Moving to Ticino
Bellinzona • Italian • Updated Jun 2026
This Ticino guide helps newcomers understand the key first steps for settling in the canton, including Gemeinde registration (Anmeldung), permits, health insurance, taxes, housing, and official local resources.
Ticino is one of Switzerland's 26 cantons, with Bellinzona as its capital and Italian as the main official language. It tends to attract italian speakers and mediterranean climate, and the canton's profile — tax rates, housing market, healthcare premiums and lifestyle — has a measurable impact on what life actually costs here. This page summarises everything someone moving to or comparing Ticino typically needs in one scroll: the tax burden at common salary levels, the communes worth shortlisting, monthly housing and insurance reality, and a step-by-step checklist for the first 90 days.
Taxes in Ticino
At an indicative gross salary of CHF 100,000 (single, no kids), the combined federal, cantonal and municipal income tax in Ticino works out to roughly 23.5%. Salaries are typically 15–25% lower than ZH/Zürich region — factor that in before comparing only the tax rate. The canton offers a child deduction of about CHF 11,100 per child against cantonal taxable income, on top of the federal CHF 6,700. The actual figure on your bill depends on the commune you pick (the Steuerfuss / coefficient varies materially within a single canton), your civil status, Pillar 3a contributions, commuting costs and any voluntary BVG buy-ins. Use the tax calculator to model your exact scenario before signing a lease.
Top communes to consider
- Collina d'OroFamously low taxes near Lugano
- ParadisoLugano lakefront
- MassagnoConvenient for Lugano workers
Housing & rent
Expect to budget around CHF 1,300/month for a 1-bedroom and CHF 2,200/month for a 3-bedroom in Bellinzona. Rents in surrounding communes are typically 15–30% lower. Bring a complete dossier (Betreibungsauszug, payslips, references, motivation letter) to every viewing — landlords almost always pick from a stack.
Health insurance
Adult standard health insurance premiums in Ticino average around CHF 360/month with a CHF 300 franchise. Premiums are personal (not income-based), and you can switch insurer once per year by 30 November. Compare on Comparis or Priminfo before defaulting to the cheapest — service quality, supplementary coverage and pharmacy network vary.
Best for
Watch out for
Salaries are noticeably lower than the rest of CH. German/French much less useful here.
First-90-days checklist
- Secure housing — most rentals in this canton ask for a Betreibungsauszug (debt extract), 3 recent payslips and a CV-style dossier
- Register at the Bellinzona Einwohnerkontrolle / Contrôle des habitants within 14 days of arrival
- Apply for your residence permit (B / L / G) at the cantonal migration office
- Choose a health insurer within 3 months — premiums are mandatory and cover starts retroactively from arrival
- Open a Swiss bank account (PostFinance, Raiffeisen, UBS, ZKB) — needed for salary, rent and SEPA
- Set up Pillar 3a if you are tax-resident and earning Swiss-taxed income
- Confirm whether you must file a regular tax return (most permits above CHF 120k gross do)
- Get a Halbtax or GA from SBB if you commute by train more than 2× per week
Compare Ticino with neighbours
Frequently asked questions
What is the income tax rate in Ticino?
Is Ticino a good canton to move to?
Do I need to speak Italian to live in Ticino?
How much do I need to earn to live comfortably in Ticino?
When are taxes due in Ticino?
Official links
Bellinzona municipality (official)Data is illustrative for 2026 and based on commonly published cantonal figures. Always verify with the official cantonal tax administration before making financial decisions.