Overview
Saint Peter and Saint Paul falls on Monday, 29 June 2026. On this date, a truck driving ban is enforced in Switzerland, affecting all goods vehicles above 3.5 tonnes gross weight across the entirety of the Swiss public road network — a full, uninterrupted 24-hour blackout. These restrictions apply exclusively to HGV/TIR goods vehicles; passenger cars, coaches, and (in most cases) empty repositioning runs are exempt. Switzerland sits at the heart of the Alpine transit corridor connecting northern Europe to the Mediterranean — the A2 San Gottardo tunnel axis and the A13 San Bernardino route carry tens of thousands of trucks annually on the Germany–Italy, Poland–Italy, and UA–EU freight lanes. A full-day ban on a Monday compresses the effective working week for any operator whose route passes through Swiss territory, and with a 3.5 t weight threshold that catches a substantially wider range of commercial vehicles than any neighbouring state, the operational impact is broader than many dispatch teams initially anticipate.
Ban Windows on 2026-06-29
| Country | Local name | Time | Applies to | Roads | Penalty |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Switzerland | Peter und Paul | 00:00–24:00 | Goods vehicles >3.5 t | All public roads | CHF 100–10,000 |
Pre-holiday day (Sunday 2026-06-28)
The eve of the holiday falls on Sunday, 28 June 2026. Several countries in the region — Poland, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Hungary, and Bulgaria — apply specific pre-holiday evening restriction slots that activate only when the holiday eve falls on a Friday or Saturday. Since 28 June 2026 is a Sunday, none of those Saturday/Friday-eve patterns are triggered; there is no significant additional pre-holiday restriction window from those countries on this occasion. Switzerland's standard recurring Sunday ban is, however, fully in force on 28 June from 00:00 to 24:00 — identical in scope to the holiday ban the following day. In operational terms, Swiss territory is effectively closed to HGV traffic for 48 consecutive hours: from midnight entering Sunday 28 June through to the end of Monday 29 June. Operators must treat this as a single unbroken 48-hour exclusion zone when drawing up trans-Alpine departure schedules for that week.
Country-by-country rules & penalties
Switzerland
Switzerland enforces one of the strictest heavy goods vehicle regimes in Europe. Weight threshold: >3.5 t gross vehicle weight — significantly lower than the >7.5 t threshold used in most other European countries and far below Poland's >12 t rule, meaning a substantially broader range of commercial vehicles is caught, including many light-commercial and medium-weight trucks that would travel unrestricted elsewhere. Roads: All public roads without exception — cantonal and municipal routes are covered alongside motorways, with no road-type exemptions available. Recurring pattern: Every Sunday and every public holiday, 00:00–24:00. An additional nightly ban applies 22:00–05:00 every day of the year for all goods vehicles above 3.5 t, including standard weekdays. Exemptions: Extremely limited. Only urgent medical supply transport and military vehicles are formally recognised as exempt. Combined transport operations (road+rail or road+ship), perishable goods consignments, and seasonal agricultural relief — all standard exemption categories in neighbouring Germany and Austria — are not automatically granted in Switzerland, and exemption certificates issued in other Alpine transit countries cannot be assumed valid without prior verification. Penalties: CHF 100 to CHF 10,000 depending on infringement severity and prior record. Swiss Cantonal Police and FEDRO (Federal Roads Office) conduct frequent roadside controls; repeat violations can result in vehicle detention at the border and escalating financial sanctions.
Plan Your Route
With Switzerland shutting down HGV movement from 00:00 on Sunday 28 June through 24:00 on Monday 29 June — 48 uninterrupted hours — early dispatch coordination is essential for any trans-Alpine consignment or repositioning run scheduled during that period. The combination of a strict 3.5 t threshold and full public-road coverage leaves no viable within-country detour:
- Target Saturday 27 June for transit: The last viable unrestricted window to cross Switzerland is Saturday 27 June before 22:00, when the nightly ban resumes. Pull forward any Switzerland-crossing loads to Friday or Saturday to avoid the combined Sunday and public holiday blockout entirely.
- Pre-book secured overnight parking: TEN-T certified truck parks in southern Germany (Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria) and northern Italy (Lombardy, Piedmont) fill rapidly ahead of multi-day ban periods. Reserve parking no later than Thursday 25 June through your fleet management or logistics portal to guarantee a compliant rest position on either side of the Alps.
- Consider the Austrian Alpine corridor: Austria does not observe Saint Peter and Saint Paul as a nationwide public holiday; the A13 Brenner motorway and A12 Inntal corridor remain open to HGV traffic on Monday 29 June 2026. Cross-check Austrian sectoral driving bans, Inntal night and weekend restrictions, and any Brenner HGV quota announcements before committing to this alternative route, as additional constraints may apply.
- Allow buffer time at Swiss border crossings: CH–DE at Basel/Weil am Rhein, CH–AT at Lustenau/Höchst, and CH–IT at Chiasso all accumulate substantial lorry queues ahead of ban periods as drivers race to complete transit. Budget a minimum of 60–90 minutes additional dwell time during peak pre-ban departure windows on Friday evening and Saturday morning.
Useful Tools for Truck Drivers
- Interactive Traffic Bans Calendar
- Live Traffic Incidents Map
- Truck Parkings Map (19,000+)
- Speed Cameras (48,000+)
- European Vignettes & Tolls
- European Holidays Calendar
Source: nakordoni.eu — Truck Traffic Bans Calendar | Updated: 22.06.2026