ความคิดเห็นที่ 1
The big question is "Which part of Switzerland"?
1. Yes, but at her age you will have to pay for her to go to a nursery (pre) school (a percentage of both your income, the higher the earning the more you pay, local government (cantonal) supported schools), the private ones are very expensive. My daughter was around that age when we placed her in a local nursery school (2.5 to 4 years old). When the child is 4 years old, she can go to a local school (pre-primary) for free then go on to primary.
http://geneva.angloinfo.com/information/11/schooling.asp
Most nursery schools take children from age 3 upwards, and must be fully toilet-trained, by the way.
2. Where in Switzerland? Average rental for a two-bedroom apartment (3-4 pieces, 70-90 m2) is around 1,100-1,600 or higher SFr/month depending on the area and the size (living area) of the apartment.
Accommodation is extremely hard to find, even if you find one you like you may not get to rent it as the decision has to be made by either the owner or the agency as to whom to give the apartment to. They do not just consider whether you can afford or not but many other things have to be considered too.
Rental costs 30 percent of a salary in average.
http://switzerland.isyours.com/e/property/renting/house.search.faq.html
3. Comparitively, a car is not that expensive but the cost of obtaining a Swiss driving license is and also the running costs, you must take driving lessons: practical, theory and first-aid, they will cost thousands of Francs (less if you're lucky enough) and a lot of your own time and effort. You will also have to know the local language (German, French or Italian), other than that it is extremely hard as some of the translation, from what I heard, can't be properly translated into either English or Thai.
http://switzerland.isyours.com/e/immigration/relocation/vehicles/driving_license.html
I lived in Geneva (city center) for at least four years without a car, able to drive with an EU driving license, with a special residence permit valid for 5 years; I could afford a car but could not afford to pay for parking fees, renting private parking space or parking fines. Since public transport in Switzerland is one of the best in the world why bother having a car just so that you can spend a lot of money on; for lessons, petrol, maintenance, insurance, parking, 40SFr/year for motorway tax, roadworthiness tests (old car, 7 yrs up every 2 years) and so on. The average cost of running a car is 900 SFrs/month. By all means, buy one if you really want to and able to drive legally on the road.
http://www.money-net.ch/en/index-old/aktuell/aktuell_aktuelles-auflistung/aktuell_aktuelles_autokosten.htm
Some useful links:
http://www.justlanded.com/english/Switzerland/Tools/Switzerland-Guide/Jobs/Social-security
http://www.justlanded.com/english/Switzerland/Tools/Switzerland-Guide
Get yourself a book about working and living in Switzerland, read and study carefully or surf around to learn more about Switzerland.
Best wishes.
จากคุณ :
genf
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7 ม.ค. 52 23:23:45
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