Schooling is usually the first thing UK families ask about when a Switzerland move starts to look serious, and rightly so. Swiss state schools are good, genuinely good, but they teach in the cantonal language. German, French, Italian, depending on the canton. For a child arriving mid-education with none of that, immersion is an option. It is also a significant undertaking, and how well it goes depends a great deal on the child.
International schools solve the immediate problem: English instruction, a familiar curriculum, and a cohort of children who have all just moved somewhere new. The pastoral support matters too. Schools that deal with expat families regularly are much better placed to support a transition than a local state school would be.
The complication is that the best schools are over-subscribed, often by a considerable margin. Waiting lists at the leading Geneva and Zurich institutions can run two to three years. School planning cannot wait until everything else is in place.
Switzerland’s public schools work well. Small classes, solid teaching, good outcomes. For younger children with time to pick up a language, and families who plan to stay long term, the state system is worth considering.
For most UK families relocating with school-age children, the language gap is too wide. A child with no German or French will need eighteen months or more, in many cases, before they can follow lessons comfortably. That is a long time to be behind. International schools remove the barrier. English from day one, a curriculum that picks up broadly where the last school left off, and classmates in the same position.
The International Baccalaureate Organisation framework is the most common across Swiss international schools. It covers three programmes: the Primary Years Programme (PYP) through primary, the Middle Years Programme (MYP) through early secondary, and the Diploma Programme (DP) at the end of school. UK universities know the DP well.
Some schools run a British curriculum pathway, GCSEs, and A levels, which matters if there is any chance of a return to the UK or a UK university application later. American curriculum schools exist in Geneva and Zurich. A number of schools offer more than one pathway, which is useful if plans are still forming.
Geneva has more international schools per square kilometre than anywhere else in Switzerland. That reflects its history as a base for international organisations and diplomatic postings, and it means families typically have more than one serious option to consider.
Ecolint (The International School of Geneva) is one of the oldest and largest IB schools in the world, with multiple campuses in and around the city. The International School of Geneva (ISG) is a separate institution, equally well established. Despite the range of options, demand at the most popular schools consistently outpaces supply. Waiting lists can extend two to three years. Families who wait until a move is confirmed before making contact will often find they have missed their window.
Zurich International School (ZIS) is the dominant option, with several campuses across the region and IB throughout. It is well regarded and draws a genuinely international cohort. The International Community School (ICS) is another city option. For primary-age children specifically, Zurich English Junior School (ZEJS) offers English-medium education through those early years.
Provision is strong. It is slightly less concentrated than Geneva, but Zurich families are not short of options. The same timing point holds: ZIS maintains waiting lists, and early contact is worth making before a firm move date exists.
Zug is smaller, and its school provision is more limited. Most families relocating there look at a combination of local schools and Zurich, which is close enough to make daily commuting workable.
Institut Montana Zugerberg is the main local option: IB programmes, a boarding structure, and a campus on the hillside above the town. It suits families who want something smaller, or who are open to boarding. For everything else, Zug’s central position in the country makes Zurich’s schools accessible in a way that would not be true from further afield.
The International School of Lausanne (ISL) is the main anchor for the region, offering IB programmes and a strong reputation among expat families across the lake area. ENSR provides a French-medium IB alternative for families where French-language schooling is a deliberate choice rather than a default.
For families considering boarding, Institut Le Rosey near Rolle, between Geneva and Lausanne, is in a category of its own. Fees reflect that. Lausanne’s proximity to Geneva means families in this part of Switzerland have access to a wider school network than the canton alone would suggest.
Fees vary quite a bit. Annual tuition runs from around CHF 15,000 at entry level to well over CHF 100,000 per year at leading secondary and boarding schools, according to the Relofinder cost of living guide 2026. For a family with two or more children in secondary education, schooling alone is a significant budget line.
Schools typically ask for financial documentation as part of the admissions process. On top of tuition, registration fees, uniforms, school trips, and boarding costs all add up. Getting a full picture of the real annual cost early in the planning process is worth doing, it affects how the rest of the relocation budget is structured.
Two to three years is a realistic waiting time at the most oversubscribed schools in Geneva and Zurich. Families who contact schools early are in a meaningfully different position from those who start the process after the relocation decision is made.
Some schools hold shadow lists or informal expressions of interest ahead of formal applications. It is always worth making contact at the earliest possible stage, even if the timeline is provisional. School availability can genuinely influence where in Switzerland a family decides to base themselves. If a particular school is the priority, understanding the admissions picture before committing to a canton is sensible.
School registration and relocation logistics need to run alongside each other, not one after the other. Families who sort the move first and school enquiries second often find that the waiting list problem was avoidable.
For the broader planning picture, our guide to moving to Switzerland from the UK covers the full timeline. Where to live in Switzerland covers how canton choice affects day-to-day life, including school access. The cost of living guide covers the wider financial picture.
For families ready to think about the move itself, our removals to Switzerland page explains how we work.
To book or ask us a question, call us on 0208 081 0188 or get in touch.