres are NOT legally mandatory in Switzerland, but driving with unsuitable tyres in winter conditions can lead to liability in accidents and fines for obstructing traffic. Strongly recommended October–April.
0.1 Promille for Novice Drivers
During the 3-year probationary period, the BAC limit is 0.1 promille (effectively zero). The general limit is 0.5 promille. Professional drivers: 0.1 promille.
Required Equipment
Warning triangle (Pannendreieck) mandatory and must be accessible (not in the boot). Reflective vest recommended but not mandatory. First aid kit recommended. Headlights must be on at all times (daytime running lights).
MFK Vehicle Inspection
The Motorfahrzeugkontrolle (MFK) is mandatory: first inspection after 5 years for new cars, then every 3 years, and after 8 years every 2 years. Managed by cantonal authorities.
Common Road Hazards in Switzerland
250 road fatalities in 2024 — know these hazards to stay safe on Swiss roads
Mountain Passes & Hairpin Bends
Steep gradients, narrow roads, and tight hairpin turns on alpine passes — extreme caution required, especially for inexperienced drivers
Winter Conditions & Black Ice
Ice, snow, and fog in mountain regions from October to April. Many mountain passes close entirely in winter.
Tunnels
Switzerland has over 700 road tunnels. Adapt to sudden lighting changes, maintain distance, and follow variable speed signs. The Gotthard Tunnel frequently has long queues.
Motorcyclists & E-Bikes
Growing number of e-bikes and motorcyclists, especially in urban areas and mountain roads. E-bike fatalities have increased significantly.
Wildlife Crossings
Deer, chamois, and other wildlife frequently cross rural and mountain roads, especially at dawn and dusk.
Rockfalls & Landslides
Mountain roads are susceptible to rockfalls, avalanches, and landslides, especially after heavy rain or snowmelt. Obey warning signs.
Switzerland's 26 Cantons
Driving licence administration is handled by the cantonal Strassenverkehrsamt in each canton
| Canton | Code | Capital | Population |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zurich | ZH | Zurich | 1.6M |
| Bern | BE | Bern | 1.0M |
| Lucerne | LU | Lucerne | 0.4M |
| Uri | UR | Altdorf | 37K |
| Schwyz | SZ | Schwyz | 0.2M |
| Obwalden | OW | Sarnen | 38K |
| Nidwalden | NW | Stans | 44K |
| Glarus | GL | Glarus | 41K |
| Zug | ZG | Zug | 0.1M |
| Fribourg | FR | Fribourg | 0.3M |
| Solothurn | SO | Solothurn | 0.3M |
| Basel-Stadt | BS | Basel | 0.2M |
| Basel-Landschaft | BL | Liestal | 0.3M |
| Schaffhausen | SH | Schaffhausen | 83K |
| Appenzell AR | AR | Herisau | 55K |
| Appenzell IR | AI | Appenzell | 16K |
| St. Gallen | SG | St. Gallen | 0.5M |
| Graubünden | GR | Chur | 0.2M |
| Aargau | AG | Aarau | 0.7M |
| Thurgau | TG | Frauenfeld | 0.3M |
| Ticino | TI | Bellinzona | 0.4M |
| Vaud | VD | Lausanne | 0.8M |
| Valais | VS | Sion | 0.3M |
| Neuchâtel | NE | Neuchâtel | 0.2M |
| Geneva | GE | Geneva | 0.5M |
| Jura | JU | Delémont | 74K |
Zurich
Zurich · 1.6M
Bern
Bern · 1.0M
Lucerne
Lucerne · 0.4M
Uri
Altdorf · 37K
Schwyz
Schwyz · 0.2M
Obwalden
Sarnen · 38K
Nidwalden
Stans · 44K
Glarus
Glarus · 41K
Zug
Zug · 0.1M
Fribourg
Fribourg · 0.3M
Solothurn
Solothurn · 0.3M
Basel-Stadt
Basel · 0.2M
Basel-Landschaft
Liestal · 0.3M
Schaffhausen
Schaffhausen · 83K
Appenzell AR
Herisau · 55K
Appenzell IR
Appenzell · 16K
St. Gallen
St. Gallen · 0.5M
Graubünden
Chur · 0.2M
Aargau
Aarau · 0.7M
Thurgau
Frauenfeld · 0.3M
Ticino
Bellinzona · 0.4M
Vaud
Lausanne · 0.8M
Valais
Sion · 0.3M
Neuchâtel
Neuchâtel · 0.2M
Geneva
Geneva · 0.5M
Jura
Delémont · 74K
While driving laws are federal (SVG/VRV), licence issuance and test administration are handled by each canton's Strassenverkehrsamt. Fees and procedures vary by canton.
Emergency Numbers
All toll-free, available 24/7. {number} is the EU-wide emergency number.
117
Police
118
Fire Brigade
144
Ambulance
1414
Rega Air Rescue
140
TCS Breakdown Service
145
Tox Info (Poison Centre)
112
EU Emergency Number
Common Misconceptions About Driving in Switzerland#
Myth: Winter tyres are mandatory in Switzerland
Fact: Unlike Germany or Austria, Switzerland has NO legal requirement for winter tyres. However, if you cause an accident or obstruct traffic due to unsuitable tyres, you face significant liability, fines, and insurance reductions. Police can also prohibit you from continuing your journey. In practice, winter tyres are essential.
Myth: Switzerland uses a penalty points system like Germany
Fact: Switzerland uses a cascading sanctions system with escalating licence withdrawal periods for repeat offences, NOT a points system. Each violation is recorded in the ADMAS register, and the severity and recency of past offences determine penalties for future violations.
Myth: You can buy the motorway vignette at the border and apply it on the motorway
Fact: You must have a valid vignette BEFORE entering the motorway. Since August 2023, an e-vignette option is available (linked to your licence plate), so you can purchase it online in advance. The physical vignette must be affixed to the windshield before use. Fine: CHF 200 + vignette cost.
Myth: The speed limit on Swiss motorways is just a recommendation
Fact: All Swiss speed limits are strictly enforced with fixed and mobile cameras. Switzerland has some of the harshest speeding penalties in Europe. Under Via Sicura, extreme speeding is a criminal offence carrying imprisonment. There is NEVER an advisory speed — all limits are mandatory.
Myth: Driving in Switzerland is similar to driving in neighbouring Germany or Austria
Fact: While Swiss roads are excellent, unique rules apply: PostBus priority on mountain roads, ascending vehicles have priority on narrow mountain roads, mandatory daytime running lights, a 3-year probationary licence system, and the Via Sicura extreme speeding criminal provisions — none of which exist in neighbouring countries.
Myth: You need a minimum number of driving lessons to take the practical test
Fact: Unlike Germany, Switzerland has NO mandatory minimum number of driving lessons. You can take the practical test whenever you feel ready. However, most candidates need 25–40 lessons, and the test is rigorous. Driving with a non-professional accompanier (family member, 23+ years old, 3+ years licence) is also allowed for practice.
Recent Changes to Swiss Driving Laws#
Key regulatory updates affecting drivers in Switzerland
E-vignette introduced
Since August 2023, motorists can purchase an electronic vignette (e-Vignette) linked to their licence plate number, in addition to the traditional windshield sticker. Available online and at border crossings. Price remains CHF 40/year.
Motorcycle reform & new regulations
Major reforms to motorcycle licencing: direct access to unlimited motorcycles (Category A) from age 20 with a practical test, simplified progression from A limited. New regulations for e-bikes and e-scooters introduced, including registration and insurance requirements for faster models.
Learner permit & probation reforms
Accompanied driving (L plate) permitted from age 17 (previously 18). Learner permit validity extended from 2 to 2 years with streamlined application process. WAB course structure updated.
Via Sicura adjustments
Some Via Sicura provisions adjusted: mandatory blood alcohol testing at all accidents was relaxed, alcohol interlock device programme piloted for repeat offenders, and extreme speeding thresholds maintained despite political debate about softening them.
Via Sicura road safety programme launched
Comprehensive federal road safety programme introducing: Raserdelikt (extreme speeding as criminal offence), mandatory 3-year probationary licence, 0.1 promille BAC for novice and professional drivers, and event data recorders for repeat offenders.
250 road deaths — worst since 2015
Switzerland recorded 250 road fatalities in 2024, the highest figure since 2015 (253), driven by increases in motorcycle and e-bike accidents.
How Switzerland Compares Globally#
Switzerland's driving regulations compared to neighbouring countries — data compiled from official government sources
| Parameter | Switzerland | Switzerland | France | Italy | Austria |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAC Limit | 0.05% | 0.05% | 0.05% | 0.05% | 0.05% |
| Min. Age (Car) | 18 | 18 | 18 | 18 | 18 |
| Driving Side | Right | Right | Right | Right | Right |
| Motorway Speed | 120 km/h | No limit* | 130 km/h | 130 km/h | 130 km/h |
| Test Questions | 50 | 30 | 40 | 50 | 50 |
| Licence Cost | CHF 2–4K | €2–3.5K | €1.5–2K | €1–1.5K | €1.5–2.5K |
| Road Deaths/yr | 250 | 2,770 | 3,170 | 3,039 | 370 |
| Deaths/100K | ~2.8 | ~3.3 | ~4.7 | ~5.1 | ~4.1 |
Same as Germany and France (0.05%). Austria is also 0.05%. Novice drivers: 0.01% in Switzerland vs 0.0% in Germany.
Same as Germany, France, Italy, and Austria. Accompanied driving from 17 in Switzerland and Germany.
Lower than Germany (no limit), France (130), and Italy (130). Austria is 130 km/h. All limits strictly enforced.
Among the most expensive globally. Germany €2,000–3,500, France €1,500–2,500, Italy €800–1,500.
~2.8 per 100K — among Europe's safest. Germany 3.3, France 4.5, Italy 4.7, Austria 3.4 per 100K.
Road deaths: Switzerland 250 (BFS 2024), Germany 2,770 (Destatis 2024), France 3,170 (ONISR 2023), Italy 2,783 (ISTAT 2023), Austria 370 (BMK 2023). BAC limits: all 0.05% general. Motorway speeds: CH 120, DE no limit (130 advisory), FR 130, IT 130, AT 130 km/h.
Sources & Methodology
Primary Sources
- Strassenverkehrsgesetz (SVG) — Road Traffic Act — Swiss Federal Government
- Verkehrsregelnverordnung (VRV) — Traffic Rules Ordinance — Swiss Federal Government
- ASTRA — Unfallstatistik (Road accident statistics) — Bundesamt für Strassen (Federal Roads Office)
- BFS — Verkehrsunfälle (Federal Statistical Office) — Bundesamt für Statistik
- TCS — Führerschein cost data — Touring Club Schweiz
- Via Sicura — Road safety programme documentation — Swiss Federal Council / ASTRA
Verification Methodology
Every fact on this page has been cross-referenced against at least two authoritative sources. Our process:
- Primary data collected from official Swiss federal legislation and government portals
- Cross-verified against BFS/ASTRA publications, TCS resources, and cantonal data
- Regional variations noted where applicable (fees differ by canton)
- Page reviewed and fact-checked on March 24, 2026
If you find an error, please contact us so we can correct it immediately.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a driving licence cost in Switzerland?
What is the Swiss theory test format?
What is the motorway vignette and do I need one?
What is the BAC (blood alcohol) limit in Switzerland?
What is the probationary licence (Führerausweis auf Probe)?
What is Via Sicura and how does it affect me?
What is the WAB course?
Do I need winter tyres in Switzerland?
Who has priority on mountain roads?
Are there minimum driving lesson requirements?
Can I convert my foreign driving licence to a Swiss one?
What equipment must I carry in my car in Switzerland?
What is the Nothelferkurs and is it mandatory?
How does Switzerland's road safety compare to other countries?
What currency are Swiss driving fees paid in?
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Pawan Priyadarshi
Founder & Chief Engineer
Data sourced from SVG, VRV, ASTRA, BFS, TCS, and official Swiss government sources. Cross-referenced with multiple authoritative sources for accuracy.
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