Swiss seniors embrace digital age as internet usage soars
Nearly 80% of Swiss retirees now use the internet, marking a significant 4.3% increase over the past three years, with smartphones becoming the preferred device for online access.
Nearly 80% of Swiss retirees now use the internet, marking a significant 4.3% increase over the past three years, with smartphones becoming the preferred device for online access.

"From the beginning of 2022 to the end of 2024, the proportion of pensioners who use the internet rose by 4.3 percentage points."
"The smartphone is the undisputed leader here: 94.7% of all internet users use it."
The digital divide is crumbling before our eyes. A staggering 79.8% of Swiss pensioners have migrated online, marking a definitive shift in the nation's demographic landscape. This is not a gradual drift; it is a surge. Over a tight three-year window ending in 2024, internet adoption among retirees jumped by a significant 4.3 percentage points.
The stereotype of the disconnected senior is officially dead. The advertising media research institute WEMF, in a comprehensive study of nearly 8,000 residents, confirms that Switzerland's elderly are no longer passive observers of the digital age—they are active participants. This rapid integration suggests a fundamental societal shift where digital literacy is becoming a prerequisite for aging in Switzerland. As services from banking to healthcare move exclusively online, Swiss seniors are stepping up, refusing to be left behind in an analog past.
The smartphone is the undisputed king of connectivity, and seniors are bowing to the throne. Today, nearly 85% of retired people utilize their smartphones to access the internet, a jump from 81% just three years ago. This mirrors the national trend where the smartphone reigns supreme with 94.7% usage across all demographics.
This mobility revolution changes everything. Seniors are not just checking emails at a desk; they are connected on the train, in the mountains, and at the grocery store. The tether to the home office has been cut. While the younger generation led the charge, the older generation has now fully embraced the convenience of the pocket computer. This high adoption rate signals a massive opportunity—and a warning—to developers and government agencies: interfaces must be designed for aging eyes and fingers, because the user base has fundamentally changed.
While the smartphone unifies the nation, a stark hardware divide remains between the generations. Age dictates the device. For the Swiss youth (aged 20-29), the laptop is the weapon of choice, commanding a massive 93% usage rate. In sharp contrast, the retiree demographic clings to the stability of the permanently installed computer.
More than half of pensioners (56.8%) still rely on desktop PCs, barely edging out laptops (56.6%). This persistence of the desktop among seniors suggests a preference for stationary, larger-screen experiences, likely for banking or reading news, contrasting with the 'digital nomad' lifestyle of the youth. Meanwhile, tablets have carved out a specific niche, finding their stronghold among the 40 to 49-year-olds. Understanding these hardware preferences is critical; while everyone is online, how they get there varies dramatically by birth year.
Switzerland stands on the brink of total digital saturation. As of March 2025, an overwhelming 95% of the population aged 14 and over is online. We are witnessing the final stages of the digital transition. The few remaining pockets of offline existence are shrinking rapidly, primarily restricted to the very oldest demographics, and even those walls are being breached.
This near-universal connectivity cements Switzerland's status as a premier digital hub in Europe. The implications are profound: isolation is becoming a choice rather than a circumstance of geography or age. However, with 95% connectivity comes the critical responsibility of cybersecurity and digital hygiene. As the entire nation—from the teenager in Geneva to the grandmother in Appenzell—logs on, the digital infrastructure must be as robust as the Swiss banking system itself.