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Company Formation in Switzerland Swiss AG & Gmbh for Hnwis, Family Offices, Commodities Traders and Ip-rich Corporates

By Jonathon Richards
– posted 2 hours ago

Company formation in Switzerland remains one of the most strategically compelling choices for international entrepreneurs, high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs), family offices, commodities traders and IP-rich corporates seeking a credible, treaty-connected European base with world-class banking infrastructure.

This comprehensive guide provides the full incorporation roadmap from choosing between a Swiss AG and GmbH, through notarisation and commercial-register filing, to bank account opening, KYC readiness and the critical 2026 substance and Pillar Two compliance landscape. Whether you are establishing a single-family holding vehicle, a commodities trading desk or an IP licensing structure, the information below is designed to help you plan efficiently and avoid costly missteps.

Quick fact: A typical Swiss incorporation takes 2–6 weeks from notarisation to register entry, with total advisory and filing costs generally ranging from CHF 3,000 to CHF 20,000+ (excluding share capital and ongoing trustee fees). See the detailed timeline and cost table below.

Why Incorporate in Switzerland? Value Propositions for HNWIs & Corporates

Switzerland consistently ranks among the world’s most attractive jurisdictions for company formation. The reasons extend well beyond its iconic banking sector:

  • Political and economic stability: A federal, direct-democracy model with predictable rule of law, a strong currency (CHF) and low sovereign risk.
  • Competitive cantonal tax landscape: Cantons compete on corporate income-tax rates, with effective combined rates (federal + cantonal/communal) ranging broadly depending on canton and qualifying status creating genuine planning opportunities for holding, IP and principal structures.
  • World-class banking and financial services: Deep relationships with global custodian banks, prime brokers and trade-finance providers, offering access to credit facilities, multi-currency accounts and wealth-management platforms.
  • Strong intellectual-property protection: Robust patent, trademark and trade-secret frameworks, combined with favourable cantonal IP-box regimes.
  • Established trust and fiduciary market: A mature ecosystem of regulated fiduciaries, trustees and corporate-services providers supporting international families and corporates.
  • Extensive double-tax-treaty network: Over 100 treaties, facilitating withholding-tax reduction on dividends, interest and royalties for qualifying structures with genuine substance.

Risk note: Since 2024, Swiss banks and authorities have materially tightened economic-substance expectations and KYC due-diligence standards. Generic shell formations with no local management, personnel or decision-making activity face increasing difficulty in securing banking relationships and maintaining treaty benefits.

AG vs GmbH Concise Explainer and Comparison Table

At a Glance When to Choose AG vs GmbH

The Aktiengesellschaft (AG) and Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung (GmbH) are by far the most popular legal forms for Swiss company formation by international clients. The AG is the default choice for larger enterprises, holding structures and situations requiring shareholder confidentiality, while the GmbH suits cost-conscious founders, smaller operations and structures where transparency among members is acceptable.

Comparison Table: Swiss AG vs Swiss GmbH

Feature Swiss AG (Aktiengesellschaft) Swiss GmbH (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung) Typical Users
Legal form Corporation (share company) Limited liability company
Minimum share capital CHF 100,000 nominal; minimum CHF 50,000 paid-in at incorporation CHF 20,000, fully paid-in at incorporation AG: holding, trading; GmbH: smaller operations
Board / management requirement Board of directors (minimum 1 member) One or more managing directors (Geschäftsführer)
Swiss-resident representative At least one person authorised to represent the company must be resident in Switzerland Same practical requirement
Notarial deed Public deed required Public deed required
Publication in SHAB Yes upon registration Yes upon registration
Shareholder register disclosure Registered shareholders recorded internally; not publicly visible (subject to UBO reporting) Quotaholders listed in the commercial register (publicly visible) AG preferred where confidentiality matters
Transferability of interests Shares freely transferable (unless articles restrict) Quota transfers require notarisation and usually articles impose restrictions AG: flexible; GmbH: controlled
Typical use-cases Holding companies, trading operations, family offices, IP vehicles, listed entities Operating SMEs, professional-services firms, smaller family vehicles, JVs

Key legal nuances: For a Swiss AG formation, the unpaid portion of the share capital (up to CHF 50,000 of the CHF 100,000 nominal) remains a contingent liability of shareholders until called. Bearer shares were effectively abolished in 2019 all shares must now be registered, and shareholders holding 25 % or more must be disclosed to the company. The statutory auditor requirement applies when a company exceeds two of three thresholds: CHF 40 million in balance-sheet total, CHF 20 million in revenue, or 250 full-time employees on annual average; smaller entities can “opt out” of an audit if all shareholders agree and the company has fewer than ten full-time employees.

Process How to Form an AG or GmbH in Switzerland

The Swiss AG registration or GmbH formation process is well-defined and typically involves a notary, a bank and a fiduciary or legal adviser. Below is the step-by-step sequence.

Step 1: Pre-Formation Planning and Name Check (ZEFIX)

Search the ZEFIX central business name index to confirm that your proposed company name is unique and permissible. Names must clearly distinguish the entity from existing registrations and may be in any of Switzerland’s official languages (or English, in practice).

  • Prepare: proposed company name (with alternatives), intended registered-office canton, and draft description of business purpose.

Step 2: Decide Legal Form, Canton and Tax Seat

Select between AG and GmbH based on the comparison factors above. The choice of canton directly affects corporate income-tax rates, capital-tax treatment and the availability of special regimes (e.g., IP box). HNWIs forming a Swiss holding company often favour cantons such as Zug, Schwyz, Lucerne or Nidwalden for their competitive rates, while Geneva and Zurich offer prestige and deep banking access.

Step 3: Draft Statutes / Articles of Association and Prepare Founder Documentation

The articles of association (Statuten) set out the company purpose, share capital structure, governance framework and transfer restrictions. Founders (individuals or corporate entities) must provide certified identification documents, proof of address, and for corporate shareholders certified extracts, powers of attorney and resolutions authorising the incorporation.

Step 4: Notarisation of Deed of Incorporation

Both AG and GmbH incorporations require a public deed executed before a Swiss notary. The deed records the formation resolution, subscription of shares or quotas, appointment of board members/managing directors and appointment of the auditor (if applicable). Signatures of all founders (or their duly authorised representatives) must be certified.

Step 5: Deposit Share Capital Capital Release Confirmation

The founders deposit the required share capital into a blocked bank account (Kapitalliberierungskonto). The bank issues a capital-release confirmation upon receipt:

  • AG: Minimum CHF 100,000 nominal capital; at least CHF 50,000 must be paid in at incorporation.
  • GmbH: Minimum CHF 20,000, fully paid in at incorporation.

The blocked account is released once the commercial-register entry is confirmed.

Step 6: Filing with the Cantonal Commercial Register and SHAB Publication

Submit the notarised deed, bank capital confirmation, director declarations (acceptance of office, domicile and representation authority) and any additional cantonal forms to the cantonal commercial-register office (Handelsregisteramt). Upon acceptance, the company is entered in the register and published in the Swiss Official Gazette of Commerce (SHAB). The company acquires legal personality at the moment of registration.

Step 7: UID and VAT Registration

A Unique Identification Number (UID) is assigned automatically upon commercial-register entry. If the company’s annual turnover is expected to exceed CHF 100,000, VAT registration with the Federal Tax Administration is mandatory; voluntary registration is also possible.

Step 8: Open Corporate Bank Account and Complete KYC

This step frequently takes the longest see the dedicated Bank Account & KYC section below. International founders should begin assembling the bank-onboarding documentation pack in parallel with formation planning.

Step 9: Ongoing Compliance Bookkeeping, Filings and Substance Documentation

From the day of registration, the company must maintain compliant bookkeeping (Swiss OR/GAAP or IFRS), file annual tax returns, hold an annual general meeting, and critically document its economic substance in Switzerland through board minutes, management contracts, employment records and operational evidence.

Practical tips common pitfalls to avoid:

  • Incomplete notarised signatures: All founders (or their proxies with specific powers of attorney) must sign the deed; missing signatures cause delays.
  • Missing bank capital evidence: The capital-release confirmation must arrive before the commercial-register application is complete.
  • Nominee-director red flags: Banks increasingly scrutinise nominee arrangements; ensure any fiduciary director has genuine decision-making authority and documented involvement.
  • Parallel bank preparation: Begin KYC document collection at Step 1 not after formation. This can save 2–4 weeks.

Timeline & Cost Realistic Table and Examples for Company Formation in Switzerland

Step Typical Duration Cost Band (CHF)
Name check & planning 1–3 days 0–500
Notary & deed of incorporation 1–5 days 1,000–4,000
Commercial register filing & SHAB publication 3–14 days 600–1,500
Bank account opening & KYC onboarding 2–8 weeks (varies significantly) No direct bank fee; advisory fees CHF 2,000–10,000+
Total (typical) 2–6 weeks CHF 3,000–20,000+ (excl. share capital & ongoing trustee fees)

Example scenarios:

  • Simple single-shareholder GmbH: Individual founder, straightforward source of funds, standard canton formation completed in approximately 2–3 weeks; all-in advisory and government costs around CHF 3,000–6,000.
  • HNWI holding AG with trustee and bank onboarding: Corporate founder chain, multi-jurisdictional UBO documentation, prime-bank relationship formation 4–6 weeks; bank onboarding 4–8 weeks additional; advisory costs CHF 10,000–20,000+.

Bank Account & KYC Onboarding Guidance Pass the Swiss Bank Test

What Swiss Banks Check

Swiss banks operate under strict anti-money-laundering (AML) obligations enforced by FINMA and underpinned by the Swiss Money Laundering Act (AMLA) and the self-regulatory CDB (Convention of Due Diligence) standards. At onboarding, expect rigorous verification of:

  • Beneficial ownership (UBO): Identity and background of all individuals holding 25 % or more, and the ultimate controlling person.
  • Source of funds and source of wealth: Documentary trail linking the capital to legitimate origins.
  • Economic substance: Evidence that the company has genuine Swiss operations, management and rationale.
  • Sanctions and PEP screening: Checks against international sanctions lists and politically-exposed-persons databases.

Recommended Bank Pack What to Prepare

  • Certified IDs: Notarised or apostilled passports for all UBOs and authorised signatories.
  • Proof of address and CV: Utility bills or official documents (less than 3 months old) and professional CV for principal decision-makers.
  • Source-of-funds / source-of-wealth documents: Sale-and-purchase agreements, employment contracts, audited accounts, bank statements, notarised transfer documentation.
  • Corporate documents: Notarised articles of association, current commercial-register extract, shareholder register, trustee agreement (if applicable).
  • Business plan and projected cashflow: Particularly important for trading entities and new ventures.
  • UBO declaration: Completed Form A (bank KYC/AML declaration form) and any supplementary bank questionnaires.

Typical KYC Timeline and Red Flags

Expect 2–8 weeks for onboarding, with complex structures (multi-layered holding chains, PEP involvement, high-risk jurisdictions in the ownership chain) at the longer end. Common red flags that trigger enhanced due diligence or outright refusal include: pure nominee-director arrangements with no genuine management role, rapid share transfers shortly after incorporation, opaque ownership chains passing through non-cooperative jurisdictions, and inconsistency between the stated business purpose and the source-of-funds documentation.

Practical Onboarding Tips for International Clients

  • Engage a local fiduciary early: A reputable Swiss fiduciary can introduce you to relationship managers and pre-clear compliance issues.
  • Pre-clear sanctions exposure: If any UBO or connected person has ties to sanctioned regions, address this transparently and with legal support before approaching the bank.
  • Prepare dual-language documentation: Swiss banks typically require originals plus certified translations (usually into English, German, French or Italian as appropriate).
  • Assemble the full pack before the first meeting: Incomplete submissions are the single most common cause of delay.

Tax & Substance Considerations 2026 Updates and What Matters

Swiss Tax Architecture Short Primer

Switzerland levies corporate income tax at three levels: federal, cantonal and communal. The federal corporate income-tax rate is approximately 8.5 % (after deduction of the tax itself from the base). Cantonal and communal rates vary significantly, resulting in combined effective rates that differ by canton. This competitive structure is a core driver of Swiss company formation for HNWIs and multinationals alike.

2024–2026 BEPS / Pillar Two Impact

Switzerland implemented the Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT) effective 1 January 2024, and the Income Inclusion Rule (IIR) from 1 January 2025, aligning with the OECD GloBE Model Rules for a global minimum effective tax rate of 15 %. Administrative guidance and transitional rules have continued to evolve through 2025 and into 2026.

Practical impact for in-scope multinational enterprises (MNEs):

  • Filing obligations: Groups within the Pillar Two scope (consolidated revenue ≥ EUR 750 million) must prepare and file a GloBE Information Return (GIR), even where no top-up tax is ultimately due.
  • Safe-harbour provisions: Transitional CbCR-based safe harbours may simplify compliance for qualifying jurisdictions and periods careful mapping is required.
  • QDMTT mechanics: The Swiss QDMTT ensures that any top-up to the 15 % minimum is collected domestically (rather than by a foreign parent jurisdiction), preserving Swiss fiscal sovereignty.
  • Out-of-scope entities: Smaller groups below the EUR 750 million threshold remain unaffected by Pillar Two, but should monitor developments, as scope may evolve.

Economic Substance Expectations in 2026

Swiss tax authorities and treaty partners assess economic substance against four practical pillars:

  • Personnel presence: Qualified employees or engaged professionals performing genuine functions in Switzerland.
  • Operational decision-making: Board meetings, management decisions and strategic direction documented as taking place in Switzerland.
  • Balance-sheet coherence: Assets, liabilities and transactional flows consistent with the stated Swiss business purpose.
  • Documented governance: Minutes, contracts, correspondence and bank signatories evidencing local management control.

For HNWIs and family offices, minimal credible substance measures typically include: a locally resident director with genuine authority, Swiss-based board meetings (at least quarterly), a physical registered office (not merely a letterbox), a local bank account operated from Switzerland, and evidence of substantive activities documented in meeting minutes and management reports.

Treaty and Withholding Considerations

Swiss holding companies continue to provide significant treaty benefits including reduced withholding tax on dividends, interest and royalties provided that the entity demonstrates sufficient substance and is not used as a mere conduit. Where substance shortfalls are identified, treaty partners may deny benefits under limitation-on-benefits clauses or the principal-purpose test (PPT) now embedded in most Swiss treaties following the MLI.

Compliance Checklist

  • Internal board minutes: Documented decisions at every board meeting, showing Swiss-based deliberation.
  • Local bank signatories: At least one Swiss-resident authorised signatory on the corporate bank account.
  • Employee and office evidence: Employment contracts, payroll records, lease agreements and utility bills.
  • IP management activity: If the company holds IP, documented DEMPE (development, enhancement, maintenance, protection, exploitation) functions performed in Switzerland.
  • Tax-ruling applications: Where the structure involves IP box, holding-privilege or other preferential treatment, a formal advance tax ruling from the cantonal tax authority is strongly recommended.

Sector-Specific Guidance Wealth Management, Commodities Trading, IP Holding

Wealth Management / Family Office

Switzerland’s family-office ecosystem is among the deepest globally. Best practices for forming a Swiss family-office vehicle include: centralising investment decision-making in Switzerland, appointing experienced local board members or advisers, establishing custodian relationships with Swiss universal banks, and ensuring compliance with cross-border regulatory reporting expectations (CRS, FATCA, QI). The structure should demonstrate genuine management autonomy rather than functioning as an instruction-taker for an offshore principal.

Commodities Trading

Geneva, Zug and Lugano host some of the world’s largest commodities-trading operations. Forming a GmbH in Switzerland or an AG for a trading desk requires careful attention to: physical vs. paper trading distinctions, customs and VAT registration for physical flows, FINMA licensing requirements if the entity qualifies as a financial intermediary, and critically the substance to justify the trading margin booked in Switzerland. Trading entities must maintain front-, middle- and back-office functions (or credible outsourcing arrangements) locally.

IP-Rich Corporates and Swiss Holding Companies

Swiss IP-holding structures benefit from cantonal IP-box regimes that can significantly reduce the effective tax rate on qualifying IP income. Key planning considerations include: structuring as an IP-holding AG vs. an operating IP company (with different substance requirements), ensuring defensible transfer-pricing documentation for royalty and licensing flows, maintaining local DEMPE functions to support treaty access, and distinguishing between acquired IP (amortisable) and self-developed IP (substance-intensive). Industry observers expect continued cantonal competition to attract IP-intensive groups.

Key Requirements & Eligibility Resident-Director Rules, Notarisation, Capital and the Register

The following Swiss company requirements apply to both AG and GmbH formations:

  • Minimum share capital: AG CHF 100,000 nominal (CHF 50,000 minimum paid-in at incorporation); GmbH CHF 20,000 fully paid-in.
  • Directors / management Swiss-resident representative: A practical and legal requirement exists for at least one person with Swiss residency who can represent the company. The Swiss SME Portal confirms this representational requirement. Banks and cantonal registrars expect a credible local representative not merely a nominee with genuine decision-making authority.
  • Notarisation: The formation deed for both an AG and a GmbH must be executed as a public deed before a Swiss notary.
  • Commercial register: Filing with the cantonal commercial-register office is mandatory. Upon registration, the company is published in the SHAB. The ZEFIX central index serves as the national name-check and extract tool.
  • UID / VAT: A UID is assigned automatically at registration. VAT registration is compulsory where annual turnover exceeds CHF 100,000; voluntary registration is available below this threshold.
  • Audit thresholds: A statutory (ordinary) audit is required when a company exceeds two of three thresholds: CHF 40 million balance-sheet total, CHF 20 million revenue, or 250 full-time employees. Companies with fewer than 10 employees may opt out of even a limited audit if all shareholders consent.

Client Proof Points Anonymised Case Studies

  • Global commodities trader: Incorporated a Swiss AG in Zug with a substantive trading desk; bank onboarding completed in 5 weeks with pre-prepared KYC documentation; customs and VAT registration aligned from day one, enabling immediate physical-trading operations.
  • Multi-jurisdictional family office: Converted a fragmented holding structure into a centralised Swiss GmbH; documented substance through a locally employed CFO and quarterly Swiss board meetings; enabled treaty relief on portfolio dividends and smooth acceptance by a leading Swiss private bank.
  • IP-rich technology group: Established a Swiss IP-holding AG with documented licensing agreements and local DEMPE functions; secured a favourable cantonal tax ruling applying the IP-box regime, reducing the effective tax rate on qualifying IP income by more than a third.
  • High-net-worth individual: Created a single-family holding AG with fiduciary trustee support; full KYC pack prepared in advance, leading to bank onboarding (including a credit facility) in under 4 weeks significantly below the typical timeline for complex structures.

Downloadable Incorporation Checklist

A one-page incorporation checklist covering the founder identification pack, notary requirements, bank-onboarding document list, step-by-step timeline and typical fee bands is available for download. This resource consolidates the procedural and documentary requirements outlined above into a single reference sheet suitable for sharing with advisers, banks and co-founders.

Sources

FAQs

How do I form an AG in Switzerland?
To form a Swiss AG, you check the proposed name on ZEFIX, draft articles of association, execute the formation deed before a Swiss notary, deposit at least CHF 50,000 of the CHF 100,000 nominal share capital into a blocked bank account, file the notarised documents with the cantonal commercial register, and await registration and publication in the SHAB. The company acquires legal personality upon register entry. The entire process typically takes 2–6 weeks.
A Swiss AG requires a nominal share capital of CHF 100,000, of which at least CHF 50,000 must be paid in at incorporation. A Swiss GmbH requires CHF 20,000, which must be fully paid in at the time of formation. Capital is deposited into a blocked bank account and released after commercial-register entry.
Yes, in practical terms. Swiss law requires that at least one person authorised to represent the company is resident in Switzerland. This applies to both AG and GmbH forms. Banks and cantonal registrars expect this representative to have genuine decision-making authority — purely nominal arrangements are increasingly scrutinised and may impede bank-account opening.
From notarisation to commercial-register entry, the typical timeline is 2–6 weeks. However, opening a corporate bank account and completing KYC onboarding can add an additional 2–8 weeks depending on the complexity of the ownership structure, the jurisdictions involved and the bank’s due-diligence requirements. Preparing all documentation in parallel with formation planning is the most effective way to compress the total timeline.
Government and notary fees vary by canton but generally fall between CHF 1,600 and CHF 5,500 for the deed, filing and SHAB publication. When professional advisory fees for structuring, bank onboarding and fiduciary services are included, total costs typically range from CHF 3,000 to CHF 20,000 or more, excluding the share capital itself and ongoing annual trustee or accounting fees.
Economic substance is assessed against four pillars: personnel presence, operational decision-making in Switzerland, balance-sheet coherence with the stated business purpose, and documented governance (board minutes, management contracts, local bank signatories). Additionally, multinational groups in scope of Pillar Two (consolidated revenue ≥ EUR 750 million) face QDMTT and IIR filing obligations, including the GloBE Information Return, even where no additional tax is ultimately payable.

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Company Formation in Switzerland Swiss AG & Gmbh for Hnwis, Family Offices, Commodities Traders and Ip-rich Corporates

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