Moving to Switzerland or Estonia with a 2.5yo autistic toddler: Local daycare vs. International English preschool?
Posted by OkMaterial6460@reddit | expats | View on Reddit | 7 comments
Hi r/expats,
My partner and I are planning a move to either Switzerland or Estonia. We have a 2.5-year-old daughter who might be a high-functioning autistic (we don't think so but she's currently undergoing diagnosis and the psychologist seems to pull in that direction). She has no speech delay but currently only speaks Hebrew. My partner and I are fluent in English and Hebrew, but we don't speak German or Estonian.
Since she's at prime age for language acquisition and play-based learning, we are torn between two paths - local system or international school.
Our questions for parents who have been there:
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Has anyone moved to a foreign-language country with an autistic toddler?
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Did you choose the local immersion route or the international English route, and why?
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If you chose local, how did you manage early intervention evaluations and daily communication with the staff without speaking the language yourselves?
Any experiences, warnings, or insights would be hugely appreciated! Thank you!
Sea-Ticket7775@reddit
Hey, this is such a real dilemma, I've worked with quite a few expat families navigating this sort of tension. I've seen a "local immersion + safety net" work: a client of mine chose the local Kita and kept a bilingual tutor on retainer remotely. The kid got natural language exposure all day, but they weren't flying blind on the developmental stuff.
Estonia might actually be easier logistically than Switzerland. The infrastructure in Switzerland is excellent but expensive and often German dependent. Estonia's got a solid public system, and honestly their bureaucracy is less opaque.
What I'd actually do is pick based on your career situation and partner fit, not just the autism angle. The language question will sort itself out either way by age 5. The exhaustion question like, can one of you afford to be more available during transition, might be a bigger variable. Is there anything pulling you toward each country beyond the school question?
OkMaterial6460@reddit (OP)
Thank you, that's really helpful.
What did the bilingual tutor teach your client's child? Was it a tutor that spoke their native language?
Since my spouse' objective is to study first, she will probably be more available during transition (depending on when the studies will actually start).
Besides the education, we're prioritizing safety, then career prospects. In both of these counts Switzerland actually has a bit of an edge over Estonia, but we would consider both locations to answer our needs.
ItsReemAlBlahBlahDee@reddit
Your first priority should be securing a job. After that you can see whether the country and city you plan to live in has adequate resources for children who need any developmental help. If you suspect autism then reaching out to city subreddits and asking there will be more helpful to you.
OkMaterial6460@reddit (OP)
Are you sure? Securing a job requires a lot of resources - mostly time investment. I'd rather not spend a lot of time applying to positions and interviewing only to find out after all of that effort that the location isn't viable for my family.
ItsReemAlBlahBlahDee@reddit
Spend a week or two researching Estonia vs. Switzerland specifically on autism early intervention….Reddit city subs (r/zurich, r/tallinn), expat Facebook groups, and direct emails to international schools asking about their SEN (Special Educational Needs) support. This is low-effort research, not a months-long commitment.
Once you’ve ruled out (or confirmed) each location on that basis, then focus your job search on the viable one(s). That way you’re not wasting interview cycles on a city you’d reject anyway.
RoundAd4247@reddit
You leave a lot of important information out. What do you do for work? Are you EU citizens or how exactly are you planning to move to Switzerland? (Estonia is relatively easy for a temporary move on a digital nomad visa.)
OkMaterial6460@reddit (OP)
I used to work in tech (senior sw engineer). Now I'm a PhD student (Industrial Engineering researching theoretical statistics) so that I can spend more time with my daughter. My partner also works in tech (automation), but she has a master's degree in social science and she's planning on studying a course/diploma to get into UX.
My partner is an EU citizen, I am not. We have a considerable amount of money saved up. Our main plan is for me to find a tech job in one of the desired destinations and then we use her EU citizenship status plus our savings plus the job offer to get her a permit and me a family reuinification visa.