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Foreign property acquisition in Switzerland entered a new era of uncertainty on 15 April 2026, when the Federal Council submitted proposed amendments to the Federal Act on the Acquisition of Real Estate by Persons Abroad, the law commonly known as Lex Koller. The proposals would tighten acquisition-permit requirements for non-Swiss buyers, extend restrictions to commercial and investment property, and impose stricter scrutiny on corporate and trust structures used to hold Swiss real estate. At the same time, construction-contract reforms that took effect on 1 January 2026 have already reshaped buyer remedies for building defects, creating fresh drafting obligations for every transaction involving new-build or renovation projects.
For foreign investors, property developers, in-house counsel and real estate lawyers in Switzerland, the convergence of these two regulatory shifts demands immediate compliance action.
Key takeaways at a glance:
The Federal Act on the Acquisition of Real Estate by Persons Abroad (Lex Koller) has governed foreign property acquisition in Switzerland since its original enactment in 1983. Its purpose has always been to limit foreign ownership of Swiss residential property while permitting qualifying commercial acquisitions. According to the Swiss Federal Office of Justice, the law requires persons abroad, defined as non-Swiss nationals without permanent residence, or foreign-controlled entities, to obtain cantonal authorisation before acquiring real estate that falls within the Act’s scope.
On 15 April 2026, the Federal Council announced that it intends to tighten the existing rules on the acquisition of property by non-Swiss nationals. As reported by SWI swissinfo.ch, the amendments would require foreign homeowners to obtain authorisation before purchasing any residential property, closing loopholes that previously exempted certain transaction structures. Industry observers expect the changes to significantly narrow the available exemptions for corporate acquisitions and cross-border fund structures.
The proposed amendments introduce several headline changes that every real estate lawyer in Switzerland must track closely:
| Date | Event | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| 15 April 2026 | Federal Council submits proposed Lex Koller amendments | Review proposed text; assess impact on pending transactions |
| Q3–Q4 2026 (expected) | Parliamentary committee deliberation | Monitor committee reports; prepare client advisory |
| 2027 (estimated) | Parliamentary vote and potential referendum period | Plan for transitional provisions; adjust structuring advice |
| 2028 (earliest estimated) | Potential entry into force | Full compliance with amended rules; update all template documents |
The proposed property purchase restrictions in 2026 would impact four distinct buyer categories:
Despite the proposed tightening, foreign property acquisition in Switzerland is not being banned outright. The answer depends on residency status, nationality, entity type and the intended use of the property. EU/EFTA nationals with a B or C residence permit can currently purchase Swiss property without Lex Koller approval in most cases, as confirmed by advisory guidance from EY. Third-country nationals holding a C (settlement) permit are generally treated on par with Swiss citizens for acquisition purposes.
The following comparison table summarises the likely permit requirements under the proposed Lex Koller 2026 framework:
| Entity Type | Permit Requirement Under Proposed Lex Koller 2026 | Practical Impact / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Individual non-resident (third-country) | Permit required for all residential purchases, stricter tests proposed | Increased denial risk; local residency exceptions remain limited to specific cantons |
| EU/EFTA resident with B or C permit | Often exempt or lower hurdle (depends on cantonal implementation rules) | Residency status is critical, advisers should obtain documentary proof well before signing |
| Third-country national with C permit | Generally exempt for primary residence; possible new restrictions for investment property | Distinguish between primary-residence and rental-purpose acquisitions |
| Foreign company / fund | New restrictions likely; stricter tests for acquisition and control | Expect tighter scrutiny and possible ban on pure investment acquisitions |
| Trust / foundation | Full disclosure of beneficial owners; permit application likely required | Must map entire ownership chain; anticipate longer processing times |
Industry observers expect the practical effect of the proposals to be felt most sharply by non-resident investors seeking holiday homes and by institutional investors using offshore fund structures. EU/EFTA nationals who are genuinely resident in Switzerland and buying a primary home are likely to remain largely unaffected, though even they should monitor cantonal implementation for nuances.
Where an acquisition permit is required under Lex Koller, whether under the current rules or the proposed 2026 amendments, the application must be filed with the competent cantonal authority before the property transfer can be recorded in the land register. According to the Federal Office of Justice, the permit process operates as a condition precedent: no entry in the land register may be made without a valid authorisation or a confirmed exemption.
The standard permit workflow follows these steps:
For companies and trusts, the documentation burden is materially heavier. Real estate lawyers in Switzerland advising corporate or trust purchasers should prepare:
Permit applications are most frequently rejected for the following reasons:
Mitigation starts early: assemble the full ownership chart and residency documentation before signing even a conditional purchase agreement. Engaging a local notary and a specialist real estate lawyer at the pre-contract stage substantially reduces the risk of rejection.
Beyond the Lex Koller permit, every cross-border acquisition requires thorough legal and transactional due diligence. The stakes are high: title defects, undisclosed encumbrances or zoning restrictions can render a purchase uneconomic or legally unenforceable. The following checklist provides a framework, and should be adapted by real estate lawyers in Switzerland to the specific property type and canton involved.
| Due Diligence Item | Who Handles It | Documents to Request |
|---|---|---|
| Title verification | Notary / land-register office | Current land-register extract; historical ownership chain |
| Encumbrances and liens | Notary / legal adviser | Mortgage notes; easement deeds; pre-emption rights |
| Zoning and planning | Municipal building authority | Zoning plan; building regulations; pending planning applications |
| Lex Koller assessment | Real estate lawyer | Buyer classification; exemption analysis; cantonal quota status |
| Environmental and contamination | Environmental consultant / canton | Cadastre of contaminated sites; soil reports |
| Tax assessment (cantonal + federal) | Tax adviser | Real-estate transfer tax rates; property-gains tax projections; withholding obligations |
| Financing and mortgage conditions | Bank / mortgage adviser | Loan commitment letter; collateral requirements; foreign-currency conditions |
Foreign buyers must consider both Swiss and home-country tax consequences. Swiss cantons levy a real-estate transfer tax (Handänderungssteuer) that ranges from 0% to over 3% depending on the canton. Property-gains tax (Grundstückgewinnsteuer) applies on resale and is calculated at cantonal rates. Non-resident owners of Swiss rental property are subject to source taxation on rental income. Early engagement with a cross-border tax adviser is essential to avoid unexpected liabilities.
Switzerland’s federalist system means that cantons retain significant discretion in applying Lex Koller and in setting supplementary rules. Tourist cantons such as Valais, Graubünden and Bern apply specific quotas for foreign holiday-property acquisitions under the existing framework. Other cantons, including Zurich and Geneva, have historically applied stricter interpretive standards even where federal law permits flexibility. Advisers must check the specific cantonal regulations and recent administrative practice in the relevant jurisdiction before filing any permit application. For broader context on international real estate transactions, GLE’s cross-border guide provides a useful comparative framework.
Parallel to the Lex Koller proposals, the construction-contract reforms that took effect on 1 January 2026 have already changed the landscape for anyone acquiring new-build or renovation property in Switzerland. These reforms update the Swiss Code of Obligations provisions governing works contracts (Werkvertrag), with direct implications for developers, general contractors and buyers.
The key changes include:
For additional background on construction-contract structures, see GLE’s guide on construction contracts, pros and cons and the construction law glossary.
Construction-contract and SPA drafting should now incorporate specific clauses addressing the 2026 reforms. Industry observers expect the following to become standard market practice:
For related guidance on defect-period exposures, see GLE’s article on developers’ liability for latent defects.
The following compliance checklist is designed for buyers, sellers, advisers and real estate lawyers in Switzerland who need to act now, regardless of whether the proposed Lex Koller amendments are enacted in their current form:
Every share purchase agreement, asset purchase agreement or property transfer deed involving a foreign buyer must now be drafted with the proposed Lex Koller amendments in mind. Even before the amendments take effect, prudent advisers are already incorporating protective provisions that will survive any tightening of the rules.
Key drafting elements include:
“This Agreement is conditional upon the Buyer obtaining a valid authorisation from [Canton] pursuant to the Federal Act on the Acquisition of Real Estate by Persons Abroad (SR 211.412.41) within [90] days of the date hereof. If such authorisation is not obtained or is refused by the Long-Stop Date, either party may terminate this Agreement by written notice, and the Deposit shall be returned to the Buyer in full.”
Where a permit application is refused, the buyer faces a clear decision: appeal or withdraw. Appeals follow the cantonal administrative-court route and may ultimately reach the Federal Supreme Court. Early indications suggest that courts will apply a strict standard to the new disclosure requirements, making thorough documentation at the application stage the single most important protective measure.
Additional enforcement risks to manage include:
The Federal Council’s 15 April 2026 proposals mark the most significant potential change to Swiss foreign-ownership rules in nearly three decades. While parliamentary debate and a potential referendum still lie ahead, the direction of travel is clear: stricter controls, broader scope and heavier documentation burdens for every category of foreign buyer. Combined with the construction-contract reforms already in force since 1 January 2026, the compliance landscape for real estate lawyers in Switzerland, and the foreign clients they serve, has fundamentally shifted.
Buyers, sellers and advisers should not wait for the final legislation. Proactive steps taken now, mapping beneficial ownership, securing residency documentation, updating SPA drafting and reviewing construction-contract clauses, will determine whether transactions proceed smoothly or stall at the permit stage. For jurisdiction-specific guidance tailored to individual transactions, GLE’s Switzerland lawyer directory connects clients with experienced real estate lawyers across Swiss cantons.
This article was last reviewed on 6 May 2026. It reflects the Lex Koller amendments as proposed by the Federal Council on 15 April 2026. The proposals remain subject to parliamentary deliberation, potential amendment and referendum. Readers should seek independent legal advice before relying on this guide for specific transactions.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jacques Johner at MLL Legal Ltd, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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