Mothers in Basel-Stadt: How the Age at Birth Has Changed Over Decades

May 26, 2026

In Basel-Stadt, the most common age for giving birth has shifted from the late twenties to the late thirties over the past two decades, with mothers aged 35 to 39 now forming the largest group. This trend is more pronounced than the national average, and the city's total fertility rate of 1.09 in 2024 remains well below the replacement level of 2.1.

Photo: Aditya Romansa, Holding baby’s hand, on Unsplash.com, licensed under Unsplash License.

Over the past few decades, women in Switzerland — and across much of the developed world — have been having children increasingly later in life. This insight examines the age of mothers at birth in Basel-Stadt, tracing how it has shifted over time and how Basel-Stadt compares with other Swiss cantons and the national average. A key indicator used here is the Total Fertility Rate (TFR) — the average number of children a woman would have over her reproductive lifetime (conventionally defined as ages 15 to 49), assuming that the birth rate observed in a given year remains constant. A TFR of 2.1 is considered the replacement level at which a population maintains its size without migration. More details on the methodology can be found on Wikipedia.

In 2025, there were 1'835 births in Basel-Stadt, of which 1'038 were to Swiss mothers and 638 to foreign mothers, with 159 births where the mother's nationality was unknown (Table 1). This represents an increase from the 1'779 births recorded in 2024, when 985 were to Swiss mothers and 611 to foreign mothers.

The long-term trend in Basel-Stadt shows a clear shift toward older motherhood. In 2005, the largest group of mothers was aged 30 to 34, with 505 births, while 317 mothers were under 25 and only 74 were over 39. By 2025, the largest group had become mothers aged 35 to 39, with 661 births, followed closely by those aged 30 to 34 with 664 births, while the number of mothers under 25 had fallen sharply to just 76, and those over 39 had more than doubled to 166 (Figure 1). This trend is even more pronounced among Swiss mothers compared to foreign mothers, though both groups show the same direction. At the youngest end of the age spectrum, births to mothers under 20 have dropped from 33 in 2005 to just 5 in 2025, while at the oldest end, births to mothers over 39 have risen from 74 to 166 (Figure 4).

Across Switzerland, the same pattern of delayed childbearing is evident. In 1970, the most common age group for mothers in both Switzerland and Basel-Stadt was 25 to 29, accounting for 35.8% and 36.8% of births respectively (Figure 4). By 2024, the most common age group in Switzerland had become 30 to 34, at 39.6%, while in Basel-Stadt it had shifted even further to 35 to 39, at 36.9%. The lines representing the share of younger mothers (under 25) and older mothers (over 35) crossed in Basel-Stadt earlier than in Switzerland as a whole, reflecting the city's more pronounced trend toward later motherhood.

The total fertility rate in Basel-Stadt stood at 1.09 in 2024, below the Swiss average of 1.29 and the rate in Zürich of 1.23 (Figure 5). The highest fertility rate recorded in Switzerland since 1982 was in Appenzell Innerrhoden in 1983, at 2.97, a level far above replacement. In contrast, Appenzell Innerrhoden's fertility rate had fallen to 1.36 by 2024, still higher than Basel-Stadt's but reflecting the broader national decline.

In summary, Basel-Stadt exemplifies the Swiss trend of increasingly older motherhood, with the most common age for giving birth now in the late thirties rather than the late twenties. The most striking finding is that in Basel-Stadt, mothers aged 35 to 39 have become the largest group, surpassing even the 30 to 34 age group, a shift that has not yet occurred at the national level. At the same time, the city's fertility rate remains well below the replacement level and below the national average, highlighting the demographic challenges of an urban population with delayed childbearing.


Table 1: Births in Basel-Stadt by Mothers Age and Nationality
Year Births Swiss Mothers Foreign Mothers Nationality unknown Age < 20 < 25 25 - 29 30 - 34 35 - 39 > 39
2025 1835 1038 638 159 5 71 253 664 829 166
2020 1994 1190 804 0 11 111 375 777 784 132
2015 2063 1198 865 0 11 169 452 790 705 117
2010 1916 1110 806 0 28 218 503 669 521 130
2005 1678 944 734 0 33 317 389 505 492 74


Table 2: Maternal Age Groups at Birth: Switzerland vs. Basel-Stadt
Year Age Group Switzerland (N) Switzerland (%) Switzerland (Rank) Basel-Stadt (N) Basel-Stadt (%) Basel-Stadt (Rank)
1970 sm25 65648 33.1 2 1682 31.9 2
1970 25t29 71130 35.8 1 1938 36.8 1
1970 30t34 39218 19.8 3 1088 20.6 3
1970 35t39 17138 8.6 4 448 8.5 4
1970 gr39 5298 2.7 5 116 2.2 5
2024 sm25 7122 4.6 5 126 3.6 5
2024 25t29 30008 19.2 3 438 12.4 3
2024 30t34 61960 39.6 1 1260 35.6 2
2024 35t39 45344 29.0 2 1308 36.9 1
2024 gr39 12078 7.7 4 412 11.6 4

Figure 1: Maternal Age Groups at Birth, Basel-Stadt 2005–2025

Figure 2: Average Age of Mothers at Birth by Origin

Figure 3: Teenage Mothers by Origin

Figure 5: Basel-Stadt, Zürich, Appenzell i.Rh., Switzerland: Fertility Rates Over Time

Figure 5: Births by Age-Group of Mother in Switzerland since 1969

Data source: Geborene nach Geschlecht, Staatsangehörigkeit und Geburtsmonat, Zusammengefasste Geburtenziffer nach Kanton, 1981-2024
Additional resources: Rückgang der Geburtenhäufigkeit in der Schweiz

🤖 This text was generated with the assistance of AI. All quantitative statements are derived directly from the dataset listed under Data Source.