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Every foreign company entering Switzerland faces the same threshold question: should you operate through a branch of the parent entity or incorporate a separate Swiss subsidiary? The answer to the branch vs subsidiary Switzerland tax question turns principally on effective corporate income tax, liability exposure, and how you intend to repatriate profits, and the calculus shifted meaningfully in 2025–2026 as cantons adjusted rates and Switzerland operationalised its Pillar Two minimum tax framework. This guide delivers a tax-first, dimension-by-dimension comparison and a concrete decision framework so that CFOs, general counsel and founders can make the call with confidence before instructing Swiss counsel.
A branch is simply an extension of the foreign parent company, it has no separate legal personality under Swiss law and exposes the parent to unlimited liability for Swiss obligations. A subsidiary, by contrast, is a fully independent Swiss legal entity (typically a GmbH or AG) that limits shareholder liability to the contributed capital, maintains its own tax residence, and accesses Swiss participation exemptions and treaty networks in its own right. Both vehicles trigger Swiss corporate income tax on locally attributable profits, but the taxable base, withholding-tax exposure and group-planning flexibility differ substantially.
The 2026 landscape adds urgency. Cantonal effective tax rates now range from roughly 11 % in low-tax cantons to above 20 % in Geneva, and Pillar Two’s Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT) may narrow, or eliminate, headline rate advantages for groups exceeding the EUR 750 million consolidated revenue threshold. Before committing, model both structures against current cantonal rates and your group’s Pillar Two position. The framework below shows you exactly how, and when to engage a Swiss tax lawyer for definitive advice.
A Swiss branch is not a separate legal entity. It is a registered extension of the foreign parent company, governed by Articles 935 and 935a of the Swiss Code of Obligations (CO). Because the branch lacks independent legal personality, the parent bears unlimited liability for every obligation the branch incurs, contracts, employee claims, tort liabilities, and regulatory penalties all flow directly to the parent’s balance sheet.
Under Swiss domestic law and most applicable double taxation agreements (DTAs), a branch constitutes a permanent establishment (PE) in Switzerland. The Swiss Federal Tax Administration (ESTV) taxes the branch only on profits attributable to that PE, not on the parent’s worldwide income. The federal direct tax rate applicable to profits is 8. 5 % on net profit under the Federal Act on Direct Federal Tax (DBG), which translates to an effective federal burden of approximately 7. 83 % after the tax-deductibility of the federal tax itself. On top of this, the canton and commune where the branch is registered levy their own corporate income and capital taxes.
Combined effective rates therefore vary by canton and typically fall within a range of roughly 12–20 %. Profit attribution to the branch follows the arm’s-length principle, mirroring OECD PE profit-attribution guidelines.
Registering a Swiss branch involves filing an application with the cantonal commercial register, appointing at least one person domiciled in Switzerland who is authorised to represent the branch, and submitting authenticated and apostilled corporate documents of the parent (for guidance on document legalisation, see whether an apostille is required for Switzerland). No minimum share capital is required. The process typically takes two to four weeks, and all-in professional costs for registration, translations and initial tax notifications generally run between CHF 2,000 and CHF 8,000, a fraction of subsidiary incorporation costs.
A Swiss subsidiary is a fully independent company incorporated under the Swiss Code of Obligations, most commonly as a Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung (GmbH) or an Aktiengesellschaft (AG). It possesses its own legal personality from the moment of commercial-register entry. The parent’s liability is generally limited to its equity contribution: CHF 20,000 for a GmbH (fully paid up at incorporation) or CHF 100,000 for an AG (with a minimum paid-up amount of CHF 50,000). This liability shield is the single most important structural advantage of the subsidiary route, though it can be eroded by parent-company guarantees, thin-capitalisation arrangements, or piercing-the-veil claims in exceptional circumstances.
A Swiss-incorporated subsidiary is a resident taxpayer subject to Swiss corporate income tax on its worldwide profits. It files separate federal, cantonal, and communal tax returns. The federal effective rate is approximately 7. 83 % (after tax deductibility), with cantonal and communal rates layered on top. Total effective combined rates in 2026 range from approximately 11–13 % in favourable cantons such as Zug and Nidwalden, through 13–16 % in Zurich and Lucerne, up to 20–24 % in Geneva. Crucially, the subsidiary, unlike the branch, can elect its seat and therefore its canton, giving group treasury meaningful scope to optimise subsidiary tax in Switzerland through cantonal arbitrage.
A resident subsidiary also qualifies for Swiss participation relief on qualifying dividend income and capital gains from substantial participations, a benefit that is structurally unavailable to a branch.
Incorporating a GmbH or AG requires notarised articles of incorporation, deposit of share capital with a Swiss bank (capital-liberation account), appointment of at least one director or managing officer domiciled in Switzerland, and registration with the commercial register. Bank KYC and anti-money-laundering checks have tightened since 2024, and industry observers expect capital-deposit timelines of two to six weeks for foreign-controlled entities. End-to-end, incorporating a subsidiary typically takes four to twelve weeks. Professional fees, notary, legal, bank, and registration, commonly range from CHF 8,000 to CHF 30,000, depending on whether a GmbH or AG structure is chosen and the complexity of the parent’s ownership chain.
The subsidiary must also comply with ongoing obligations: annual accounts, statutory audit (if thresholds are met), beneficial-ownership reporting (see the Swiss beneficial ownership register (2026)), and annual tax filings.
| Dimension | Branch (foreign parent) | Subsidiary (Swiss GmbH / AG) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal status & liability | Not a separate entity, parent bears unlimited liability for all branch obligations | Separate legal entity, parent liability limited to share capital (GmbH CHF 20k; AG CHF 100k) |
| Tax residence & taxable base | PE, taxed only on Swiss-source profits attributable to the branch | Swiss tax resident, taxed on worldwide profits |
| Cantonal tax exposure | Taxed in canton where branch is registered; PE profit-allocation rules apply | Taxed in canton of registered seat, can be chosen to optimise rate |
| Typical effective CIT range (2026) | 12–20 % (depends on branch canton) | 11–24 % (Zug ~11–13 %; Zurich ~13–16 %; Geneva ~20–24 %) |
| Withholding tax on outbound dividends | Generally no Swiss WHT on branch profit remittances to parent | 35 % statutory WHT, reduced to 0–15 % via DTA or participation exemption |
| VAT registration & recovery | Required if CHF 100,000 turnover threshold met; standard recovery rules | Required if CHF 100,000 turnover threshold met; same recovery rules |
| Social security & payroll | Swiss-employed staff subject to Swiss social contributions | Swiss-employed staff subject to Swiss social contributions, no material difference |
| Regulatory / licensing | Accepted for most non-regulated activities; some sectors require local entity | Preferred or required for FINMA-regulated and other licensed activities |
| Setup cost & capital | CHF 2k–8k; no minimum share capital | CHF 8k–30k; GmbH CHF 20k capital / AG CHF 100k capital |
| Timing to operational | 2–4 weeks | 4–12 weeks (bank KYC can extend timeline) |
| Profit repatriation & tax planning | Profits remitted without dividend formalities; limited local planning scope | Dividend planning, participation exemption, and DTA relief available |
For most foreign groups entering Switzerland in 2026, two dimensions dominate the decision. First, liability: if the Swiss operation carries material contract, employment or regulatory risk, the subsidiary’s limited-liability shield is decisive. Second, effective tax after repatriation: while the branch avoids Swiss withholding tax on remittances, the subsidiary’s access to participation relief and treaty-reduced WHT rates often produces a lower total tax cost once cantonal optimisation is factored in. The sections below unpack each dimension.
Tax is usually the dimension that tips the branch or subsidiary Switzerland decision. Both structures trigger Swiss corporate income tax, but the mechanics differ in ways that compound over time.
| Item | Branch | Subsidiary |
|---|---|---|
| Federal CIT (effective after deductibility) | ~7.83 % on PE profit | ~7.83 % on worldwide profit |
| Typical combined effective CIT (2026 examples) | Zug branch ~11–13 %; Zurich branch ~13–16 %; Geneva branch ~20–24 % | Zug subsidiary ~11–13 %; Zurich subsidiary ~13–16 %; Geneva subsidiary ~20–24 % |
| Swiss WHT on dividends / profit remittance | Generally nil, branch remittances are not treated as dividends | 35 % statutory; reduced to 0–15 % under most DTAs (e.g., 0 % to EU parent under EU–Swiss agreement conditions; 5 % under many bilateral treaties for qualifying holdings) |
| Participation relief | Not available to a branch | Available, reduces effective tax on qualifying dividends and capital gains from participations of ≥ 10 % |
| Minimum capital | None | GmbH: CHF 20,000; AG: CHF 100,000 (CHF 50,000 paid up) |
| Typical setup cost (professional fees) | CHF 2,000–8,000 | CHF 8,000–30,000 |
Federal and cantonal mechanics. The federal direct tax rate on profit is 8.5 % (DBG Art. 68), which is effectively reduced to approximately 7.83 % because the tax itself is deductible from the tax base. Each canton and commune then levies additional income and capital taxes. For a branch, the taxing canton is fixed, it is where the branch is registered and operates. A subsidiary, however, is taxed at the canton of its registered seat, which the parent controls. This means a subsidiary can be incorporated in Zug (effective combined rate roughly 11–13 %) even if day-to-day operations also involve personnel in Zurich, provided substance requirements are met at the seat.
Withholding tax. Switzerland levies a 35 % anticipatory tax (Verrechnungssteuer) on dividends paid by a Swiss subsidiary. For most treaty-country parents with qualifying holdings, the effective rate is reduced, often to 5 % or 0 %, under the applicable DTA or the EU–Switzerland agreements. Branch profit remittances to the foreign parent, by contrast, are generally not subject to Swiss withholding tax because they are not characterised as dividend distributions. This gives the branch a structural WHT advantage on paper, but that advantage narrows or disappears when the subsidiary can access full DTA relief.
VAT and payroll. Both structures must register for Swiss VAT if domestic taxable turnover exceeds CHF 100,000. VAT recovery rules, social-security contribution rates and payroll obligations are materially identical for both vehicles, neither structure offers a meaningful advantage on indirect tax.
Pillar Two / minimum tax. Switzerland implemented the OECD/G20 Pillar Two framework through a constitutional amendment and introduced a Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT) from 1 January 2024, with further implementing ordinances entering force in 2025–2026. Groups with consolidated revenues of EUR 750 million or above must ensure that Swiss constituent entities, whether branches or subsidiaries, bear at least a 15 % effective tax rate. The likely practical effect is that low-tax cantonal regimes (those with effective rates below 15 %) will see top-up tax applied, potentially eroding the rate arbitrage that historically favoured subsidiaries in cantons like Zug. For qualifying groups, the branch vs subsidiary tax comparison should now be run on a Pillar Two-adjusted basis.
A branch offers zero liability insulation. Creditors, employees, regulators and counterparties can pursue claims directly against the foreign parent’s worldwide assets. In cross-border litigation, a Swiss judgment against the branch is enforceable against the parent under the Lugano Convention (for EU/EFTA states) or bilateral enforcement treaties.
A subsidiary limits exposure to the capital contributed. The parent will not be liable for the subsidiary’s debts unless it has issued guarantees, engaged in abusive conduct justifying a piercing-the-veil action, or created a PE through the subsidiary’s activities (the so-called “agency PE” risk). Practical mitigation for both structures includes adequate local insurance, arm’s-length intercompany agreements and clear separation of management functions.
A branch can typically be operational in two to four weeks, the registration is administrative, requires no capital deposit, and notarial involvement is limited. A subsidiary takes four to twelve weeks end-to-end. The longer timeline is driven primarily by capital-deposit procedures and bank KYC, which have become more demanding since 2024 for foreign-controlled entities. Setup costs reflect this gap: CHF 2,000–8,000 for a branch versus CHF 8,000–30,000 for a subsidiary. For short-term market tests or project-based engagements, the branch’s speed and cost advantage is significant.
Certain regulated sectors, financial services, insurance, asset management and fund administration, require or strongly favour a Swiss legal entity for licensing by FINMA or self-regulatory organisations (SROs). A branch of a foreign bank or insurer may operate under specific FINMA exemptions, but the standard path is subsidiary incorporation. For businesses considering Swiss licensing in the fintech or crypto space, see the detailed guides on Swiss SRO licence & FINMA pathways and SRO licence in Switzerland: requirements & costs.
A subsidiary opens up planning levers that a branch cannot access: deductible management fees and royalties (subject to Swiss thin-capitalisation and transfer-pricing rules), dividend timing, and the Swiss participation exemption on inbound dividends. In M&A contexts, acquirers also prefer a clean subsidiary structure, buying the shares of a Swiss entity is far simpler from a due-diligence and transaction-structuring standpoint than acquiring a branch of a foreign company.
Three developments in 2025–2026 make it essential to re-run the branch vs subsidiary Switzerland tax analysis before committing to either structure.
Actionable takeaway: Recompute your effective combined tax (including QDMTT where applicable) under current 2026 cantonal rates for both a branch and a subsidiary before making a final decision. Static assumptions from 2023 or 2024 modelling are likely to produce incorrect conclusions.
The pros and cons of a branch vs subsidiary in Switzerland distill into a small number of actionable triggers. Use the table and checklists below to orient the decision before modelling specific tax outcomes with counsel.
| If your priority is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Fast, low-cost market test with minimal capital commitment | Branch, operational in weeks; no minimum capital |
| Limiting parent liability and maintaining a separate legal profile | Subsidiary (GmbH or AG), limited liability by default |
| Cantonal tax optimisation and access to participation exemptions | Subsidiary, choose a favourable canton; participation relief available |
| Regulated sector requiring a Swiss licence (FINMA, SRO) | Subsidiary, licensing typically requires local legal entity |
| Minimising WHT on profit repatriation via DTA or participation regime | Subsidiary, plan dividend distributions under treaty relief |
| Avoiding Swiss withholding tax altogether on remittances | Branch, profit transfers generally not subject to Swiss WHT |
| Short-term project or contract (under 2 years) | Branch, easier to wind down; lower exit costs |
Choose a branch when:
Choose a subsidiary when:
A simple four-question decision flow sharpens the analysis: (1) Is the Swiss activity permanent and commercially material? If yes, lean subsidiary. (2) Is limited liability essential? If yes, subsidiary. (3) Is cantonal rate optimisation or access to participation exemptions central to the business case? If yes, subsidiary. (4) Is the activity FINMA-regulated? If yes, subsidiary. If you answered “no” to all four, the branch is likely the better starting point, and you can always convert later.
The branch vs subsidiary Switzerland tax decision is not one to resolve with a generic checklist. Engage a qualified Swiss tax lawyer early in the planning process, the cost of restructuring after choosing the wrong vehicle far exceeds the cost of getting it right from the outset. Specific triggers that move the decision into professional-advice territory include:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kerem Altay at Bratschi, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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