Right of residence following divorce. Three-year rule, domestic violence, integration.
Last reviewed
03.06.2026
Statute as of
01.01.2024
Statute citations
5 linked
Reading time
7 min read
As of: 01.06.2026 · Snapshot
Divorce and Residence Permit — Art. 50 FNIA
Effective date: 01.01.2024.
Status: AI draft, pending review by the supervising lawyer of record.
Frequently asked
4 answers on this topic.
Concrete questions people ask about Divorce — art. 50 FNIA.
Not automatic. Art. 50 FNIA protects the right of residence if the marriage has lasted at least three years AND successful integration has taken place (language level, employment, social integration). Without these requirements, the cantonal authority examines important personal reasons – such as domestic violence or difficult reintegration in the country of origin.
A third-country national who resides in Switzerland on the basis of marriage to a Swiss national (Ci permit) or a national with a settlement or residence permit (B permit for family reunification) typically has a residence status that is linked to the existence of the marital relationship. In the event of divorce or dissolution of the marital relationship, the question arises: can the foreign national continue to reside in Switzerland, even if the original basis for their stay (the marriage) no longer exists?
Art. 50 of the Federal Act on Foreign Nationals and Integration (AIG, SR 142.20) is the key provision. It stipulates that the permit may be continued under certain conditions, even after the dissolution of the marriage.
Scope of application of Art. 50 LEI/LStrI/FNIA
Art. 50 FNIA applies to persons whose right of residence is derived from Art. 42, 43 or 44 FNIA — i.e. typically:
«Marital community» is not identical to «marriage». It ends when the spouses live separately – which may be before the formal divorce. The 3-year period begins with the marriage (in the case of marriages concluded in Switzerland) or with the marriage concluded abroad, provided that the marriage was actually lived in Switzerland thereafter.
Integration is defined in Art. 58a FNIA and includes:
Respect for the values of the Federal Constitution,
Language proficiency (typically A2 level in spoken language at the place of residence, which is mainly relevant for the subsequent C residence permit).
Participation in economic life or acquisition of education (gainful employment, self-employment, apprenticeship, activity involving parental care duties).
Compliance with Swiss law,
Family responsibility.
The cantonal practice varies in the strictness of the integration assessment. Geneva tends to be more nuanced; some German-speaking cantons are stricter.
Route 2 — Important personal reasons (Art. 50 para. 1 lit. b and para. 2 LEI/LStrI/FNIA)
Even without the 3-year requirement, the permit can be extended if important personal reasons necessitate a continued stay in Switzerland. Article 50(2) of the Federal Act on Foreign Nationals and Integration (FNIA) specifically mentions:
marital violence — the person was a victim of marital violence (domestic violence, psychological violence, coercion) during the marriage.
social reintegration in the country of origin is seriously at risk.
The importance of the reasons is assessed on a case-by-case basis. The cantonal migration offices and case law provide lists of indicative evidence. Domestic violence is documented by medical certificates, police reports, domestic violence protection orders, confirmation from women’s shelters or similar evidence.
Practical Scenarios
Separation before completion of the 3-year period
If the marital relationship ends before the three-year period is completed, option 1 is not available. Option 2 remains – important personal reasons. Without documented marital violence or a comparable situation, the granting of the permit is uncertain in individual cases.
Divorce after a long-term marriage with joint children
In the event of a divorce after a marriage of several years with common children who are subject to compulsory schooling in Switzerland, the prospects in practice tend to be good, provided that integration can be demonstrated and the means of support are secured.
Death of the Swiss spouse
If the Swiss spouse dies, an extension of the permit may be considered – either under Fedlex·Art. 50 AIG (important personal reasons) or by examining whether the foreign national has already acquired an independent basis for their stay. The cantonal assessment is based on the individual case.
Dissolution of the marital relationship without formal divorce
A permanent separation without a formal divorce also ends the marital relationship. The cantonal migration office typically establishes this (by requesting information from both spouses and assessing the available evidence).
Procedural guidance
The foreign national should notify the cantonal migration office of any change in their marital status without delay (duty to cooperate, Fedlex·Art. 90 AIG).
The application for an extension will be assessed as part of the standard extension procedure; however, the migration authorities may also carry out an unscheduled review if the permit is still valid.
If there is an imminent risk of losing the permit, legal advice should be obtained immediately – the deadlines for legal remedies are short (typically 30 days).
Relationship to family reunification (Art. 47 FNIA)
Following a successful extension of the permit in accordance with Fedlex·Art. 50 AIG, the deadline of Fedlex·Art. 47 AIG (5 years for family reunification with one’s own children or a new spouse) must be observed. This deadline applies independently of the marital situation. It is discussed in detail in framework/fw_aig_vzae_glossary.md and in procedure/pr_deadlines_table.md.
Cantonal Practice Overview (see cantonal/ca_*.md)
Canton
Note
Zurich
Strict evidentiary requirement for Art. 50 lit. b; marital violence must be documented
Bern
Comparable to Zurich, with some nuance regarding child integration
Vaud
Relatively accessible regarding child integration and employment
Geneva
Nuanced practice; evidence from women's shelters and CSPs is recognised
Basel-Stadt
Standard practice; good legal representation is recommended
Ticino
Independent practice
What SIP does not cover (Anti-Scope)
No assessment of the individual prospects of success («You will retain your permit»).
No assessment as to whether specific incidents qualify as “domestic violence” within the meaning of Art. 50 para. 2 lit. b LEI/LStrI/FNIA.
No strategic advice in divorce proceedings (e.g. regarding custody arrangements with a view to the residence permit).
No representation before the migration authorities or in court.
Removals
Emergency assistance in cases of domestic violence: List of women's shelters (DAO Swiss Conference against Domestic Violence), Männer.ch, LGBTQ+ Helpline. Pre-vetted referral chain in crisis/cr_safety_emergency_referrals.md.
Legal support: SIP lawyer referral service in the language of the canton of residence; free initial consultation via cantonal legal advice centres (e.g. advice from the Swiss Bar Association, Zurich Bar Association).
Cantonal portal information: cantonal migration office for formal procedural questions.
HARD GLOSSARY — non-negotiable Swiss federal codes / agency names.
"AIG" → "FNIA"
"Ausländer- und Integrationsgesetz" → "Federal Act on Foreign Nationals and Integration"
"VZAE" → "OASA"
"BüG" → "SCA"
"Bürgerrechtsgesetz" → "Swiss Citizenship Act"
"FZA" → "AFMP"
"Freizügigkeitsabkommen" → "Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons"
"AsylG" → "AsylA"
"Asylgesetz" → "Asylum Act"
"nDSG" → "revFADP"
"DSG" → "FADP"
"SEM" → "SEM"
"Staatssekretariat für Migration" → "State Secretariat for Migration"
Last updated: 18.05.2026 — Initial AI draft. Awaiting review and approval by the supervising lawyer of record in accordance with ADR-016. If there is any indication of domestic violence: Clara will immediately refer to the women’s shelter hotline or the emergency hotline 143 before providing any further information.
As of: 01.06.2026 · Snapshot
Reflects the cited law as of the snapshot — not a check of current force.