Our Expert in Switzerland
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Yes, Swiss bank accounts can be frozen, and the legal machinery to do so is well established. The route, evidentiary burden and scope of any freeze depend on whether the order is a civil attachment (séquestre) under the Federal Debt Enforcement and Bankruptcy Act (DEBA), a criminal or money-laundering hold ordered by prosecutors or the Money Laundering Reporting Office (MROS), or an administrative sanctions freeze imposed by the Federal Council. Switzerland’s reputation for bank secrecy remains strong, yet Article 47 of the Banking Act contains carve-outs that allow courts, prosecutors and regulators to override confidentiality when specific statutory conditions are met.
This guide sets out the mechanics, evidence thresholds and practical steps counsel and creditors need to evaluate before pursuing, or defending against, a freeze of Swiss-held assets.
Swiss law provides three principal pathways to freeze a bank account. A creditor may obtain a civil attachment order (séquestre) under DEBA Articles 271–281. Swiss prosecutors or MROS may impose a criminal or anti-money-laundering hold. The Federal Council may order a sanctions-based freeze under its foreign-policy powers, as it did on 5 January 2026 in relation to Venezuelan state assets. Each mechanism operates under distinct rules, timelines and evidence requirements, though all ultimately override bank secrecy once a valid order is in force.
If you are a creditor seeking to freeze a Swiss bank account, the core steps are:
Not every account freeze follows the same legal pathway. Understanding the distinction is critical because it determines who may apply, what evidence is needed and how long the freeze can last.
The DEBA attachment, known as séquestre in French-speaking cantons, is the primary tool available to private creditors. Governed by Articles 271 to 281 of the DEBA, it allows a creditor to ask a Swiss enforcement judge to freeze bank accounts, securities and other assets belonging to the debtor. The order is provisional, it preserves assets while the creditor pursues or validates a substantive claim. Both Swiss and non-Swiss creditors may apply, provided they can establish the jurisdictional nexus required under the statute.
Swiss prosecutors may freeze accounts as part of a criminal investigation under the Swiss Code of Criminal Procedure (CrimPC). Separately, where a bank identifies a suspicious transaction, it must file a report with MROS under the Anti-Money Laundering Act. MROS can then order a temporary hold, typically for five working days, while it assesses whether to refer the matter to prosecutors. If a formal criminal investigation follows, the freeze may be extended indefinitely by prosecutorial order. Reforms to the Swiss Code of Criminal Procedure that took effect on 1 January 2024 broadened the circumstances under which banking information may be disclosed to prosecutors and foreign authorities.
The Federal Council can order asset freezes by decree under its foreign-policy and sanctions powers. These freezes are administrative in nature, apply immediately and bind all Swiss financial institutions without need for a court order. On 5 January 2026, for example, the Federal Council ordered a freeze of assets linked to the Maduro regime in Venezuela, a measure that took effect across the Swiss banking system without individual court proceedings.
| Order Type | Available To / Authority | Key Evidence & Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| DEBA attachment (séquestre) | Creditors (domestic and foreign) via cantonal enforcement judge | Creditor must show probable claim and risk of dissipation; bank freezes specified funds pending enforcement |
| Criminal / MROS hold | Swiss prosecutors, MROS, police | Triggered by criminal investigation or suspicious-activity report; bank blocks assets pending order; secrecy exceptions apply |
| Sanctions / Federal Council freeze | Federal Council (sanctions regime), FINMA, banks under directive | Immediate freeze based on sanctions listing; broad administrative regime; no individual court order required |
The DEBA attachment order is the most commonly used instrument for creditors who wish to freeze a Swiss bank account in a civil context. Its statutory framework is set out in Articles 271–281 of the DEBA.
The core provisions governing attachment are concentrated in a compact set of articles within the DEBA:
Any creditor, Swiss or foreign, holding a monetary claim against a debtor with assets in Switzerland may apply for a DEBA attachment. Foreign creditors do not need a prior Swiss judgment; the attachment itself is a provisional measure that can be sought before or in parallel with substantive proceedings. Representation by a Swiss-qualified attorney is not formally required in all cantons for the application itself, but as a practical matter, engaging local counsel is essential to navigate cantonal procedural requirements and to ensure effective service on the bank.
The hallmark of the séquestre in Switzerland is its ex parte character. Under Article 274 DEBA, the enforcement judge may grant the attachment order without notifying the debtor in advance. This is the norm rather than the exception, the entire purpose of the mechanism is to prevent the debtor from moving assets before the order takes effect. The creditor files a written application containing:
Industry observers expect judges in most cantons to decide ex parte applications within hours to a small number of working days, depending on urgency and the completeness of the submission.
An attachment order in Switzerland can cover bank account balances, securities held in custody, safe-deposit box contents and any other identifiable assets held by the bank in the debtor’s name. The creditor need not specify the exact account number if the debtor’s identity and the banking institution are sufficiently identified, the bank is then obliged to search its records and freeze any assets matching the order. Where the creditor can supply an IBAN or specific account reference, the process is faster and less likely to be disputed.
The evidence bar for a DEBA attachment is deliberately lower than the standard for a final judgment. Courts apply a prima facie standard: the creditor must render the claim and the attachment ground “probable” (vraisemblable), not proven to a certainty.
Under Article 272 DEBA, the applicant must satisfy the judge on two fronts. First, the underlying monetary claim must be rendered probable, meaning the documentary record, taken at face value, supports the existence and quantum of the debt. Second, one of the statutory grounds for attachment under Article 271 must be established. The most frequently invoked ground for foreign creditors is the absence of a Swiss domicile for the debtor, which is treated as a freestanding ground that does not require separate proof of dissipation risk. Where the debtor does have a Swiss domicile, the creditor must show an objective, concrete risk that assets will be removed, hidden or dissipated.
Swiss courts expect creditors to substantiate their ex parte applications with contemporaneous documentation. The following evidence types are standard in practice:
| Evidence Type | Purpose | Strength for Attachment |
|---|---|---|
| Underlying contract or loan agreement | Establishes the legal basis and quantum of the claim | High, primary proof of the obligation |
| Demand letters and correspondence | Demonstrates default and the creditor’s attempts to collect | Medium, supports urgency and good faith |
| Banking intelligence (account identifiers, bank name) | Identifies assets to be frozen and the institution to be served | High, necessary for execution of the order |
| Transaction records or payment trail | Links the debtor to the Swiss-held assets | High, strengthens nexus between claim and frozen funds |
| Sworn factual affidavit from the creditor | Summarises the factual basis and urgency under oath | Medium, supplements documentary record |
| Foreign judgment or arbitral award (if available) | Elevates the probable-claim showing; may simplify validation | Very high, close to conclusive on the claim element |
The enforcement judge exercises a broad discretion when assessing an ex parte application. The standard is one of vraisemblance, plausibility, which sits well below the civil balance-of-probabilities standard applied at trial. Judges will generally accept credible documentary evidence without requiring live witness testimony. However, the court must also weigh proportionality: an attachment freezing the entirety of a debtor’s Swiss wealth where the claim is modest may be narrowed in scope.
Switzerland’s banking secrecy regime, anchored in Article 47 of the Banking Act, criminalises the unauthorised disclosure of client information by bank employees, agents and auditors. Yet this protection is far from absolute, and it cannot shield assets from a lawful freezing order.
Article 47 imposes criminal penalties, including fines and imprisonment, on anyone who discloses confidential banking information without legal authority. The provision applies to current and former bank employees, auditors and their auxiliaries. For creditors, the practical implication is that banks will not voluntarily reveal account details in response to informal requests or foreign subpoenas that lack a Swiss legal basis.
Banking secrecy yields to a range of statutory exceptions:
A DEBA attachment order is a domestic court order issued by a Swiss enforcement judge. Once served on the bank, it overrides the bank’s confidentiality obligations vis-à-vis the debtor. The bank must freeze the identified assets and confirm to the enforcement office that it has done so. The bank is not required to disclose the account balance or transaction history directly to the creditor, but it must report to the enforcement office whether attachable assets exist. The Swiss Bankers Association’s Agreement on Due Diligence (CDB 2020) reinforces banks’ obligation to cooperate with lawful domestic orders, and the bank’s internal compliance function will treat a valid séquestre as a binding instruction.
Foreign letters or requests without a Swiss legal basis, by contrast, do not compel disclosure and banks routinely refuse them.
Creditors holding freezing orders from courts outside Switzerland face a significant practical question: will a worldwide freezing order or a foreign attachment order be recognised and enforced by Swiss institutions?
Swiss law does not automatically recognise or enforce foreign provisional measures. A worldwide freezing order issued by an English court, for example, has no direct legal effect in Switzerland. Swiss banks are not obliged to comply with foreign court orders that have not been recognised through a Swiss judicial process. Recognition is possible under the Lugano Convention (for EU/EFTA judgments) or bilateral treaties, but provisional and protective measures face additional hurdles, including Swiss public-policy review and the requirement that the foreign order meet Swiss procedural standards.
The practical difference is critical. A worldwide freezing order binds the party (in personam), but it does not create a right in rem over Swiss-held assets. A Swiss DEBA attachment, by contrast, operates in rem: once the order is served on the bank, the assets are frozen as a matter of Swiss law. For this reason, creditors who obtain a foreign freezing order are routinely advised to seek a parallel DEBA attachment in Switzerland to secure actual preservation of the assets. Relying on the worldwide order alone carries a real risk that the Swiss bank will not comply.
The recommended pathway for a foreign claimant seeking to freeze a Swiss bank account is:
| Stage | Typical Court / Legal Action | Bank Reaction |
|---|---|---|
| Application filed | Judge reviews ex parte; decision within hours to a few working days | None, bank not yet notified |
| Order granted and served | Enforcement office serves order on bank | Bank freezes identified assets; reports to enforcement office |
| Debtor notified | Debtor may file opposition under Article 278 DEBA | Bank maintains freeze pending resolution |
| Validation deadline | Creditor must commence substantive proceedings within the statutory period under Article 279 DEBA | If creditor fails to validate, freeze lapses and bank releases assets |
The enforcement judge may require the creditor to post security (sûretés) as a condition of the attachment, particularly where the claim is large or the debtor contests the order. Security is intended to compensate the debtor for losses if the attachment is later found to have been unjustified. Court fees and counsel costs vary by canton but are generally proportionate to the amount at stake. Creditors should budget for both the attachment phase and the substantive validation proceedings.
Banks served with a DEBA attachment will freeze the specified assets and report compliance to the enforcement office. In some cases, a bank’s internal compliance function may independently impose a hold pending MROS guidance, adding a separate layer of restriction. Debtors may challenge the attachment by filing opposition under Article 278 DEBA, arguing that the claim is unfounded, the attachment ground is not satisfied, or the order is disproportionate. If the opposition succeeds, the court will order the release of frozen assets. Interlocutory appeals to the cantonal supervisory authority are also available.
For account holders whose assets have been frozen, the first step is to engage Swiss counsel promptly to assess the legal basis of the freeze and identify the appropriate procedural remedy.
Swiss bank accounts can be frozen through well-established legal mechanisms, most commonly the DEBA attachment (séquestre) for creditors, but also through criminal, anti-money-laundering and sanctions channels. The evidence threshold for a civil attachment is deliberately manageable, bank secrecy cannot block a valid court order, and foreign creditors have full access to the system. Whether you are a creditor seeking to preserve assets or an account holder responding to a freeze, the critical step is to engage experienced Swiss counsel without delay. For guidance from a qualified practitioner, consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Gregory Lachat at Angelozzi Lachat Attorneys-at-law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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