Switzerland Civil Registration

Definition
Civil registration (Zivilstand / état civil / stato civile) is the government record of births, marriages, and deaths. These civil registers are kept by the local civil registration office (Zivilstandsamt / service de l'état civil / ufficio dello stato civile) of each political community. Beginning in 1876, the civil registration office kept two separate sets of books: A-registers (records of births, marriages, and deaths occurring in the community regardless of citizenship) and B-registers (births, marriages, and deaths of citizens of the community that occurred outside the community). In 1928, the B-registers were discontinued and officially replaced by family registers (Familienregister / registres des familles / registro delle famiglie) kept by the civil registrar.

Time Coverage
Nationwide civil registration began on 1 Jan 1876. Several cantons began keeping records earlier.
 * Pre-1876 civil registration records are also available for the following cantons:
 * Basel-Landschaft: 1827
 * Fribourg: 1849
 * Genève: 1798
 * Glarus: 1849
 * Neuchâtel: 1825
 * Sankt Gallen: 1867
 * Schaffhausen: 1849
 * Solothurn: 1836
 * Ticino: 1855
 * Vaud: 1821
 * Valais: 1853

Bürgerbücher or Bürgerrodel (Citizens’ Books) were kept by some communities as early as the 1820s.

Birth Registers

 * Name
 * Date and place of birth of child
 * Names, residence and occupation of the parents

Marriage Registers

 * Names, ages, residences, and occupation of bride and groom
 * Date and place of marriage
 * Names, residence, occupation of parents
 * Names of witnesses and person who performed the ceremony

Death registers

 * Name of deceased
 * Age
 * Sometimes place of birth
 * Date and place of death
 * Occupation
 * Name of surviving spouse
 * Name and residence of informant
 * Cause of death
 * Sometimes names of parents
 * Sometimes names of children.

Familienregister (Family Register
This volume consists of a separate page for each married couple and their children. Entries may include the couple’s parents’ names and notes about occupation, emigration, or other unusual circumstances.

Bürgerbücher or Bürgerrodel (Citizens’ Books)
These contain about the same information as found in the modern Familienregister.

Accessing the Records

 * Requests for information concerning ancestral families may be obtained by writing to the appropriate ZivilStandesamt.
 * Access to records less than 100 years old is generally restricted to direct-line relatives.
 * An up-to-date Excel file with contact information for civil registration offices nationwide can be downloaded at: Addresses for Civil Registration (ZivilStandesamt) Offices (.pdf)
 * Consult the Language Map of Switzerland, and then write your request in the appropriate language:
 * Germany Letter Writing Guide
 * Italy Letter Writing Guide
 * French Letter Writing Guide

Online Civil Registration Records

 * 1792 - 1876 - at FamilySearch — index and images