Swiss job interviews: how to avoid common pitfalls?
What should Hungarian job seekers expect at a Swiss job interview? Cultural expectations, salary negotiations, documents, and the most common mistakes — factually.
How does Swiss interview culture differ?
The Swiss labour market comprises four official language regions (German, French, Italian, Romansh), and this is also reflected in interview culture. In the German-speaking cantons (Zürich, Bern, Basel, Aargau), the process is typically more formal and structured; in the French-speaking areas (Geneva, Vaud, Neuchâtel), you can expect a somewhat more relaxed atmosphere, although the expectations are essentially the same.
What is expected in every region:
Punctuality. Even a delay of five minutes creates a serious negative impression. If an unexpected obstacle arises, the best solution is to call ahead and inform them.
Thorough knowledge of the company. The employer expects you to know the company’s activities, market position and — where publicly available — its most recent developments.
Concrete examples. In Swiss interviews, competency-based interviewing (Kompetenzbasiertes Interview) is standard: questions such as “Tell me about a situation when…”. Vague answers weaken the candidate’s position.
Discretion. The employer may not ask about personal circumstances — relationship status, children, health condition — (as this follows from the principle of equal treatment), and you are under no obligation to volunteer such information.
What mistakes do Hungarian employees most often make?
This is not a stereotype, but a recurring pattern that HR professionals and career advisers alike report.
Excessive modesty and avoiding self-presentation
In Hungary, some employees are socialised to believe that self-praise is impolite. In Switzerland, the purpose of the interview is precisely for you to present convincingly and concretely why you are the most suitable candidate. Answers such as “I will try to do my best” are not very persuasive; answers such as “At my previous job, I achieved a X% increase in efficiency by…” are.
Avoiding salary expectations
In Switzerland, stating your salary expectations is not impertinent — it is expected. If the job ad asks for your Lohnvorstellung (salary expectation) and you leave it out, the application is considered incomplete. It will of course also come up in the interview; evasive answers such as “we’ll see” signal uncertainty.
Missing or insufficiently prepared references
The vast majority of Swiss employers ask for references (Referenzen / références). This is usually the names and contact details of 2–3 former managers or colleagues whom the employer can contact directly. If you do not prepare your references properly (do not inform them in advance, do not brief them on the context), it can create an unpleasant surprise for both sides.
Incomplete documentation
The formal requirements for a Swiss CV (Lebenslauf / CV) and cover letter (Motivationsschreiben / lettre de motivation) differ from those in Hungary. A missing copy of a diploma, the absence of an employer reference letter (Arbeitszeugnis / certificat de travail) or a CV in a non-Swiss format can put the candidate at a disadvantage — even if their professional background is strong.
How to prepare: documents, references, language skills
What documents are requested?
For a Swiss job application, the following are typically required:
Document | Swiss designation | Note |
|---|---|---|
CV | Lebenslauf (CV) | A photo is generally expected in the German-speaking cantons; less mandatory in French-speaking areas |
Cover letter | Motivation letter | Personalized, focused on the position and the company |
Degrees, certificates | Diplomas, certificates | For a Hungarian diploma, SBFI recognition may be required (see below) |
Employer reference letter | Arbeitszeugnis | Mandatory from Swiss employers, recommended from foreign employers |
List of references | Reference list | 2–3 names, job titles, contact details |
Hungarian diploma in Switzerland: what should you expect?
The Swiss Federal Office for Vocational Education and Training and Innovation (SBFI — Staatssekretariat für Bildung, Forschung und Innovation) handles the recognition procedure for foreign qualifications. Recognition is not automatic and is not mandatory for every profession, but for certain regulated professions (doctor, dentist, pharmacist, engineer in certain fields, teacher) it is essential. The fee and processing time vary by profession; you can find the specific requirements on the SBFI website.
What level of language proficiency is expected?
This depends heavily on the position and the sector. General guidelines:
Office, administrative, and client-facing positions: at least B2–C1 level in the local working language (German, French, Italian) is expected.
Technical, IT, research positions: C1 level in English is often sufficient, but knowledge of the local language is a competitive advantage.
Healthcare and social services: C1–C2 level in the local language is generally mandatory.
If your language skills are weaker than expected, it is worth addressing this proactively in the cover letter and indicating that you are actively improving them.
The interview process: phases and expectations
How many interview rounds are there in Switzerland?
The Swiss recruitment process typically consists of several rounds:
Phone or video screening (Telefoninterview / entretien téléphonique): 20–30 minutes, usually conducted by HR. Its purpose is to assess basic motivation and communication skills.
First in-person interview: 60–90 minutes, with HR and the direct manager participating. Competency-based questions dominate.
Second round / assessment: at larger companies, you may also be asked to complete a test task, presentation, or group exercise.
Reference check: almost always before the offer.
The full process can take 3–8 weeks — this is normal in Switzerland and does not mean the candidate has been ruled out.
How should you behave in the interview?
Arrive 5–10 minutes early, but do not go in more than 5 minutes before the scheduled time.
A handshake is generally accepted; cheek-kissing is not customary in a business context during an interview.
Wait to be invited to sit down.
Ask questions in return: Swiss employers value it when candidates ask thoughtful questions about the role, the team, and the company’s goals.
Salary negotiations and benefits — what can be negotiated?
How should you determine your salary expectation?
In Switzerland, there is no general federal minimum wage (some cantons and sectors have a cantonal minimum wage or a minimum wage under a collective agreement — Gesamtarbeitsvertrag / GAV). You can find market salary levels from the following sources:
Lohnrechner on arbeit.swiss: free, filterable by sector, region, and level of experience.
Salary.ch and Lohncheck.ch: private-sector salary databases.
Union wage recommendations: if there is a GAV in the relevant sector, it includes minimum wage levels.
Salary expectations are usually stated as a gross annual amount (Jahresbruttolohn). The 13th-month salary (13. Monatslohn) is widely common in Switzerland — if the job ad does not mention it, it is worth asking.
What can be negotiated beyond base salary?
The following elements can be negotiated, although not with every employer or for every position:
Start date (Eintrittsdatum): if you are currently serving a notice period, this is usually handled flexibly.
Work location and home office share: especially in IT and office-based roles.
Training and development budget (Weiterbildungsbudget).
Mobility benefits: travel pass contribution (GA Generalabonnement or Halbtax), company car.
Paid vacation: the statutory minimum is 4 weeks (20 working days), but many employers offer 5 weeks; this is negotiable.
What is generally not negotiable?
The mandatory social insurance contributions (AHV/AVS, IV/AI, ALV/AC) — these are set by law.
The mandatory employer health insurance (KVG/LAMal basic package) — this is arranged by you.
Costs during the interview process — who pays for what?
This is an area where Hungarian job seekers are often unprepared.
In the case of a local interview travel costs are usually borne by the candidate — especially in the first round. Some larger employers reimburse them, but this should be clarified in advance rather than raised after the fact.
In the case of a foreign candidate (if you still live in Hungary and would travel to Switzerland for an interview) the situation is different: the employer may decide to reimburse the costs, but there is no legal obligation to do so. If the job ad does not promise travel support, it is worth asking when you are invited — this is not rude, but practical.
In the case of a video interview any technical costs incurred (stable internet, suitable background, headset) are the candidate’s responsibility.
Integration tips for the first months
The success of the interview is only the first step. In Swiss workplace culture, the first 3–6 months are decisive.
Probation period (Probezeit / période d'essai): typically 1–3 months, during which both parties may terminate the contract with a shorter notice period. There is no need to fear this, but it should be handled consciously: ask many questions, learn the processes, and do not wait until the six-month mark for your first feedback.
Punctuality in working hours: flexible working hours (Gleitzeit) are available in many places, but keeping to core hours and recording working time (Zeiterfassung) is generally mandatory.
Collegial relationships: workplace relationships in Switzerland are initially more formal than what many are used to in Hungary. Trust is built slowly — this is not rejection, but a cultural norm.
Language development at work: do not hesitate to ask local colleagues to correct your emails in the local language — this is usually received positively.
Hungarian communities: active Hungarian communities operate in Zürich, Bern, Genève and Basel, and they can help reduce social isolation during the first period.
When is it worth involving an HR consultant, association or community?
In certain situations, the article alone is not enough preparation:
If you work in a regulated profession (doctor, engineer, lawyer, teacher), and the process of diploma recognition is not clear.
If you are applying for a leadership position where the complexity of salary negotiations (stock options, bonus structures, non-compete clauses) requires expert support.
If you are arriving with a spouse from a third country and the question of a work permit affects the timing of the interview.
If the interview is in French or Italian if this is happening, and you are not sure about the professional terminology.
In such cases, it is worth contacting experienced members of the local Hungarian community, or using the advisory service of svajc.com.
Sources
ch.ch — the official Swiss information portal: https://www.ch.ch/en/
ch.ch — Working in Switzerland: https://www.ch.ch/en/work/
arbeit.swiss — the portal of the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO), with the salary calculator tool: https://www.arbeit.swiss/
SBFI — State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation (diploma recognition): https://www.sbfi.admin.ch/
Seco — State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (employment law, CBA): https://www.seco.admin.ch/
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In Brief
In Swiss job interviews, punctuality, thorough company research, concrete self-presentation, and proper documentation are crucial. The most common mistakes made by Hungarian applicants are excessive modesty, avoiding salary expectations, missing references, and incomplete application materials.
Key Takeaways
- Arrive 5–10 minutes early, because even a few minutes’ delay creates a negative impression.
- Prepare by reviewing the company’s activities, market position, and recent public news before attending the interview.
- Support your answers with concrete examples, especially in competency-based questions.
- State your salary expectation as a gross annual amount if the job ad or interview asks for it.
- Prepare your references in advance, and only list people who are genuinely reachable and well informed.
- Check that your CV, cover letter, diploma copies, and recommendation letters comply with the Swiss format.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is a Swiss job interview different from a Hungarian one?
Swiss interviews are generally more formal, more structured, and rely more heavily on concrete examples. Employers place strong emphasis on punctuality, knowledge of the company background, references, and a clearly stated salary expectation.
How much delay is considered a problem in a Swiss interview?
Even being a few minutes late can create a bad impression. If an unexpected obstacle arises, the best solution is to call ahead and inform them in advance.
What is expected when stating salary expectations?
In Switzerland, stating your salary expectation is not impolite; it is often expected. If the ad asks for a Lohnvorstellung, leaving it out may be seen as an incomplete application.
Do I need to provide references when applying for a job in Switzerland?
Yes, the vast majority of Swiss employers ask for references. Typically, they expect the names and contact details of 2–3 former managers or colleagues whom they can contact directly.
What documents are needed for a Swiss application?
Usually, you need a CV in Swiss format, a tailored cover letter, copies of diplomas and certificates, as well as recommendation letters and a list of references. For a Hungarian diploma, SBFI recognition may also be required in some professions.
What level of language skills is expected in Switzerland?
This depends on the position and sector. For office and customer-facing roles, a local language level of B2–C1 is usually expected; in healthcare and social work, C1–C2 is more common. In technical and IT roles, C1 English is often sufficient.
How long can the Swiss recruitment process take?
The process usually involves several rounds, and the total duration can be 3–8 weeks. This is considered normal in Switzerland and does not necessarily mean the candidate has been rejected.
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