renewing C permit: new requirements

Could somebody share their real experience with renewing the C permit this year (after the new legislation on integration was enforced)?

What documents are required? Did you need to take the language test?

Vaud experience would be particularly valuable.

Thank you in advance!

Google is your friend:

https://www.vaud-welcome.ch/-practic...sidence-permit

and more general:

https://www.ch.ch/en/renewal-overvie...idence-permit/

Thank you for the links.

However, I would be grateful if somebody could share their practical experience.

Thank you!

Hi,

I just did this 3 weeks ago in Kanton Aargau. No issues. (I don't speak any German).

Just got letter from Gemeinde to fill out some form. about 5 days later, letter comes for me go to Aarau for another Biometry (finger print and photo), that took all about 3 minutes. About 3 days later, new letter in the mail from Gemeinde to pick up permit.

My assumption is that at the moment they have not fully implemented the new rules, otherwise a garbage Auslander like me who can't speak German would't have gotten the C-permit renewal.

No worries and the only comment I'll add, is things can change and probably will. So if you do get it, and you want to stay in CH with a C, then you do your best on language and other integration.

I also will work on my language despite feelings I've had enough of CH and am thinknig of my own CHExit by that time (for varied reason not language or anything like that). But still I will invest that, and even if I leave I'll be richer in knowledge and experience right?

Good liuck!

I think you'll find if you already have a C permit, they will renew it with no fuss, however if you have a B and want a C, you'll have to jump through some additional hoops, such as a language test.

Thank you so much for sharing your real experience!

Many thanks! You are absolutely right and will put extra efforts on my language skills.

Thank you for your information!

I live in Vaud.

I renewed my Permit C, along with that of my kids, earlier this year. The process is fairly painless.

Form through the post, get the pics taken, pay the money at the counter, hand everything in, have a brief chat with the lady at the counter and all is done. Permit through the post a month or so later.

Level of French required: a little above Bonjour in a dodgy accent. Shocked look from daughter as it was the first time she had heard me speak French in complete sentences.

My wife (non-EU) transitioned from B to C.

Same story, more or less. Except she didn't have to speak any French. She said the lady at the counter was fine with her speaking in English.

Permit through the post a month or so later.

Fairly painless, when all is said and done.

I believe in VD, non-EU nationals also have to go to Flon, in Lausanne, for their digital data - photo, fingerprints, and signature for their credit card sized permit.

Thanks for your real reply. I am currently in Switzerland for about 4.5 years now, residing on the border of Aargau and Zurich, in Aargau. I have had the new 2019 integration laws on my mind lately. Currently on 5 year B-permit with a possible change to C-permit or Swiss citizenship eligibility at the 5 years point.

My worry is that, although I am not up for a "renewal" on C-permit I might have difficulties upgrading to a C or Citizenship because I am currently at about an A2 level of High-German with basic understanding of commonly used Swiss German.

I was not sure how seriously the Aargau or Federal government might look at this issue according to the new laws, etc. I am an American, so lucky for me I normally qualify for a C-permit after 5 years but the new C-permit rules for so-called "fast track C-permit" in 5 years are at A2 or B1 local language. I am not entirely sure how they will handle my case when it comes up.

You need to show a language certificate.

Showing that you are integrated is as important. And being integrated will have improved your language.

I find that quite difficult ..

Are you really supposed to join a club for the sake of it? Is it enough to never use a Migros bag when shopping at COOP to show proper integration?

You're married to a Swiss, which means in theory they'll go a bit easier on you. Get an A2 certificate from one of the approved schools and you'll be fine, even with speaking in any naturalization interview. I'd apply for C permit as soon as you can, then you can take your time with naturalization if that bit has you spooked.

Canton Vaud - renewal papers received 10 April 2019 / completed and returned with photos and payment on 12 April 2019. New permits received through the post on 3 May 2019, so the whole process took 3 weeks (including the Easter break).

No language questions/skills testing involved.

To make sense of this, it would help to include

- Original citizenship of you and spouse

- "Renewal of C" vs "Upgrade B to C"

Different rules apply...

Now that was easy (C permit renewal EU):

Hand in the piece of paper they sent, a new passport picture, 65 CHF and in 2-3 weeks I will have the new C permit.

UK citizen here 8 years on a B and requested a C permit. I was asked for:

Confirmation of employment

Criminal record check

confirmation that I never claimed social assistance

German A2 certificate (and only from a specific list of schools)

I was given 14 days to provide everything and couldn't do the German exam in time. A week later I got a letter to say my new B permit was available for collection.

Not surprising as the language certificate is not a new request

14 days seems like an awfully short amount of time to gather all of these documents requested...