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Switzerland’s revised Anti-Money Laundering Act (AMLA) and the new Federal Act on the Transparency of Legal Entities together represent the most significant expansion of swiss notary AML obligations 2026 in over a decade. The Federal Council confirmed the reform package in 2025, introducing a central transparency register for beneficial ownership, extending due-diligence duties to advisers, including notaries, and tightening reporting requirements across company formation, share transfers and real-estate transactions. For practitioners who authenticate public deeds daily, the changes demand immediate workflow adjustments: new KYC documentation at onboarding, mandatory verification against the register before notarisation, and strict discrepancy-reporting timelines. This guide maps every obligation to the notarial acts it touches and provides checklists, sample wording and procedural scripts ready for adoption.
Two legislative instruments drive the 2026 reforms. The Federal Act on the Transparency of Legal Entities creates a central beneficial ownership register administered by the Federal Department of Justice and Police (FDJP). Simultaneously, the revised AMLA extends anti-money-laundering obligations to advisory activities, a category that explicitly includes notarial services when notaries assist with company formation, real-estate transactions or trust structures. The Federal Council adopted the reform package following parliamentary approval in 2025, with implementing ordinances setting out the operational detail for the central transparency register 2026.
The reforms respond to Switzerland’s mutual evaluation by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and align Swiss law with international standards on corporate transparency. The Transparency Act requires Swiss legal entities, including AGs, GmbHs, foundations, associations with commercial activities and certain trusts, to identify and register their beneficial owners in the central register. The revised AMLA, in parallel, redefines the concept of “financial intermediary” to cover advisers who perform certain qualifying activities, bringing notaries squarely within scope when they carry out notarisations related to the formation, management or dissolution of legal entities and when they handle property conveyances.
| Date / Period | Change | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 2025, Parliamentary adoption | Federal Act on Transparency of Legal Entities and revised AMLA approved | Legislative basis established; implementing ordinances in preparation |
| Mid-2026, Expected entry into force | Transparency register goes live; revised AMLA due-diligence obligations take effect | Notaries must verify BO data against the register before each qualifying notarisation; new KYC procedures mandatory |
| Transitional period (expected 18–24 months from entry into force) | Existing entities must register beneficial owners; transitional provisions for ongoing mandates | Notaries should proactively notify existing corporate clients to prepare filings; phased compliance window for legacy structures |
Industry observers expect the Federal Council to publish the precise entry-into-force date via an ordinance in the coming months. Practitioners should monitor the Federal Gazette and admin.ch for confirmation of exact transitional deadlines.
The revised AMLA transforms notary due diligence in Switzerland from a largely voluntary best-practice exercise into a statutory obligation with defined procedures, thresholds and reporting chains. Notaries performing qualifying activities must now implement a full AML compliance programme comparable to that of regulated financial intermediaries.
For every natural person appearing before the notary, the following steps become mandatory under the notary compliance AML 2026 framework:
When the client is a legal entity, the notary must go further. Under the beneficial ownership register Switzerland framework, the notary must:
The revised AMLA specifies circumstances that require the notary to escalate to enhanced due diligence (EDD). These include:
In each EDD case, the notary must obtain additional documentation (e.g., audited financial statements, bank references, source-of-wealth evidence) and record the enhanced assessment in the case file.
Sample wording, adapt and verify before use in practice.
Client interview script (opening): “Under the revised Swiss Anti-Money Laundering Act, I am required to verify your identity and the identity of any beneficial owners before proceeding with this notarisation. I will need to see original identification documents for all parties, a completed beneficial ownership declaration, and, where applicable, documentation on the source of funds for this transaction.”
KYC form excerpt, beneficial ownership declaration:
If the notary identifies grounds for suspicion, including discrepancies with the central register that the client cannot satisfactorily explain, the notary must:
The likely practical effect of the new reporting chain will be that notaries establish a formal internal compliance function or appoint an AML compliance officer, even in smaller practices, to manage escalations and maintain the MROS reporting relationship.
Company formation notarisation in Switzerland has always required the notary to authenticate the articles of incorporation and verify the identity of founders. The 2026 reforms add a beneficial-ownership verification layer that interacts with both the commercial register and the new central transparency register.
Sample clause for articles of incorporation (beneficial ownership disclosure):
Sample wording, adapt and verify before use in practice.
“The shareholders undertake to disclose to the company, and the company undertakes to register with the Federal Central Transparency Register, the identity of all natural persons who are the beneficial owners of the shares, in accordance with the Federal Act on the Transparency of Legal Entities and its implementing ordinances. Any change in beneficial ownership must be notified within 30 days.”
When a notary authenticates amendments to articles of association or notarises share transfer agreements, the same verification steps apply. The notary must confirm that the outgoing and incoming shareholders’ beneficial ownership information is current in the transparency register. Where discrepancies are identified, the notary must advise the client to correct the register entry and document the advice given.
| Entity Type | Notary Duties (2026) | Reporting Timeline / Who Files |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic company (AG / GmbH) | Verify company BO from register or company documents; obtain signed BO declaration; add BO verification to notarial record | Company must ensure register entry, company files; notary must flag discrepancies to client and recommend filing within 30 days |
| Trust / foundation | Identify settlor, controllers and beneficiaries; apply enhanced due diligence on opaque structures | Notary collects BO info; trustee or legal representative files with register; notary documents and confirms client’s filing duties |
| Individual seller / buyer | Standard ID verification; verify source of funds if high-risk; enhanced checks if PEP or high-value transaction | No separate BO filing; identity verified and records retained; suspicious activity reported to MROS immediately |
Real-estate conveyances represent one of the highest-risk categories for money laundering, and the 2026 notarisation requirements ensure that notaries serve as a critical gatekeeper. The revised framework applies to all property transfers that require notarial authentication, which, under cantonal law, includes virtually every sale, gift or exchange of immovable property in Switzerland.
Where the transaction involves mortgage financing, the notary should coordinate with the lending institution to confirm that the bank’s own KYC has been completed and that the beneficial owner of the borrowing entity is consistent with the information provided to the notary. Early indications suggest that lenders will increasingly request a notarial confirmation of BO verification as part of their own compliance files, creating a two-way information flow that practitioners should anticipate and plan for. Cantonal variations in notarial tariffs, procedural requirements for land register submissions and the format of public deeds mean that practitioners must also verify the specific rules of the canton in which the property is situated.
Foreign clients present additional layers of complexity under the 2026 reforms. The revised AMLA does not exempt non-resident clients from beneficial ownership verification, if anything, it heightens scrutiny where structures span multiple jurisdictions.
The following tools are designed for immediate adoption into notarial workflows. All sample wording should be adapted to cantonal requirements and verified with qualified legal counsel before use.
| Step | Action | Documentation Required |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Verify identity of all natural persons | Original passport or ID card; copy retained in file |
| 2 | Verify legal existence of entity clients | Commercial register extract (dated within 30 days) |
| 3 | Collect BO declaration | Signed beneficial ownership form (see template above) |
| 4 | Query central transparency register | Printout or electronic confirmation of register check |
| 5 | Assess for EDD triggers | Internal risk assessment memo |
| 6 | Screen against PEP and sanctions lists | Screening result printout with date stamp |
| 7 | Obtain source-of-funds evidence (if triggered) | Bank confirmation, loan commitment, audited accounts |
| 8 | Document rationale in case file | Written assessment of AML checks and conclusions |
| 9 | File MROS report (if suspicious) | Copy of report and internal escalation record |
| 10 | Retain records for 10 years | Full case file index with retention date noted |
Sample wording, adapt and verify before use in practice.
“The undersigned notary confirms that, in accordance with the revised Federal Anti-Money Laundering Act and the Federal Act on the Transparency of Legal Entities, the identity of the parties and the beneficial owners of the legal entities involved in this transaction has been verified. A query of the Federal Central Transparency Register was conducted on [DATE], and the results were consistent with [OR: inconsistent with, in which case the discrepancy was addressed as follows: ___] the beneficial ownership declarations provided by the parties. This verification is documented in the notary’s case file under reference [REF].”
Sample wording, adapt and verify before use in practice.
“Before we proceed, I am legally required under the 2026 amendments to the Swiss Anti-Money Laundering Act to ask you several questions and collect documentation. This applies to all notarial acts involving company formation, amendments and property transactions. I will need: (1) your valid passport or identity card, (2) a completed beneficial ownership declaration for any legal entity involved, and (3) documentation showing the source of funds for this transaction if applicable. May I begin by confirming your full legal name and date of birth?”
Non-compliance with the revised AMLA and the Transparency Act carries both administrative and criminal consequences. The penalty framework is designed to ensure that obligations are taken seriously at every level of the reporting chain.
Swiss notary AML obligations 2026 demand a structured implementation response. The following action plan provides a clear starting framework:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Armin Gilg at Fortis Law AG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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