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notary services switzerland

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Notary Services Switzerland 2026: Fees, AML Due Diligence & E‑notarisation Rules

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Anyone involved in a Swiss real-estate transaction in 2026 is navigating a fundamentally different compliance landscape for notary services Switzerland‑wide. The partial revision of the Anti‑Money Laundering Act (AMLA), adopted by the Federal Assembly on 26 September 2025, has extended statutory due-diligence duties to notaries handling property transfers, corporate formations and financing documentation. At the same time, the federal Notarial Digitisation Act is creating a pathway for electronic originals of authenticated instruments, reshaping how deeds are executed, stored and registered across cantons.

This guide consolidates the practical information that general counsel, in-house teams, estate agents and private parties need right now: realistic fee ranges with worked examples, clear “who pays” rules, a step-by-step AML checklist, and an operational playbook for electronic notarisation in Switzerland.

Notarial System in Switzerland: Who Is a Notary and How They Operate

Types of notaries

Switzerland recognises three principal models for organising the notariat. In the self-employed (Latin) notary model, used in cantons such as Bern, Basel‑Landschaft, Fribourg, Geneva, Ticino and Vaud, notaries hold a cantonal licence but run independent practices. In the state notary (Amtsnotariat) model, found in Zurich, Schaffhausen, Thurgau and several central-Swiss cantons, notarial functions are performed by officials employed within cantonal courts or land-registry offices. A smaller number of cantons operate a mixed system combining elements of both.

When notarisation is legally required

Swiss federal law mandates public notarisation for a defined set of transactions. The most common triggers include transfers of ownership in real estate, the creation or modification of mortgage liens (Grundpfandrechte), articles of association for companies limited by shares (AG) and limited-liability companies (GmbH), certain powers of attorney and advance healthcare directives, and marriage contracts or inheritance agreements.

Canton organisation and territorial competence

A notary’s territorial jurisdiction is determined by cantonal law, and an instrument authenticated in one canton is recognised federation-wide. The table below summarises the dominant model in selected cantons.

Canton Notary model
Zurich, Schaffhausen, Thurgau State notary (Amtsnotariat)
Bern, Basel‑Landschaft, Fribourg Self-employed (Latin) notary
Geneva, Vaud, Neuchâtel, Ticino Self-employed (Latin) notary
Lucerne, Uri Self-employed notary
Aargau, Basel‑Stadt Mixed / hybrid system

Notary Fees Switzerland 2026: Tariff Logic, Ranges and Worked Examples

Typical notarial fees for property deeds in Switzerland range from CHF 500 to CHF 3,000 for common consumer transactions, although complex or high-value deals regularly exceed these thresholds. The precise amount depends on the canton, the transaction value, the time and complexity involved, the significance of the contract, and the notary’s professional responsibility.

What drives notary costs for real estate

In cantons with state notaries, fees are set by an official tariff schedule published by the cantonal government, leaving little room for negotiation. In Latin-notary cantons, fees are typically guided by a cantonal framework tariff but may be agreed within a published range. Key cost factors include the purchase price or value of the encumbered property, the number of mortgage entries required, whether the deed involves complex structures (trusts, SPVs, foreign entities), and the language and translation needs of the parties.

Beyond the notary’s own fee, buyers and sellers must budget for land-registry fees (Grundbuchgebühren) and, where applicable, cantonal transfer taxes (Handänderungssteuern). Land-registry fees are typically calculated as a permille of the transaction value and vary significantly by canton.

Representative notarial and land-registry fee ranges

Service Typical fee range (CHF) Who usually pays
Authentication of purchase deed (notary fee) 500 – 3,000+ Buyer (or split by agreement)
Land-registry entry (ownership transfer) 0.1 % – 0.3 % of purchase price Buyer
Mortgage lien entry (Schuldbrief) 0.1 % – 0.2 % of mortgage amount Buyer / borrower
Cantonal transfer tax (where applicable) 0.1 % – 1.5 % of purchase price Buyer, seller or split (canton-specific)
Certified copies, extracts, courier 50 – 300 Requesting party

Worked examples, real estate notarisation fees

The examples below use mid-range estimates for a canton with a Latin-notary system. Actual costs will differ by canton and complexity.

Component CHF 300,000 apartment CHF 1,000,000 house CHF 5,000,000 commercial property
Notary fee (deed authentication) ≈ 800 ≈ 1,800 ≈ 4,500
Land-registry fee (0.15 %) 450 1,500 7,500
Mortgage lien entry (0.15 % of 80 % LTV) 360 1,200 6,000
Transfer tax (example: 1 %) 3,000 10,000 50,000
Estimated total (excl. advisers) ≈ 4,610 ≈ 14,500 ≈ 68,000

These figures are illustrative. In Zurich, for instance, the state-notary system produces lower notarial fees but the canton levies its own registry tariff. In Geneva, the Latin notary may charge a higher authentication fee while the cantonal transfer duty applies at different rates depending on buyer status. The critical takeaway: always request a binding fee estimate from the competent notary before signing any engagement letter.

Who Pays Notary and Land-Registry Fees in Switzerland?

The allocation of notary fees Switzerland‑wide is not fixed by federal statute, it is determined by cantonal custom and, above all, by what the parties agree in the sale-and-purchase agreement (SPA).

Purchase and sale transactions

In most cantons, the default expectation is that the buyer pays the notary fee for authentication of the purchase deed and the land-registry entry for the transfer of ownership. Where a cantonal transfer tax applies, the split varies: some cantons impose it entirely on the buyer, others on the seller, and several divide it equally. Parties routinely negotiate departures from these defaults, so the SPA should state the allocation explicitly.

Mortgage entries and loan documentation

Costs related to the creation or amendment of a mortgage lien (Schuldbrief / Grundpfandrecht) are almost invariably borne by the borrower. The lender’s external legal fees for reviewing or drafting loan documents sit outside the notary’s tariff and are charged separately.

Estate, planning deeds and corporate notarisation

For inheritance agreements and marriage contracts, the instructing party pays. In corporate notarisation (formation of an AG or GmbH, capital increases, articles amendments), the company itself bears the cost. Where multiple shareholders instruct jointly, internal cost-sharing is governed by the shareholders’ agreement.

Quick allocation checklist:

  • Seller tasks: deliver clear title, pay any agreed share of transfer tax, provide AML identification documents.
  • Buyer tasks: pay notary fee, land-registry fee, mortgage lien entry, and agreed share of transfer tax.
  • Lender tasks: instruct its own counsel; borrower pays mortgage-registration costs.

2026 AML Changes: Swiss Notary AML Obligations and What Must Be Done Now

On 26 September 2025, the Federal Assembly adopted a partial revision of the Swiss Anti‑Money Laundering Act. The revised AMLA broadens the scope of persons and activities subject to anti-money-laundering duties, and for the first time extends explicit statutory obligations to notaries engaged in certain advisory and transactional activities. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be a significant increase in compliance effort for notarial practices across every canton.

Summary of new obligations

The 2026 changes introduce several requirements that directly affect notary services Switzerland practitioners deliver:

  • Expanded scope. Notaries acting as advisers in the planning or execution of financial transactions, including real-estate transfers involving complex structures, are now classified as obliged persons under the AMLA.
  • Beneficial-ownership verification. Notaries must identify and verify the ultimate beneficial owner (UBO) for all parties to a transaction, cross-referencing the Swiss Transparency Register where available.
  • Risk-based due diligence. Transactions must be assessed for money-laundering risk using defined criteria, with enhanced due diligence (EDD) triggered by higher-risk indicators such as politically exposed persons (PEPs), unusual payment structures or foreign-domiciled corporate purchasers.
  • Suspicious-activity reporting. Where a notary has reasonable grounds for suspicion, the obligation to report to the Money Laundering Reporting Office Switzerland (MROS) is mandatory and immediate.
  • Record retention. All client-identification documents, risk assessments and transaction files must be retained for a minimum of ten years.

Notary-specific due-diligence checklist (10 steps)

  1. Collect government-issued photo identification for all natural persons (passport or national ID).
  2. Obtain proof of residential address (utility bill or official certificate dated within three months).
  3. For legal entities: request certified articles of association, commercial-register extract, and an organisational chart.
  4. Identify the ultimate beneficial owner(s) using a declaration of beneficial ownership (Form A equivalent).
  5. Cross-check UBO information against the Swiss Transparency Register and available sanctions lists.
  6. Assess the transaction risk profile: apply a standard risk-scoring matrix covering origin of funds, counterparty jurisdiction, transaction complexity and PEP status.
  7. Apply enhanced due diligence where elevated risk is identified (additional source-of-funds documentation, senior-management sign-off).
  8. Document findings in a written risk-assessment memorandum and file it with the transaction record.
  9. If suspicion arises at any stage, halt the transaction and file a suspicious-activity report with MROS without delay.
  10. Retain all identification documents, risk assessments and correspondence for a minimum of ten years from the date the business relationship ends.

Liability and penalties

Failure to comply with AML obligations exposes notaries to administrative sanctions from the relevant supervisory authority, potential criminal liability for negligent or wilful facilitation of money laundering, and significant reputational damage. Early indications suggest that regulators will initially focus on whether notaries have implemented written internal AML policies and documented their risk assessments. Practical mitigation steps include adopting standardised KYC templates, scheduling periodic compliance training and retaining independent AML counsel for complex transactions.

Reporting and verification obligations by entity type

Entity type Notary’s CDD steps (2026) Reporting trigger / action
Individual buyer / seller Photo ID check, proof of address, source-of-funds declaration for large transfers Report to MROS if suspicion arises; retain records for ten years
Domestic company / SPV Verify UBO via Swiss Transparency Register, obtain commercial-register extract, compare governing documents If UBO information is inconsistent or missing, escalate, request clarification and report if suspicion persists
Foreign corporate purchaser Verify incorporation documents, validate UBO through certified foreign-register extracts, apply enhanced due diligence Obtain additional source-of-funds documentation; report suspicion to MROS and consider blocking the transaction

Electronic Notarisation Switzerland: The Notarial Digitisation Act and Canton Practice

The federal Notarial Digitisation Act introduces a legal framework allowing notaries to create electronic originals of authenticated instruments, a fundamental shift for notary services Switzerland has traditionally delivered exclusively on paper. The Act sets minimum requirements for digital identity verification, qualified electronic signatures and tamper-proof storage, while leaving cantons considerable discretion over implementation timelines and operational details.

What counts as an electronic original

Under the Notarial Digitisation Act framework, an electronic original must satisfy three conditions: the notary’s identity is verified through a qualified electronic certificate issued by a recognised provider; the instrument bears a qualified electronic signature (QES) that meets the requirements of the Swiss Federal Act on Electronic Signatures (ZertES); and the signed document is stored in a tamper-proof repository with a secure timestamp. An electronic original created under these conditions has the same evidentiary force as a traditional paper deed.

Canton-by-canton practical notes

  • Zurich. The state-notary offices are in the early stages of integrating electronic deed-creation workflows. Land-registry acceptance of electronically authenticated deeds is expected to follow cantonal implementation ordinances.
  • Geneva. Geneva’s Latin-notary chamber has piloted digital signing for commercial-law instruments. Real-estate deeds are anticipated to transition to electronic originals in a phased rollout.
  • Lucerne. Self-employed notaries in Lucerne have begun accepting qualified electronic signatures for certain non-real-estate instruments, with broader coverage planned as the federal Act enters into force.

Operational steps for e‑notarisation

Notaries and parties preparing to use electronic notarisation should follow this preflight checklist:

  • Identity proofing: ensure all signatories hold a valid Swiss-recognised electronic identity or an equivalent foreign eID accepted under bilateral agreements.
  • Qualified electronic signature: procure QES certificates from a ZertES-accredited provider before the signing appointment.
  • Secure timestamping: confirm the notary’s software generates a trusted timestamp compliant with federal standards.
  • Registry acceptance: verify in advance that the relevant cantonal land registry accepts electronic submissions for the specific transaction type.
  • Custody and archiving: establish a retention protocol for the electronic original that meets the ten-year minimum and ensures ongoing accessibility.

How to Notarise a Swiss Property Sale: Step-by-Step

Pre-contract steps

Before any deed is drafted, the notary conducts preliminary checks: confirming the seller’s title via a land-registry extract, performing AML identification and UBO verification for all parties, and reviewing any existing encumbrances (mortgages, easements, pre-emption rights). The buyer should arrange financing confirmation and any necessary approvals (e.g., Lex Koller authorisation for foreign buyers).

Signing and execution

At the signing appointment, the notary reads the deed aloud in its entirety, a mandatory step under Swiss law. The parties may ask questions or request amendments before signing. Where electronic notarisation is available and all preconditions are met, the instrument may be signed using qualified electronic signatures. Otherwise, wet-ink signatures are applied in the notary’s presence, and the notary affixes the official seal and signature.

Registration and post-closing

The notary submits the authenticated deed to the competent cantonal land registry. Processing times vary: straightforward residential transfers typically take one to four weeks, while complex commercial transactions or multi-canton filings may require up to six weeks. Mortgage-lien entries are processed concurrently if submitted together with the transfer deed.

Step Who does it Typical duration
Title check and AML verification Notary 1 – 2 weeks
Draft deed preparation and review Notary, reviewed by parties 1 – 3 weeks
Signing appointment Parties + notary 1 day
Land-registry submission Notary 1 – 3 days after signing
Registry processing and entry Canton land registry 1 – 6 weeks
Confirmation and certified extract Notary to parties Within days of registry entry

Practical Risk Management: Sample Wording, Fee Clauses and Engagement Templates

Counsel drafting or reviewing SPAs and notarial engagement letters should consider incorporating the following clauses. These are indicative formulations, always adapt them to cantonal requirements and the specific transaction:

  • Fee allocation: “The notarial fees for authentication of this deed and the land-registry entry for the transfer of ownership shall be borne by the Buyer. The costs of any mortgage-lien entry shall be borne by the Borrower.”
  • Instruction authority: “The Seller and the Buyer jointly instruct the Notary to prepare and authenticate this deed. The Notary acts independently and owes duties of impartiality to both parties.”
  • Liability limitation: “The Notary’s liability for errors in the preparation of this deed shall be governed by [applicable cantonal law] and is limited to the extent permitted by law.”
  • Retention of originals: “The authenticated original of this deed shall be retained by the Notary in accordance with cantonal archiving requirements for a minimum period of [X] years.”
  • E-notarisation consent: “The parties consent to the execution of this deed as an electronic original within the meaning of the Notarial Digitisation Act, provided all technical and legal preconditions are satisfied at the time of signing.”

Conclusion: Notary Services Switzerland, Next Steps for Counsel

The 2026 regulatory environment for notary services Switzerland‑wide demands proactive preparation. The revised AMLA has made due-diligence compliance a statutory obligation rather than a voluntary best practice, while the Notarial Digitisation Act is opening a new frontier for electronic execution that early adopters can use to reduce turnaround times and improve client experience. General counsel, in-house teams and private parties should obtain binding fee estimates early, build AML verification into every transaction timeline, and confirm electronic-notarisation readiness with the competent canton before scheduling a signing appointment. The landscape for notary services Switzerland practitioners and clients rely upon has shifted, and preparation is the best protection against delay, penalty or unwelcome surprise.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Swiss State Secretariat for International Finance, AMLA overview
  2. Federal Chancellery, AMLA partial revision parliamentary notice
  3. Digital Switzerland, Notarial Digitisation Act
  4. Lenz & Staehelin, Amendments to the Swiss Anti‑Money Laundering Act
  5. Institut für Notariatsrecht und Notarielle Praxis, Notarial practice in Switzerland
  6. Representative notary fee list (consumer tariff example)
  7. Global Law Experts, Swiss Notary AML Obligations 2026
  8. Bär & Karrer, AMLA revision briefing
  9. Mercury Compliance, AMLA factsheet

FAQs

How much does a notary cost in Switzerland?
Typical notarial fees for common consumer transactions such as property deeds range from CHF 500 to CHF 3,000, depending on the canton, transaction value, complexity and notary responsibility. High-value or complex commercial transactions often exceed this range. Always request a binding estimate from the competent notary before instructing.
There is no uniform federal rule. In most cantons, the buyer pays the notary authentication fee and the land-registry entry fee. Cantonal transfer taxes may be split between buyer and seller or borne entirely by one party, depending on cantonal law and what the sale-and-purchase agreement specifies.
Under the revised AMLA, notaries must verify the identity of all parties, identify ultimate beneficial owners, assess the transaction for money-laundering risk, apply enhanced due diligence where elevated risk exists, report suspicious activity to MROS, and retain all identification and assessment records for a minimum of ten years.
Yes. The Notarial Digitisation Act creates a legal basis for electronic originals of authenticated instruments, provided the notary uses a qualified electronic signature, secure timestamping and tamper-proof storage. Canton-level implementation varies, so parties should confirm readiness with the relevant cantonal authority before the signing date.
Typical processing by cantonal land registries takes between one and six weeks, depending on the complexity of the transaction, whether mortgage entries are filed simultaneously, and the current backlog at the registry office. Straightforward residential transfers are usually processed within one to four weeks.
Yes. Where a party to the transaction is a legal entity, the notary must obtain certified governing documents, identify the ultimate beneficial owner(s), and cross-check the information against the Swiss Transparency Register. For foreign-domiciled entities, enhanced due diligence, including certified foreign-register extracts and additional source-of-funds documentation, is required.
Non-compliance exposes the notary to administrative sanctions from the supervisory authority, potential criminal liability for facilitating money laundering, and serious reputational consequences. Implementing written internal AML policies and standardised KYC procedures is the most effective form of mitigation.
The swisNot network (swisnot.ch) maintains a directory of notaries across 13 cantons. In state-notary cantons such as Zurich, the cantonal government publishes a list of official notary offices. You can also search the Global Law Experts lawyer directory and filter by Switzerland and Notary Services to find qualified practitioners.
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Notary Services Switzerland 2026: Fees, AML Due Diligence & E‑notarisation Rules

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