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Last updated: 14 July 2026
Every Swiss M&A transaction forces the same threshold question: should the buyer acquire individual assets or buy the target company’s shares? The answer to the asset purchase vs share purchase Switzerland tax question shapes who pays how much tax, which liabilities transfer, and how quickly the deal can close. In 2026, the calculus has shifted further: Switzerland’s adoption of the OECD Pillar Two global minimum tax rules now requires multinational buyers to model whether a post-deal step-up actually reduces their worldwide tax bill, or triggers a top-up charge. This guide delivers the dimension-by-dimension comparison, the quantified tax and cost differences, and the actionable decision framework that buyers, sellers, CFOs and corporate counsel need before instructing Swiss tax advisors.
In an asset purchase (often called an asset deal), the buyer acquires specified assets, contracts and, where agreed, liabilities directly from the selling company or individual. The transaction is documented in an asset purchase agreement (APA) that itemises exactly what transfers: equipment, inventory, intellectual property, customer contracts, real property and selected employees. Anything not listed stays with the seller.
Asset deals are the preferred form of company sale in the Swiss SME sector, particularly where the target is a sole proprietorship or a partnership. They are also common in carve-out transactions where the buyer wants only a division rather than the whole entity.
Who typically prefers an asset purchase:
Key buyer liabilities that may still transfer in an asset purchase:
In a share purchase (or share deal), the buyer acquires all or a controlling block of the target company’s shares. The company itself, with every contract, licence, employee, asset and liability, continues unchanged. Ownership of the legal entity shifts, but the entity’s relationships with the outside world remain intact.
Share deals are the dominant structure for mid-market and large-cap Swiss M&A, and they are generally more tax-efficient for sellers. The share deal advantages and disadvantages break down as follows:
Share deal advantages:
Share deal disadvantages:
The table below maps every critical decision dimension for an asset purchase vs share purchase in Switzerland. Use it as a quick reference before diving into the detailed analysis that follows.
| Dimension | Asset Purchase | Share Purchase |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial mechanics | Buyer acquires specified assets and contracts via APA; must novate each contract individually. | Buyer acquires shares; company continues with all contracts, licences and history intact. |
| Eligibility / use cases | Cherry-pick assets; step-up tax basis; avoid legacy liabilities; carve-outs. | Full business transfer; seller seeks tax-efficient exit; regulated-industry continuity. |
| Tax on seller | Company recognises taxable gain (corporate tax + cantonal); potential double taxation on distribution. | Private seller: capital gain generally tax-free. Corporate seller: participation exemption may apply. |
| Tax on buyer (step-up) | Yes, new tax basis for each acquired asset; future depreciation/amortisation reduces taxable income. | No automatic step-up; existing book values carry over. |
| Securities transfer tax | Generally not applicable to asset transfers. | 0.15% (Swiss securities) / 0.30% (foreign securities) where Swiss securities dealer is involved. |
| VAT consequences | May apply to supplies of goods; business transfers may qualify for VAT exemption, verify with ESTV. | Share transfers generally not subject to VAT. |
| Liability exposure | Buyer can exclude most legacy liabilities; employment and certain tax/social security obligations transfer automatically. | Buyer inherits all historical liabilities; protection only via warranties, indemnities and W&I insurance. |
| Transfer timing / complexity | More complex: asset lists, novations, third-party consents, separate IP and real estate transfers. | Simpler mechanics: single share transfer; fewer novations (regulatory approvals may still apply). |
| Regulatory / contractual continuity | Requires novation and third-party consent for contracts and permits; regulatory re-approval often needed. | Contracts and licences remain; easier for regulated businesses (finance, healthcare, energy). |
| Financing / loan treatment | Lenders may require new facilities; seller liabilities remain unless novated or refinanced. | Existing financing often continues; lenders generally prefer share deals for continuity. |
| Enforceability / disputes | Potential disputes over asset scope; buyer holds direct title to purchased assets. | Historic liabilities stay in target company; buyer may have less direct control over legacy claims. |
Typical buyer quick-read: A private equity fund acquiring a Swiss manufacturing division will usually prefer an asset deal to cherry-pick operating assets, avoid legacy product-liability claims and capture a step-up for depreciable machinery. The trade-off is higher transactional complexity and the automatic transfer of employment obligations.
Typical seller quick-read: A founder selling a Swiss software company will usually prefer a share deal for the tax-free capital gain (as a private individual), the one-step transfer, and the continuity of SaaS customer contracts that would otherwise require individual novation.
The side-by-side table above provides the overview. The sections below quantify the differences across the five dimensions that most frequently determine deal structure in Swiss M&A.
Tax is the single most influential factor in the asset-versus-share decision. The differences are structural and, in most scenarios, substantial.
Seller-side tax treatment. In an asset deal, the selling company recognises a taxable gain equal to the difference between the sale price allocated to each asset and its tax book value. That gain is subject to corporate income tax at the federal level (federal direct tax rate of 8.5% on profit, per DBG, SR 642.11) plus cantonal and communal taxes, resulting in combined effective rates that vary significantly by canton. If the after-tax proceeds are then distributed to the shareholder, a second layer of tax applies, creating the classic double-taxation problem of asset deals.
In a share deal, a private individual seller typically pays no tax on the capital gain, because private capital gains on movable property are exempt from Swiss federal and (most) cantonal income taxes. A corporate seller can claim the participation exemption (Beteiligungsabzug) under Art. 69–70 DBG, which can reduce the effective tax rate on the share sale gain to low single digits, provided the participation thresholds are met.
Buyer-side step-up and loss carryforward. The asset deal’s headline advantage for buyers is the step-up: the purchase price allocated to depreciable or amortisable assets establishes new, higher tax book values. The buyer can then deduct depreciation against future taxable profits over the useful life of each asset. Under Art. 28 DBG, tax losses may be carried forward for seven years, which can further shelter post-acquisition income. In a share deal, the underlying assets keep their historical book values, no step-up is available, and the buyer’s only direct deduction relates to interest on acquisition financing.
Securities transfer tax (stamp duty). Switzerland levies a securities transfer tax (Umsatzabgabe) on the transfer of taxable securities when a Swiss securities dealer is involved in the transaction. The rates, as published by the Swiss Federal Tax Administration (ESTV), are 0.15% of the consideration for Swiss securities and 0.30% for foreign securities. Asset transfers generally do not trigger this tax, but share deals almost always do.
| Tax / Cost Item | Asset Purchase | Share Purchase |
|---|---|---|
| Securities transfer (stamp) tax | Generally not applicable | 0.15% (Swiss securities) / 0.30% (foreign securities) via Swiss securities dealer |
| Corporate tax on sale proceeds | Company-level taxable gain (federal 8.5% + cantonal/communal); double taxation on distribution | Private seller: generally tax-free capital gain. Corporate seller: participation exemption may apply |
| VAT | May apply; business transfers can be VAT-exempt in certain cases, verify with ESTV | Generally no VAT on share transfers |
| Transaction costs | Higher: novations, asset-by-asset registration, notary fees, real estate transfer tax | Lower transactional overhead; securities transfer tax administration |
| Step-up benefit | Yes, new depreciable/amortisable tax basis for acquired assets | No automatic step-up; limited revaluation opportunities |
| Loss carryforward | Seller’s losses generally remain with seller; buyer starts fresh with stepped-up basis | Target company’s losses may be available for seven years, but change-of-ownership anti-abuse rules can restrict use |
Cross-border and Pillar Two interaction. For multinational enterprise (MNE) buyers in scope of the OECD Pillar Two rules, the step-up calculus has changed. A stepped-up asset basis reduces local Swiss tax, but the resulting lower effective tax rate may trigger a top-up tax in the buyer’s home jurisdiction. The detailed Pillar Two analysis appears in the section below.
Beyond tax, transaction costs diverge materially. An asset deal typically incurs higher advisory, notary and registration fees because each asset category requires a separate transfer instrument, real property demands notarisation, IP requires assignment and registry updates, and every material contract needs novation or consent. Cantonal real estate transfer taxes (ranging by canton) add a further cost layer when real property is included.
A share deal reduces most of these friction costs to a single share transfer instrument plus securities transfer tax administration. Buyers and sellers should run a net-present-value after-tax model comparing total deal costs, including the value of the buyer’s step-up amortisation stream, before locking in a structure.
The liability dimension is where the two structures diverge most sharply.
Asset deals take longer to close. Each asset transfer may require separate regulatory approval, third-party consent or notarisation. Where real estate is involved, cantonal land registries impose their own processing timelines. Transitional services agreements (TSAs) are often needed to bridge operational gaps while systems migrate.
Share deals can close faster, sometimes within weeks of signing, because the single share transfer replaces dozens of individual asset transfers. However, regulatory approvals (competition law filings, FINMA approval for financial-sector targets, sector-specific foreign-ownership restrictions) can still extend the timeline.
In regulated industries, finance, healthcare, energy, telecommunications, a share deal almost always preserves existing licences and permits without re-application, because the licensed entity continues unchanged. An asset deal would require the buyer to apply for new licences, a process that can take months and carries approval risk.
The OECD’s Pillar Two framework (the GloBE rules) imposes a global minimum effective tax rate of 15% on MNE groups with consolidated revenues of EUR 750 million or more. Switzerland has implemented a Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-Up Tax (QDMTT), the mechanism that allows Switzerland itself to collect any top-up tax before a foreign parent jurisdiction does so via the Income Inclusion Rule (IIR).
How Pillar Two affects the asset-vs-share choice in 2026:
Practical recommendation: If the buyer is part of an MNE in scope of Pillar Two, run a post-deal GloBE top-up simulation before deciding on an asset step-up. Industry observers expect the share deal to gain further relative attractiveness for cross-border acquisitions into low-effective-tax Swiss cantons (Zug, Schwyz, Nidwalden) where step-up benefits were historically largest but are now most exposed to top-up charges.
The general rule of thumb in Swiss M&A: buyers prefer asset deals; sellers prefer share deals. But the right structure depends on which priorities dominate. Use the framework below to match your situation to the optimal structure.
| If your priority is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Maximum protection from legacy liabilities (and you can accept novation complexity) | Asset purchase |
| Fastest, most tax-efficient exit for the seller with continuity of contracts and permits | Share purchase |
| Obtaining a tax step-up for depreciable/amortisable assets to reduce future taxable profit | Asset purchase (model net benefit vs Pillar Two top-up) |
| Minimising transactional disruption (licences, customer contracts, employment) | Share purchase |
| Reducing cash tax at seller level (private individual owner) | Share purchase |
| Buyer is an MNE in scope of Pillar Two and step-up benefits may be reduced by top-up tax | Model both; Pillar Two may favour share deal in cross-border scenarios |
| Target has significant tax losses you want to utilise | Share purchase (verify anti-abuse restrictions on loss use post-change-of-control) |
| Acquiring only a division or business line rather than the whole entity | Asset purchase |
Six-question quick test, does an asset deal suit your transaction?
If you answered yes to four or more of these questions, an asset deal is the likely better structure. Otherwise, start your analysis from the share deal and test whether the liabilities and tax profile justify the added complexity of an asset structure.
The asset-vs-share structuring decision requires specialist input well before signing. Engage Swiss tax counsel in the following situations:
Finding qualified Swiss M&A tax counsel is straightforward through the Global Law Experts Switzerland directory.
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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