Speed Limit 30: Federal Council's Proposals Heading in the Right Direction

01.12.2025 | from Touring Club Suisse (TCS)

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Touring Club Suisse (TCS)

01.12.2025, The TCS views the Federal Council's proposals for implementing the Schilliger motion positively. To enable a practical implementation, TCS demands some adjustments - especially the need for a clear definition of 'traffic-oriented road'. The direction of the revision is, however, encouraging and is supported by the public, as shown by yesterday's vote in the canton of Zurich on the mobility initiative and the referendum of 28 September in Lugano.


The voters of the canton of Zurich clearly approved the mobility initiative yesterday, sending a strong signal for a speed limit of 50 km/h on main traffic routes. The approval of the initiative, co- launched by the TCS section Zurich, demonstrates that the public desires a clear hierarchy of the road network.

This result in Zurich also pleases TCS central president Peter Goetschi: 'With the acceptance of the mobility initiative, the voters of the canton of Zurich have set a strong signal for the speed limit of 50 km/h on main roads. This result confirms the recent vote in Lugano on the same topic and shows that the public does not want a creeping expansion of the 30-zone.' The opinion of the public has not changed since 2001 when the VCS initiative was rejected by 80 percent of the voters and unanimously by the cantons.

The cantonal voting result also underlines the demand of the federal parliament to bring more clarity to the national framework for a 30 km/h speed limit. To implement this concern of the Schilliger motion, the Federal Council has prepared a consultation draft to which the TCS gave its opinion for the first time on 3 September.

The TCS has thoroughly examined the Federal Council's proposals during the consultation and reviewed the planned changes in the signalling and noise protection ordinance. From TCS's perspective, the Schilliger motion is thus effectively implemented, and the hierarchy of the road network is strengthened. Nevertheless, the ordinance can still be improved with four targeted adjustments. As traffic-oriented roads are central to the ordinance, it is appropriate that the definition of the term is regulated and applied uniformly throughout Switzerland. Therefore, the TCS suggests defining traffic- oriented roads clearly in an additional article of the ordinance.

According to the new ordinance, low-noise road surfaces should be prioritised to reduce noise pollution. In terms of precision, the TCS demands an additional article in the ordinance. Specifically, when speed reductions are made for noise protection reasons, the speed limit should be regularly reviewed and possible measures examined.

The prioritisation of low-noise road surfaces also necessitates action by the federal government. TCS demands that the Federal Roads Office and the Federal Office for the Environment specify in their instructions to the cantons and municipalities that low-noise road surfaces are the most important measure for noise reduction.

The consultation strengthens the prevailing principle: a 50 km/h speed limit on major axes for motorised traffic. Although the Federal Council also affirms this principle, the TCS wants to go a step further. The option to include traffic-oriented road sections in 30 km/h zones should be eliminated without replacement. Within a 30 km/h zone, if traffic-oriented road sections suddenly appear, different regulations regarding right of way and pedestrian crossings apply. This leads to confusion, mistakes, and accidents, which the TCS rejects.

TCS is confident that the Federal Council will further improve the ordinance draft presented. With the definitive implementation of the parliamentary decision, it will be ensured that speed regulations remain a federal matter, as regulated in the road traffic law.

Press contact:
Marco Wölfli, TCS Media spokesperson
Tel. 058 827 34 03
marco.woelfli@tcs.ch

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Conclusion of this article: « Speed Limit 30: Federal Council's Proposals Heading in the Right Direction »

Touring Club Suisse (TCS)

Since its founding in 1896 in Geneva, the Touring Club Switzerland has been serving the Swiss population. It is committed to safety, sustainability, and self-determination in personal mobility, politically and socially. With over 2000 employees and 23 regional sections, Switzerland's largest mobility club offers its more than 1.6 million members a wide range of services related to mobility, health and leisure activities.

Every 70 seconds, an assistance case occurs. 200 patrol officers are annually on the roads with approximately 361,000 missions in Switzerland and allow immediate continuation in more than 80% of the cases. The ETI headquarters organises about 63,000 assistance cases annually, including 3,500 medical assessments and over 1,300 repatriations. TCS Ambulance is the largest private operator for rescue services and patient transport in Switzerland with 400 employees, 22 logistics bases, and around 45,000 missions per year. The legal protection offices handle 52,000 cases and provide around 10,000 legal consultations.

Since 1908, TCS has been committed to more safety in mobility - made possible by membership. It develops teaching materials, awareness-raising and prevention campaigns, tests mobility infrastructures and advises authorities. Every year, the TCS distributes around 115,000 safety belts and 90,000 safety vests to children, ensuring their mobility is also safe. The driving centres count 42,000 participants annually in training and further education across all categories of vehicles.

With 32 locations and about 900,000 overnight stays, TCS is also the largest campsite provider in Switzerland. The TCS Mobility Academy researches and shapes transformations in transport, like the vertical mobility of drones or shared mobility, such as with the 400 electric cargo bikes 'carvelo' and 43,000 users. TCS is a co-signatory of the Roadmap Elektromobilität 2025.

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Source: Touring Club Suisse (TCS), Press release

Original article published on: Tempo 30: Vorschläge des Bundesrates zielen in die richtige Richtung