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Are PMR446 walkie-talkies legal in Switzerland?


Building an Igloo if camping is not allowed? (Switzerland/Liechtenstein)Windsurfing in Switzerland (or nearby areas)What are possible traveling plan for Switzerland in December-end for 5 days from Paris?What kind of roads am I not allowed to ride my bicycle on in Switzerland?Can a US citizen entering the EU in Germany travel through Switzerland without further ado?Renting a car in Switzerland for short foreign tripsHow to find mountain parking in Switzerland?Drive through Germany and Switzerland with barbells as luggageUS iphone se usage in switzerlandRented car in Switzerland: fuel and gas station






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34















We plan a road trip through Switzerland and we want to use walkie-talkies for the communication between the cars. We have devices that are using the PMR446 frequency and according to the manufacturer they are licence free in the EU. But what about Switzerland?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    These kind of "walky talkies" are pretty common in the mountains throughout Europe (inc Switzerland). They are frequently used by skiers, boarders and mountaineers and you can buy them from the larger sport retailers.

    – Qwerky
    May 20 at 13:42












  • Why would they be illegal?

    – Azor Ahai
    May 20 at 18:13






  • 10





    Because not all countries licence PMR446

    – Stevetech
    May 20 at 21:18

















34















We plan a road trip through Switzerland and we want to use walkie-talkies for the communication between the cars. We have devices that are using the PMR446 frequency and according to the manufacturer they are licence free in the EU. But what about Switzerland?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    These kind of "walky talkies" are pretty common in the mountains throughout Europe (inc Switzerland). They are frequently used by skiers, boarders and mountaineers and you can buy them from the larger sport retailers.

    – Qwerky
    May 20 at 13:42












  • Why would they be illegal?

    – Azor Ahai
    May 20 at 18:13






  • 10





    Because not all countries licence PMR446

    – Stevetech
    May 20 at 21:18













34












34








34








We plan a road trip through Switzerland and we want to use walkie-talkies for the communication between the cars. We have devices that are using the PMR446 frequency and according to the manufacturer they are licence free in the EU. But what about Switzerland?










share|improve this question
















We plan a road trip through Switzerland and we want to use walkie-talkies for the communication between the cars. We have devices that are using the PMR446 frequency and according to the manufacturer they are licence free in the EU. But what about Switzerland?







legal switzerland communication






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 20 at 15:21









a CVn

319212




319212










asked May 20 at 9:36









Dirty-flowDirty-flow

11k1457114




11k1457114







  • 1





    These kind of "walky talkies" are pretty common in the mountains throughout Europe (inc Switzerland). They are frequently used by skiers, boarders and mountaineers and you can buy them from the larger sport retailers.

    – Qwerky
    May 20 at 13:42












  • Why would they be illegal?

    – Azor Ahai
    May 20 at 18:13






  • 10





    Because not all countries licence PMR446

    – Stevetech
    May 20 at 21:18












  • 1





    These kind of "walky talkies" are pretty common in the mountains throughout Europe (inc Switzerland). They are frequently used by skiers, boarders and mountaineers and you can buy them from the larger sport retailers.

    – Qwerky
    May 20 at 13:42












  • Why would they be illegal?

    – Azor Ahai
    May 20 at 18:13






  • 10





    Because not all countries licence PMR446

    – Stevetech
    May 20 at 21:18







1




1





These kind of "walky talkies" are pretty common in the mountains throughout Europe (inc Switzerland). They are frequently used by skiers, boarders and mountaineers and you can buy them from the larger sport retailers.

– Qwerky
May 20 at 13:42






These kind of "walky talkies" are pretty common in the mountains throughout Europe (inc Switzerland). They are frequently used by skiers, boarders and mountaineers and you can buy them from the larger sport retailers.

– Qwerky
May 20 at 13:42














Why would they be illegal?

– Azor Ahai
May 20 at 18:13





Why would they be illegal?

– Azor Ahai
May 20 at 18:13




10




10





Because not all countries licence PMR446

– Stevetech
May 20 at 21:18





Because not all countries licence PMR446

– Stevetech
May 20 at 21:18










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















35














Yes, you can use PMR446 walkie-talkies in Switzerland.



Usage of PMR446 in Europe is licensed on a country-by-country basis and not mainly by the EU. You can get an up to date list of European countries allowing PMR446 usage and a summary of national deviations from the European Communications Office. Swiss federal authorities also have an information page confirming that usage of PMR446 devices is allowed.






share|improve this answer




















  • 7





    Here's the English version

    – MJeffryes
    May 20 at 10:12






  • 2





    @MJeffryes If I could only read. Thanks for the advice. I have linked to the English page now.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    May 20 at 10:13






  • 1





    @Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Yes, quite a bit. First of all, back then, you only had analog PMR446 in the range from 446.0 MHz, to 446.1 MHz. In the meantime, they added two incompatible types of digital PMR446, in the range from 446.1 MHz to 446.2 MHz. The newest change is that they then expanded the analog PMR446, so that it covers range from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz, and they expanded the both digital versions of PMR446, so that they too cover span from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz.

    – AndrejaKo
    May 21 at 10:56






  • 2





    @Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Now comes the fun part: Not all CEPT/ECC countries allow everything, so some only allow analog PMR446 from 446.0 to 446.1, some don't allow the newest mixed version yet and so on. So in some countries which can be said to allow PMR446, you could theoretically get into trouble, if you're using wrong kind of PMR446. That's why I think it's important to note that the list is outdated.

    – AndrejaKo
    May 21 at 10:58







  • 1





    Keep in mind that despite the devices being allowed, not any-and-all device using that band is allowed. There's a maximum amount of radiated power defined somewhere (probably around 0,5 - 5W Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) or something) and crossing that line makes them illegal.

    – Mast
    May 21 at 17:22












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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









35














Yes, you can use PMR446 walkie-talkies in Switzerland.



Usage of PMR446 in Europe is licensed on a country-by-country basis and not mainly by the EU. You can get an up to date list of European countries allowing PMR446 usage and a summary of national deviations from the European Communications Office. Swiss federal authorities also have an information page confirming that usage of PMR446 devices is allowed.






share|improve this answer




















  • 7





    Here's the English version

    – MJeffryes
    May 20 at 10:12






  • 2





    @MJeffryes If I could only read. Thanks for the advice. I have linked to the English page now.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    May 20 at 10:13






  • 1





    @Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Yes, quite a bit. First of all, back then, you only had analog PMR446 in the range from 446.0 MHz, to 446.1 MHz. In the meantime, they added two incompatible types of digital PMR446, in the range from 446.1 MHz to 446.2 MHz. The newest change is that they then expanded the analog PMR446, so that it covers range from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz, and they expanded the both digital versions of PMR446, so that they too cover span from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz.

    – AndrejaKo
    May 21 at 10:56






  • 2





    @Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Now comes the fun part: Not all CEPT/ECC countries allow everything, so some only allow analog PMR446 from 446.0 to 446.1, some don't allow the newest mixed version yet and so on. So in some countries which can be said to allow PMR446, you could theoretically get into trouble, if you're using wrong kind of PMR446. That's why I think it's important to note that the list is outdated.

    – AndrejaKo
    May 21 at 10:58







  • 1





    Keep in mind that despite the devices being allowed, not any-and-all device using that band is allowed. There's a maximum amount of radiated power defined somewhere (probably around 0,5 - 5W Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) or something) and crossing that line makes them illegal.

    – Mast
    May 21 at 17:22
















35














Yes, you can use PMR446 walkie-talkies in Switzerland.



Usage of PMR446 in Europe is licensed on a country-by-country basis and not mainly by the EU. You can get an up to date list of European countries allowing PMR446 usage and a summary of national deviations from the European Communications Office. Swiss federal authorities also have an information page confirming that usage of PMR446 devices is allowed.






share|improve this answer




















  • 7





    Here's the English version

    – MJeffryes
    May 20 at 10:12






  • 2





    @MJeffryes If I could only read. Thanks for the advice. I have linked to the English page now.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    May 20 at 10:13






  • 1





    @Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Yes, quite a bit. First of all, back then, you only had analog PMR446 in the range from 446.0 MHz, to 446.1 MHz. In the meantime, they added two incompatible types of digital PMR446, in the range from 446.1 MHz to 446.2 MHz. The newest change is that they then expanded the analog PMR446, so that it covers range from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz, and they expanded the both digital versions of PMR446, so that they too cover span from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz.

    – AndrejaKo
    May 21 at 10:56






  • 2





    @Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Now comes the fun part: Not all CEPT/ECC countries allow everything, so some only allow analog PMR446 from 446.0 to 446.1, some don't allow the newest mixed version yet and so on. So in some countries which can be said to allow PMR446, you could theoretically get into trouble, if you're using wrong kind of PMR446. That's why I think it's important to note that the list is outdated.

    – AndrejaKo
    May 21 at 10:58







  • 1





    Keep in mind that despite the devices being allowed, not any-and-all device using that band is allowed. There's a maximum amount of radiated power defined somewhere (probably around 0,5 - 5W Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) or something) and crossing that line makes them illegal.

    – Mast
    May 21 at 17:22














35












35








35







Yes, you can use PMR446 walkie-talkies in Switzerland.



Usage of PMR446 in Europe is licensed on a country-by-country basis and not mainly by the EU. You can get an up to date list of European countries allowing PMR446 usage and a summary of national deviations from the European Communications Office. Swiss federal authorities also have an information page confirming that usage of PMR446 devices is allowed.






share|improve this answer















Yes, you can use PMR446 walkie-talkies in Switzerland.



Usage of PMR446 in Europe is licensed on a country-by-country basis and not mainly by the EU. You can get an up to date list of European countries allowing PMR446 usage and a summary of national deviations from the European Communications Office. Swiss federal authorities also have an information page confirming that usage of PMR446 devices is allowed.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited May 20 at 10:13

























answered May 20 at 10:11









Tor-Einar JarnbjoTor-Einar Jarnbjo

34.5k491129




34.5k491129







  • 7





    Here's the English version

    – MJeffryes
    May 20 at 10:12






  • 2





    @MJeffryes If I could only read. Thanks for the advice. I have linked to the English page now.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    May 20 at 10:13






  • 1





    @Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Yes, quite a bit. First of all, back then, you only had analog PMR446 in the range from 446.0 MHz, to 446.1 MHz. In the meantime, they added two incompatible types of digital PMR446, in the range from 446.1 MHz to 446.2 MHz. The newest change is that they then expanded the analog PMR446, so that it covers range from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz, and they expanded the both digital versions of PMR446, so that they too cover span from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz.

    – AndrejaKo
    May 21 at 10:56






  • 2





    @Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Now comes the fun part: Not all CEPT/ECC countries allow everything, so some only allow analog PMR446 from 446.0 to 446.1, some don't allow the newest mixed version yet and so on. So in some countries which can be said to allow PMR446, you could theoretically get into trouble, if you're using wrong kind of PMR446. That's why I think it's important to note that the list is outdated.

    – AndrejaKo
    May 21 at 10:58







  • 1





    Keep in mind that despite the devices being allowed, not any-and-all device using that band is allowed. There's a maximum amount of radiated power defined somewhere (probably around 0,5 - 5W Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) or something) and crossing that line makes them illegal.

    – Mast
    May 21 at 17:22













  • 7





    Here's the English version

    – MJeffryes
    May 20 at 10:12






  • 2





    @MJeffryes If I could only read. Thanks for the advice. I have linked to the English page now.

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    May 20 at 10:13






  • 1





    @Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Yes, quite a bit. First of all, back then, you only had analog PMR446 in the range from 446.0 MHz, to 446.1 MHz. In the meantime, they added two incompatible types of digital PMR446, in the range from 446.1 MHz to 446.2 MHz. The newest change is that they then expanded the analog PMR446, so that it covers range from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz, and they expanded the both digital versions of PMR446, so that they too cover span from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz.

    – AndrejaKo
    May 21 at 10:56






  • 2





    @Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Now comes the fun part: Not all CEPT/ECC countries allow everything, so some only allow analog PMR446 from 446.0 to 446.1, some don't allow the newest mixed version yet and so on. So in some countries which can be said to allow PMR446, you could theoretically get into trouble, if you're using wrong kind of PMR446. That's why I think it's important to note that the list is outdated.

    – AndrejaKo
    May 21 at 10:58







  • 1





    Keep in mind that despite the devices being allowed, not any-and-all device using that band is allowed. There's a maximum amount of radiated power defined somewhere (probably around 0,5 - 5W Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) or something) and crossing that line makes them illegal.

    – Mast
    May 21 at 17:22








7




7





Here's the English version

– MJeffryes
May 20 at 10:12





Here's the English version

– MJeffryes
May 20 at 10:12




2




2





@MJeffryes If I could only read. Thanks for the advice. I have linked to the English page now.

– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
May 20 at 10:13





@MJeffryes If I could only read. Thanks for the advice. I have linked to the English page now.

– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
May 20 at 10:13




1




1





@Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Yes, quite a bit. First of all, back then, you only had analog PMR446 in the range from 446.0 MHz, to 446.1 MHz. In the meantime, they added two incompatible types of digital PMR446, in the range from 446.1 MHz to 446.2 MHz. The newest change is that they then expanded the analog PMR446, so that it covers range from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz, and they expanded the both digital versions of PMR446, so that they too cover span from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz.

– AndrejaKo
May 21 at 10:56





@Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Yes, quite a bit. First of all, back then, you only had analog PMR446 in the range from 446.0 MHz, to 446.1 MHz. In the meantime, they added two incompatible types of digital PMR446, in the range from 446.1 MHz to 446.2 MHz. The newest change is that they then expanded the analog PMR446, so that it covers range from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz, and they expanded the both digital versions of PMR446, so that they too cover span from 446.0 MHz to 446.2 MHz.

– AndrejaKo
May 21 at 10:56




2




2





@Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Now comes the fun part: Not all CEPT/ECC countries allow everything, so some only allow analog PMR446 from 446.0 to 446.1, some don't allow the newest mixed version yet and so on. So in some countries which can be said to allow PMR446, you could theoretically get into trouble, if you're using wrong kind of PMR446. That's why I think it's important to note that the list is outdated.

– AndrejaKo
May 21 at 10:58






@Tor-Einar Jarnbjo Now comes the fun part: Not all CEPT/ECC countries allow everything, so some only allow analog PMR446 from 446.0 to 446.1, some don't allow the newest mixed version yet and so on. So in some countries which can be said to allow PMR446, you could theoretically get into trouble, if you're using wrong kind of PMR446. That's why I think it's important to note that the list is outdated.

– AndrejaKo
May 21 at 10:58





1




1





Keep in mind that despite the devices being allowed, not any-and-all device using that band is allowed. There's a maximum amount of radiated power defined somewhere (probably around 0,5 - 5W Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) or something) and crossing that line makes them illegal.

– Mast
May 21 at 17:22






Keep in mind that despite the devices being allowed, not any-and-all device using that band is allowed. There's a maximum amount of radiated power defined somewhere (probably around 0,5 - 5W Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) or something) and crossing that line makes them illegal.

– Mast
May 21 at 17:22


















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