Personal Finance

Is a side hustle worth it in Switzerland?

A side hustle in Switzerland is worth it when the extra income clearly outweighs the tax, social contribution and administrative costs that come with it.
janice-kerschbaumer
Janice Kerschbaumer
Financial Educator - Founder of Coach Ton Budget & Coach Ton Business
PublishedJul 17, 2026
UpdatedJul 17, 2026
6min
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A side hustle in Switzerland can lift your income, but taxes, social contributions and admin rules decide whether it truly pays. Here is what to weigh before you start.

A side hustle in Switzerland is worth it when the extra income clearly outweighs the tax, social contribution and administrative costs that come with it. Many people start one without realising that a secondary self-employed activity must be registered with the social system once its net profit passes CHF 2'500 a year or that certain thresholds trigger VAT and formal independent status. Having worked with more than 300 entrepreneurs, I will break down the real costs, the rules that catch beginners and how to judge whether your side project actually pays.

"A side hustle is worth it only when the money you keep, not the money you bill, justifies your hours."

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Do you have to declare side hustle income in Switzerland?

Yes. All income is taxable and must appear on your tax return. Once a secondary self-employed activity earns more than CHF 2'500 of net profit a year, it must also be registered with an AVS compensation fund. There is no tax-free hobby allowance for genuine earnings.

Two systems apply at once. For tax, every franc you earn is added to your income, whatever the amount. For social insurance, once your annual net profit from the side activity passes CHF 2'500 you are expected to affiliate with a cantonal compensation fund and pay first-pillar contributions on a sliding scale, up to about 10% of that profit, with a minimum of around CHF 530 a year. Skipping this can lead to back-payments with interest and gaps in your future pension, so it is rarely worth the risk. Keep in mind that recognition as self-employed depends on the compensation office assessing whether the activity actually qualifies as independent work.

I see this constantly: people celebrate the turnover and quietly forget the contributions and tax behind it. Treating those as optional is the most expensive mistake a beginner can make.

When do you need independent status or a VAT number?

You must register for VAT once your annual turnover from taxable services reaches CHF 100'000. Recognised independent status from your AVS fund usually matters well before that. These are two separate thresholds that people often confuse.

Independent status is granted by your cantonal compensation fund and confirms you work in your own name and at your own risk. Swiss clients frequently ask to see proof of it before paying your first invoice, because an unrecognised contractor can be reclassified as an employee and leave the client liable for contributions. VAT registration is a different trigger: above CHF 100'000 of taxable turnover you have 30 days to register with the Federal Tax Administration. Below that you are exempt, though you can opt in voluntarily if you work business to business. The simplest legal form to start is a sole proprietorship (raison individuelle), which needs no minimum capital. In practice, most people begin small as a sole proprietorship and only deal with VAT if and when turnover climbs toward that threshold.

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How much of your side hustle income do you actually keep?

Less than the headline figure, because social contributions, income tax at your top marginal rate and business costs all come out first. The gap between turnover and take-home is where many side hustles disappoint.

Side income stacks on top of your main salary, so it is taxed at your highest marginal rate, not your average one. Add first-pillar contributions on your net profit, plus the cost of materials, tools, software and your own time.

A worked example

Say you earn CHF 10'000 from a side project and spend CHF 2'000 on expenses, leaving CHF 8'000 of profit. First-pillar contributions on a profit this small are modest, on the order of a few hundred francs, since the annual minimum is around CHF 530. Income tax depends on your canton and your marginal rate, but stacked on a normal salary it might take somewhere between CHF 2'000 and CHF 2'700. That can leave you keeping in the region of CHF 5'000 of the original CHF 10'000, roughly half. Running the numbers honestly before you start tells you whether the effort is worth it.

A good thing to note, actual taxes vary considerably depending on your canton, commune and personal circumstances.

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I started this way myself, so I understand the appeal. The honest question is not how large the turnover looks, but how much of it survives contact with tax and contributions.

Which side hustles tend to pay off in Switzerland?

The ones that pay best combine a high hourly value, low overhead and skills you already have. Margin matters more than turnover.

Consulting, tutoring, coaching and freelance creative or technical work tend to keep more of each franc, because they cost little to deliver and command Swiss hourly rates. Low-margin resale or platform gig work can fill time without building much, once fees, materials and your hours are counted. As a quick illustration: a consultant billing CHF 150 an hour with almost no delivery costs keeps most of that rate, while someone reselling goods at a 20% gross margin, after platform fees, packaging and delivery time, may keep only a few francs an hour despite a busy-looking turnover. The point is not that one path is better than another, but that you should price your time properly and compare what you keep, not what you bill. Pricing is where many people undersell themselves, so it is worth getting right from the start.

What hidden costs do people forget?

The forgotten costs are usually time, missing insurance cover, a pension gap and your own employment contract. These rarely show up until they bite.

As a self-employed person you are not automatically covered for unemployment or workplace accidents and you build no occupational pension (LPP) unless you arrange it yourself. Accounting and admin take real hours. And before you start, check your main employment contract: many include non-compete clauses or require your employer's approval for outside work. Clearing that early avoids an awkward conversation later.

1
taxes
Declare from franc one

All income is taxable and goes on your tax return. Register with an AVS fund once your secondary net profit passes CHF 2'500 a year.

2
money-thresholds
Watch the thresholds

CHF 2'500 of net profit triggers AVS registration for a side activity; CHF 100'000 of turnover triggers VAT. A sole proprietorship needs no minimum capital to start.

3
work
Judge by what you keep

Side income is taxed at your top marginal rate. Favour high-margin work, price your time properly and run the numbers before you commit.

FAQ

At what amount must I declare side hustle income?

All income is taxable from the first franc and belongs on your tax return. For social insurance, a secondary self-employed activity must be registered with an AVS compensation fund once its net profit passes CHF 2'500 a year.

Do I need to set up a company for a side hustle?

Usually not. A sole proprietorship (raison individuelle) needs no minimum capital and is enough to start. A company structure only makes sense as the activity grows.

Conclusion

A Swiss side hustle is worth it when the money you keep, not the money you bill, justifies the effort. Declare all income, register with an AVS fund once your secondary net profit passes CHF 2'500 a year and watch the CHF 100'000 VAT threshold as you grow. Remember that side income is taxed at your top marginal rate and that contributions and costs shrink the headline. Favour activities with high hourly value and low overhead, then price your time honestly. Check your employment contract first and plan for the cover you lose as a self-employed person. Run the numbers before you commit. Done honestly, a side hustle can be a smart income boost rather than an expensive hobby.

The content in this article is provided for educational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, financial recommendations, or promotional material.

janice-kerschbaumer
Janice Kerschbaumer
Financial Educator - Founder of Coach Ton Budget & Coach Ton Business

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