Don't leave for Switzerland if you don't know these five rules

These five rules are essential information for anyone who moves here, not just foreigners, but anyone in Switzerland who moves from one address to another, writes The Local. Registering the settlement whether you live in a big city or in a small village, you are required to announce your arrival to [...]
Logging
Whether you live in a large city or a small village, you are required to announce your arrival to your municipal authorities (Gemeinde / municipality / communityà locale) within 14 days.
Record rules are strictly implemented. One of the reasons is that the amount of taxes on income and health insurance insurance you pay is based on your residence.
To register, you'll have to show your ID, stay/work permission if you're a foreign citizen and health insurance confirmation (see below).
It's better to call your municipality early to find out which other documents are necessary.
Health Security
Unlike most countries, health insurance is mandatory in Switzerland for all residents.
Whoever lives here on permanent grounds must take a security policy within three months of arrival. It can be purchased by any of the nearly 50 health - insurance providers operating in Switzerland.
Coverage for basic health care and hospitalization, dubbed LaMAL, is the same throughout Switzerland, but companies can compete in terms of price and additional insurance traits.
What if you don't get one? Your chances are that you will be caught sooner or later. This will happen when you seek medical help, or apply for a new job or apartment, in all of these cases you will be asked to give evidence of security.
If you don't keep insurance, the canton you live in will buy a police officer for you and send you a bill, sends you albinfo.ch.
And anyone who doesn't pay health insurance bills can get on the blacklist.
If you are low in income and cannot afford self - assurances and family members, you may be entitled to a reduction in ping through federal and cantonal subsidies.
But overcoming health insurance is not an option.
Radio / Television Tax
It may sound foolish to pay the radio, television and Internet tax at this time, but Switzerland wants you to do it anyway.
This money is used to subsidize the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation and a series of private radio and television channels.
Once a year, each family receives a bill from an agency mandated by the government called Seraphs. This year, the price for this service has dropped from 365 to 335 francs.
Do you have to pay this fee?
The only people excluded from this tax are those who receive benefits of well-being, disabled persons (including those who are deaf and blind), and diplomats.
If you don't fall into any of these categories, or you can prove that you live in a cave away from civilization, you're obliged to pay, follow away albinfo.ch.
Animals
If you own a pet, remember that the well - being of animals is an established right in the Swiss Constitution.
Swiss Animal Protection Law stipulates certain rules that pet owners must follow. For example, she says that small domestic animals such as rabbits, rodents, and guine pigs tend to remain alone without a friend, so they must be kept in pairs.
And if cats are kept alone, they should have daily interactions either with a human being or visual contact with another cat, the law determines.
Also, each dog owner has to pay the dog tax, which depends on the size and weight of the dog.
But of course one of the weirdest legislation the Swiss have is the one that prevents the boiling of living lobsters, contains albinfo.ch.
This law, which went into effect on March 1, 2018, prohibits this practice by reasoning that it is cruel because lobsters may feel pain.
Instead, the law calls for a more human death for lobsters: “making them unconscious” before we dive into hot water. Two methods are recommended: the electrical shock or calming of lobsters by sinking them into salt water and then inserting a knife into the brain.
Apparently, someone decided that these two methods are somewhat more human.
Waste disposal
Wherever you live, know that waste disposal in Switzerland is highly regulated.
For example, throwing all the garbage into a garbage bag without isolating those bottles. PET cans of tin or paper is a violation in Switzerland.
It could result in heavy fines, the amount of which is determined by each individual municipality.
And yes, municipal workers have the right to look through garbage bags to identify garbage violators a implacable task but, apparently, very important.
These are the rules you need to remember:
You can't just use a bag to dump your trash. Each canton has specially designated bags, or bags, with the price in accordance with their size (35, 60, or 100 liters), or a poster that should be placed in a bag.
Bags are available in all supermarkets, grocery stores, and convenience shops. However, you may not find them on the shelves and you may need to search them in the ark. The reason is, the bags are expensive over 30 francs for 10 of the smaller ones and people have stolen them.
You don't need to put your recycling items, including PET bottles, glass, cardboard, paper, tin, aluminum and batteries, into the garbage bag. Instead, they must go to a particular gathering point in your residential municipality.












