A new study by the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts warns that as Swiss residents live longer, their retirement savings may be insufficient, highlighting a growing 'longevity risk' that could lead to widespread financial shortages in old age.

"A significant proportion of 65-year-olds today have a realistic chance of living well beyond the average life expectancy. This can become a financial problem."
Switzerland is grappling with a paradox of progress: we are living longer than ever, but our bank accounts are failing to keep pace. A staggering 50% of Swiss women currently aged 65 are projected to reach their 90th birthday, while men are fast approaching an average horizon of 87. This isn't just a demographic shift; it is a financial seismic event. Since the inception of the national old-age pension scheme in 1948, the retirement 'finish line' has moved back by nearly a decade. Back then, a woman could expect 14 years of post-work life; today, that figure has soared to 23 years. This unprecedented expansion of the golden years is transforming the dream of a long life into a looming nightmare of insolvency. As Anina Hille of the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts warns, basing a financial plan on 'average' life expectancy is no longer a safe bet—it is a gamble with one's final years.
The price of reaching age 100 in Switzerland has hit a jaw-dropping CHF 1.32 million in required personal savings. For those with an average income, the funding gap—the terrifying void between state pensions and actual living costs—surges from CHF 728,000 at age 85 to over CHF 921,000 by age 90. This is the 'Longevity Risk' in cold, hard numbers. While medical advances and improved living conditions have gifted us more time, those extra years are frequently marred by skyrocketing healthcare and housing costs. The study highlights that the final years of life are often the most expensive, yet they are the years when personal assets are most likely to be exhausted. We are witnessing a dramatic collision between biological success and economic reality, where the reward for a healthy life is a critical shortage of funds.
Faced with the crushing cost of domestic aging, a growing number of Swiss citizens are choosing a radical exit strategy: emigration. At the end of 2024, over 27,000 Swiss nationals were living in Spain alone, with a remarkable 33% of them over the age of 65. This 'pensioner flight' is a direct response to the realization that a Swiss pension, once considered the gold standard of security, no longer guarantees a dignified life within Swiss borders. Many find that their savings, which would evaporate in Zurich or Geneva, afford a comfortable lifestyle in the Mediterranean. However, this trend signals a worrying erosion of the social contract. When the nation's elders feel forced to flee the country they helped build because they 'lived too long,' the economic pressure on the remaining old-age pension funds becomes an undeniable crisis that demands immediate structural reform.
The era of passive retirement planning is over; private provision must now become the primary shield against poverty. Longevity is no longer just a demographic statistic—it is emerging as a defining economic trend of the 21st century. The HSLU study emphasizes that building assets early and aggressively is the only way to cope with a retirement that could easily span three decades. While 'longevity' is gaining traction as a hot investment theme in global markets, the Swiss financial sector is still in the early stages of developing products that truly address these long-term risks. Moving forward, the pressure on the AHV (Old-Age and Survivors' Insurance) will only intensify. The message for the Swiss public is blunt: the state can no longer carry the full weight of your 90s. Individual responsibility and early-stage capital accumulation are the only tools left to ensure that a long life remains a blessing rather than a burden.