Construction a Bellinzona — 30 open positions
More about this search for cross-border applicants
Bellinzona, the capital of Ticino, offers a dynamic construction job market with 20 current openings. The city's strategic location and ongoing infrastructure projects create opportunities for skilled professionals. With a mix of historic preservation and modern development, roles range from site management to specialized trades. Cross-border workers benefit from proximity to northern Italy, with commuting times typically under two hours. Familiarity with Swiss construction standards and language proficiency in Italian are advantageous.
Frequently asked questions
What permits do I need to work in Bellinzona as a cross-border worker?
Cross-border workers from Italy need a G permit, which allows you to work in Switzerland while living in Italy. Your employer typically initiates this process.
Which construction sectors are hiring in Bellinzona?
Current openings span residential, commercial, and infrastructure projects, including roles in civil engineering, carpentry, and electrical work.
How does taxation work for cross-border construction workers in Bellinzona?
Cross-border workers are taxed in Switzerland on their Swiss-sourced income, but Italy may also tax worldwide income, potentially leading to double taxation.
How we collect listings and what this page guarantees
Listings on this page come from a proprietary crawler that polls the main Swiss ATS (Smartrecruiters, Workday, proprietary trackers like Talentry and ServiceNow) every 6 hours, plus the cantonal Ticino Job Center, JobUp, JobScout24 and the career pages of long-standing Ticino employers. Every listing passes a deduplication check on normalised title + company + municipality before publication, so the same role does not appear twice even when the employer posts it on three portals. The displayed date is the original publication date — not the crawl timestamp — so you can judge the freshness. We keep listings online for 30 days or until the employer removes them from its ATS (we verify HTTP 404 and "position closed" redirects every 12 hours).
Living in Italy and working in Ticino: the cross-border geography
Bellinzona is 60 km from Como and 70 km from Varese, with off-peak driving time around 55 minutes (peaks 06:30-07:30 and 16:30-19:00) and 50 minutes by TILO regional train (Como-Chiasso-Bellinzona line). The fastest crossings for Bellinzona-bound commuters are Brogeda, Stabio: peak-time queues can exceed 25 minutes at Brogeda, while Stabio flows more smoothly after 07:15. The local economy is anchored in amministrazione cantonale, sanità EOC, biotech IRB: workers in these sectors find a deep market with frequent role rotation and well-structured collective agreements. The required G permit is filed by the Swiss employer at no cost and remains valid until the contract end; renewal is automatic as long as employment, border-zone residence (within 20 km) and at least weekly return to the Italian home are maintained.
CHF gross salary: how to land at real take-home
Listings on this page publish CHF annual gross salary: the typical range for skilled office roles is CHF 65-120k, but real take-home depends on four variables. (1) Cantonal TI source tax: brackets 6-19 % depending on gross, marital status and number of children. (2) Social charges: AVS-AI-IPG 5.3 % flat, unemployment 1.1 % up to CHF 148,200/year, LPP rising from 7 % at 25 to 18 % above 55. (3) The 2024 Italy-Switzerland fiscal agreement: dual taxation with Italian tax credit up to 80 % of the Swiss withholding for new cross-border workers (hired after 17 July 2023), 10,000 EUR allowance. (4) Commute costs: a mid-size petrol car covering 40-60 km/day costs CHF 2,400-3,200/year between fuel, motorway and wear (Swiss vignette CHF 40 included). The typical gross-to-net gap is 18-28 % for a childless single, 12-22 % for a married worker with two dependents. Open the calculator with the listing's gross figure and your own profile to get the exact number for your scenario.
Example: a manager with a CHF 7'154 gross monthly offer in Bellinzona (CHF 93,000 gross/year over 13 months). Source tax ~13 % (~CHF 930), AVS-AI-IPG 5.3 % (~CHF 379), LPP ~7 % (~CHF 501). Swiss net ~CHF 5'344/month. EUR rate at 0.97 → ~EUR 5'184. On the Italian side, 24.5 % of source tax is refunded to your residence municipality (border zone) and the Italian IRPEF tax credit closes the calculation. The Frontaliere Ticino calculator handles both regimes (old + new agreement) and shows the effective net.
Frequent questions from cross-border readers
How many days a week can I work remotely while keeping cross-border status?
Teleworking is currently allowed up to 25 % of the working time (about one day per week on a standard schedule) without losing cross-border status and without triggering social-security contributions in the country of residence. Above 25 %, a specific agreement between employer, employee and authorities is required — exceeding the cap shifts the social and fiscal basis toward Italy. Check the agreed share with HR before signing.
Does Bellinzona have a different border zone than the rest of Switzerland?
No: the "border zone" of the 2024 Italy-Switzerland agreement is the same across the Canton of Ticino — Italian municipalities within 20 km of the Swiss border. What changes between Lugano and Bellinzona is the commute time, not the tax regime. Your Italian residence stays in the same municipality even if you switch employers between Ticino cities.
Are Italian qualifications recognised for construction in Bellinzona?
For most private-sector roles, the Swiss employer accepts an Italian diploma or degree directly, without formal recognition. For regulated professions (healthcare, civil engineering, lawyers, accountants) recognition by SBFI/SEFRI is required: the procedure takes 3-6 months and should be launched in parallel with applications, not afterwards.
How much does the commute actually cost on a monthly basis?
For a mid-size petrol car commuting 50 km/day (e.g. Como-Bellinzona return), monthly cost across fuel, motorway and wear is around CHF 200-280. Adding the yearly Swiss vignette (CHF 40) and cross-border driver insurance, the annual impact is about CHF 2,500-3,200 to subtract from gross. Choosing TILO regional rail over private car can cut this cost by 30-40 % when distances and working hours allow the train.
Related tools for cross-border workers
Three free tools to close the loop before applying: cross-border net salary calculator with both tax regimes (old + 2024 new agreement) and the municipal refund estimate; CHF/EUR exchange comparator with rates from Italian banks, Swiss bureaus de change and Wise/Revolut; LAMal health-insurance comparator to pick the cheapest premium in your Ticino work municipality.