Ist das Leben in der Schweiz🇨🇭 teurer als in Deutschland?
Ist das Leben in der Schweiz teurer als in Deutschland? 🇨🇭
Ist das Leben in der Schweiz teurer als in Deutschland? 🇨🇭
Ab wann konntet ihr ernsthaft mit Geld umgehen? Und was denkt ihr, ab wann man es können sollte?
Hallo, es ist schon etwas spät aber habe gerade eine neue Buchidee nur fehlt mir ein passender Titel. Geht um eine Teenage-Romance.. Jemand Ideen? Danke! 🙂
Hallo, in den USA sind Maisprodukte sehr weit verbreitet, hier allerdings weniger. Liegt es einfach daran, dass in Europa allgemein weniger Mais angebaut wird oder hat das andere Gründe?
for us and in the European section, absolutely.
but the reward is also correspondingly higher etc.
People simply don’t understand that it’s not just about prices, but also about food selection. In Switzerland there is simply NOT the same offer. And above all, the offer never varies. There are always the same products.
People simply don’t understand that it’s not just about prices, but also about food selection. In Switzerland there is simply NOT the same offer. And above all, the offer never varies. There are the same products all year round. There are no favorable variants as in Germany. There are cheap tables of chocolate, but there is no fake kit or Fake Snickers or cheap coffee or similar. Hard to describe, but there are always only the brand products, but no favorable alternatives. Very much less than in Germany anyway. There are also new things in Germany. Like new drinks. You can try it out. It’s just fun and brings creativity to life. There’s no such thing in Switzerland. An area where there are only totally more expensive versions are back ingredients. I don’t even bake regular butter cookies because there is no cheap version of vanilla sugar or baking powder. It is very expensive to buy a simple package of vanilla sugar. And the back department is tiny. There are hardly any strays or rum or something more unusual… These are just a few examples of what is simply extremely much worse in Switzerland than in Germany. There are 2 ketchups here in Switzerland. In Germany, each supermarket has at least 4 or more ketchup varieties and sauces. I recently bought a cheap curry sauce from the bottle. So so sooo gross. It’s just NOT the same. In Germany you can buy the cheap house brands, because they often taste just as much as the more expensive products. In Switzerland, the favorable products are often so disgusting. I also noticed that shampoo and shower gel in Germany have a completely different quality. On the Schauma Shampoo I buy in Switzerland for 3.90 per bottle, I get very brittle, flaky and super dry hair. When I was in Germany I bought a bottle of Schauma Shampoo there, it smells different and even when I used it in Switzerland with exactly the same calcareous water, my hair was smooth and scalable. Also in Spain on holiday made the same experience with this shampoo. Only in Switzerland do the shampoos seem to be different. What is also extremely expensive is plaster and detergent. And also here again applies, the most favorable detergent can simply not be used, it stinks and does not wash well at all. The cheapest is 2,50 francs per litre at Migros. It’s just so unusable. Then it goes on with 6.50 per liter, then 11 francs, then 13, then 16, then 22 francs per liter! These are the price categories. So I always have to buy this for 6.50. Toilet paper is too expensive here. The cheapest, is totally gray and hard, costs 5,50 per 10 reels. Good toilet paper costs 12 francs per 10 reels. I could go on like this forever. But the problem is not only the price but the lack of choice. Also about bakery and bread. This is such a mourning game… There’s hardly anything good. Everything is always and always only leaves. They really pack everything in foliage from sweet to deftive but good cakes are simply not available here. Last time, I paid 8,50 francs for a piece of vegan chocolate tart (vine piece). That hurts so much. Not because I don’t have the money, but because this average tart doesn’t even make me happy. But the Swiss are always totally satisfied with everything. I don’t think they know what life means. And pleasure. And availability of cool interesting foods and menues. Or individual clothes. There is no way to buy individual clothes. That’s why everyone is running around identically. A huge difference to Germany. There are also barely any bastellades or the like. Just how we can buy something nice for the kids to craft at Tedi or NKD times. Here everything is so limited in the selection. Nothing cool at all. Or some school backpacks. They then have three for the boys to choose from and three for the girls. Every second child has the same backpack. Everything is standardized, standardized, limited. Sad and sad. I think Switzerland has NO good economy and I think above all one about this country and people: they are liars and hypocrites. They swarm from their Switzerland, but continue to go to Germany for shopping. They are totally different from the Germans and from the rest of the world. But last time again: Switzerland wants to join the EU (!!!) Become a science body! That’s unheard. It’s disrespectful. Those who do not want to be part of the EU and want to sink into poverty and simplicity must not ask for accession to such a body. They’re really hypocrites.
The cost of living is significantly higher. However, wages are also higher and taxes lower
Yes, d. more expensive. Of course, wages are higher there, but of course you have nothing to do with your salary in Germany.
Certainly. The Swiss earn more
Of course. A pack of cheese 13 francs…
which cheese costs so much? I’ve never seen in Basel.
Basel is even more expensive than Fribourg! And here in Fribourg, the Gruyere Hartkäse costs 13 francs the piece. So don’t tell me. And the cheap alternatives taste really bad. In Germany, the cheap cheese also tastes. But maybe your taste buds are dead or were all their lives used to the red to the Migros called “Budget”. Celebrity products are mostly.
If you mean 1kg of cheese, 13.- still cheap…
Kulturell is offered much more in Basel than in Fribourg. Great offer of cinema, theatres, concerts, museums. But why do you live in Fribourg if you like it so badly there? It’s a rather small rural place. It was years ago that there was an interview that didn’t bring anything about stress interview. I wondered why people in such a small place are so stressful.
I was already in Basel, twice, once on a retreat and once private. Basel has just as fucking and disappointing supermarkets as Fribourg… And the city has died, especially on Sunday. Public life there is almost as little as in Fribourg. If you want to be depressed, go to Basel. Where Fribourg is probably definitely the worst and most dead city in Switzerland. Everything’s dead here.
You’ll get carrot juice. Fruit juices are sometimes somewhat more expensive than in neighbouring countries.
I have never seen the pastry in the Coop or Migros all in Basel.
If you want to buy a cheap smoothie by yourself at coop, there is not. Why? There’s nothing else in the expensive smoothie. But there are NO alternatives. Only the fiery. So where in God’s name is this a great choice. There are two brand moothy varieties. That’s it. In Germany there are at least 10 different smoothies. Some expensive, some cheap. Or sandwiches, there are soooooo much more choice of alternative products. In Switzerland you are alternativeless in the truest sense of the word. You have to buy the expensive products because, as I said, the only one is there. And I repeat: this has nothing to do with great selection. It’s the opposite. Sausage and cheese as well as fish counters where you can buy fresh meat, sausage, cheese and fish directly from the butcher, there is no sperm market here. Just as in Germany there is a bakery with fresh bakery in the entrance area of the supermarkets. And so much more!
Swiss supermarkets look like war broke out. But in Switzerland and not only in Ukraine. Above all, pastries are plundered at 2 pm, vegetables also often. Eggs too often. Nothing will be delivered. A friend of mine works in Germany at the supermarket and he makes pastries fresh in a side room of the supermarket and places new fresh bread. In Switzerland it remains empty once emptied. It’s an awkward joke. The Swiss just don’t care. They don’t care. They also do nix with love or at least devotion or concentration. Otherwise, the supermarkets would not look so plundered and there is a totally high staff key. Totally many employees, but somehow nothing works in the back and in front.
I had nowhere else found an aldi market where as much choice was as with Aldi in Basel. In most Aldi shops, I don’t know what to cook from the bare offer. Nevertheless, with large Coop branches is better offer.
The Carrefour MIni markets in France are excluded from Christmas goose. Organic fruit and vegetables are packaged in small quantities so that each piece of fruit or vegetables costs almost one euro. At Christmas there were wild for 40 euros/kg. I can buy even better in Basel.
No, the Aldi Switzerland now has less choice than the Aldi in Germany. Alone with different yoghurts, baked goods 24/7 (only in German aldis all day fresh warm pastries that are more than just pastry sweet and salty), with sweets, drinks, fruits and vegetables, canned, sauces, sausage, cheese. Definitely less choice than in Germany.
Yes, that France has even worse products than Switzerland is clear to me.
How much gram is there for 13 CHF? By the way, I usually buy my food in Basel although I do not live in Switzerland. In the Coop there is a lot cheaper than in the French Carrefour especially when you buy larger quantities and there is much more choice and better quality than in Germany. Those who want to buy cheap food in Switzerland should go to Denner Discount; However, the selection is limited there. Aldi Switzerland is also not much more expensive than Aldi elsewhere and has more choice.
Yes much, more expensive than in Iceland
That’s why many Swiss come to D for shopping.
they come mainly because they receive the VAT of 19% after purchasing. Otherwise, the ride would hardly be worth it.
It is not friendly ignorant and mentally absent. It’s dangerous. If here in Switzerland is a bloody one on the road, no one calls for help because everyone thinks so much self-initiative to show is UNHÖFLICH. Or because they think the emergency call has made jmd different and they don’t want to get any trouble for a double emergency call. The sign citizens, this is Switzerland. Google times: Stories of sign citizens. In Germany, these stories probably all know, but if you’re a Swiss woman, you may have never heard of it. Or do these stories not even play in Switzerland? Would fit! 😅
However, the ride is worth a lot for some. They come mainly for detergents, drug products, toilet paper, sausage and meat. And I’ll tell you something else: many Swiss colleagues have a mailbox behind the German border and can send their parcels and Amazon shipments that can’t be delivered to Switzerland and to save the bulk of postage and stress with customs and Swiss mail. My mother zb wanted to make me happy for my birthday and sent me a package without telling me. It should be a surprise. It ended that I got mad that she didn’t tell me, because otherwise I would have told her that she should never send a package to Switzerland in God’s name. It didn’t happen forever. It was lost. At the post office they had NO PC at the official pick-up station to enter the broadcast number at all. They only had a back space, totally incorrigible. There’s a thousand things on the switch. Even the seller’s jacket was on the floor. Then ZWEI employees who are completely overwhelmed with my question about the package. I’ve never seen anything like that in Germany. In Germany, I go to the postal desk, there is one person and gives me information about my mail. Here in Switzerland IMMER will be called if I ask an employee somewhere something directly at least two more because the first one I ask never know it directly. Once I asked an employee where the water is. He said they had to go to the beverage department. I like this: Yes exactly and where is it? He likes: Ask in the beverage department. I’m like, thank you stupid piece of shit. (No, I didn’t say, of course). Save time and ask staff? If you don’t go in Switzerland, instead you’re looking for everything yourself. Or at the checkout. How you can take off slowly. Ellenlange snakes, quengeling children, and a supermarket worker who doesn’t notice anything. Caught in a dream world. Is that friendly? No! It is rude, as it deprives people of life and nerves. So much for the Swiss kindness for the rest.
No, the cheapest toilet paper in Switzerland is gray and hard. The cheapest toilet paper in Germany is white and soft. The detergent and the drugstore products are also much better and there is much more choice. In Germany there are delicious alternative products to the brand products. There are even Fake KitKat and Fake Snickers, but they taste just as good as the originals. There are zig different lemonades and drinks. Drinks from which Switzerland has never heard anything. And that for a small price. There is creativity in the supermarket because there are often new offers or novelties to try. Pustekuchen in Switzerland. The same range all year round. So please don’t tell me. I cook very much myself and know very well with food. I know very precisely that the quality of the budget foods and other cheap domestic brands in Switzerland are not at all comparable to the cheap domestic brands in Germany and, above all, there is hardly any choice as already mentioned.
Why don’t you go somewhere else when you’re so dissatisfied? I had previously studied in Lausanne and was very satisfied there.
They are often artificially friendly, but they are not as attractive as in Germany. In terms of imports: for purchases abroad up to CHF 300 counter value, all VAT returns and no customs fees. The Swiss buy cheaper at the German supermarket than the Germans! However, quality is often worse than Switzerland. Post in Germany is also not optimal; Inland letters need up to a week and letters in neighbouring countries up to a month!
In the end, it comes out to the same thing if one weighs the extra merit with the higher expenses
The purchasing power in Germany and France is at least 30% lower than in Switzerland!
Yeah.