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Understanding how to change foundation purpose in Switzerland is one of the most consequential governance questions a founder or board can face. Swiss foundation law, codified in Articles 80–89 of the Swiss Civil Code (ZGB), treats the stated purpose as the legal cornerstone of every foundation, and for decades, that purpose was considered virtually immutable. The 2006 revision of the ZGB introduced Article 86a, granting founders who expressly reserved the right a formal mechanism to request an amendment, subject to a mandatory waiting period and supervisory oversight. As the 2024–2026 foundation-law refresh continues to reshape supervisory-authority practice across cantons, practitioners now have more options, and more complexity, than ever when deciding between a purpose amendment, a foundation merger, or dissolution.
Yes, it is possible to change a Swiss foundation’s purpose, but the available route depends on whether the founder reserved that right and on the circumstances driving the change. Here are the key paths at a glance:
A Swiss foundation is established by the dedication of assets to a specific purpose (Art. 80 ZGB). Unlike an association, a foundation has no members, it is an independent legal entity governed by its charter (Stiftungsurkunde), regulations and a board (Stiftungsrat). The founder sets the purpose, endows the assets, and then, in principle, steps back: the foundation exists to serve its stated mission in perpetuity.
This structural rigidity is what distinguishes foundations from associations in Switzerland. An association’s members may vote to change its objects by simple majority; a foundation’s purpose, by contrast, can only be altered through the specific statutory mechanisms in Art. 86 and Art. 86a ZGB. The Swiss Foundation Code, published by SwissFoundations, reinforces this principle while also acknowledging that good governance sometimes demands adaptation.
| Feature | Foundation (Stiftung) | Association (Verein) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal basis | Art. 80–89 ZGB | Art. 60–79 ZGB |
| Members | None, governed by board | Yes, member-driven governance |
| Purpose change | Only via Art. 86 / 86a ZGB (strict conditions) | Members’ resolution (majority vote) |
| Supervision | Federal or cantonal supervisory authority | Self-governance; limited supervision |
| Dissolution | Court or supervisory authority (Art. 88–89 ZGB) | Members’ resolution or by law |
Article 86 ZGB provides that the competent federal or cantonal authority may, upon application or on its own initiative, amend the purpose of a foundation if the original purpose has acquired a quite different significance or effect, such that the foundation has plainly become estranged from the founder’s intention. The threshold is high: the change in circumstances must be material and objectively demonstrable.
Article 86a ZGB, introduced with the 2006 revision and refined in subsequent practice, allows the founder to reserve the right to amend the purpose. This reservation must be stated expressly in the charter. Where such a reservation exists, the founder may submit an application to the supervisory authority to change the purpose, but not earlier than 10 years after the foundation was established, or 10 years after the last such change was approved. The new purpose must not be unlawful, immoral or impossible.
Article 86a CC represents the most direct route for a change of purpose in a Swiss foundation, but it is available only where two cumulative conditions are met. First, the founder must have expressly reserved the right to amend the purpose in the foundation’s charter at the time of establishment. A reservation added after the fact is not sufficient. Second, the statutory waiting period of 10 years must have elapsed, counted from the date of establishment or from the date the last founder-initiated change took effect.
The scope of permissible changes under Art. 86a is broad in principle: the founder may request a fundamentally new purpose, a narrowing or broadening of the existing purpose, or even a reorientation of the foundation’s charitable or private objectives. The only absolute limits are those imposed by Art. 86a para. 2 ZGB: the new purpose must not be unlawful, immoral or impossible. In practice, supervisory authorities also assess whether the proposed purpose is sufficiently defined and whether the foundation’s assets remain adequate to pursue it.
The ten-year waiting period is jurisdictionally enforced with precision. Practitioners should note the following:
The founder submits a written application to the competent supervisory authority (federal for foundations operating across cantons; cantonal for those with a local scope). The application should be accompanied by:
Industry observers expect the typical processing time for a straightforward founder-filed change to be approximately two to four months, though complex cases or supervisory backlogs can extend this to six months. Costs include notary fees for charter amendments, legal advisory fees, and any supervisory filing charges, which vary by canton.
Where no founder reservation exists under Art. 86a, or where the founder has died, or the ten-year period has not elapsed, the only available route for a change of purpose Swiss foundation boards can pursue is the supervisory-authority mechanism under Article 86 ZGB. This route is narrower and subject to a more demanding legal standard.
Under Art. 86, the competent authority (the federal or cantonal supervisory authority, or, for family and ecclesiastical foundations, the competent court) may amend the foundation’s purpose if the original purpose has acquired a quite different significance or effect, such that the foundation has manifestly become estranged from the founder’s intention. The key legal threshold is “compelling reasons”, not mere inconvenience, strategic preference, or changed market conditions, but an objective, demonstrable shift that renders the original purpose fundamentally misaligned with the founder’s actual intent.
Supervisory-authority changes typically arise where:
The supervisory authority must ensure that the new purpose remains as close as possible to the founder’s original intention, the principle of proximity (Grundsatz der Zwecknähe). Early indications suggest that the 2024–2026 reforms have encouraged cantonal authorities to engage more proactively with foundation boards on potential purpose amendments, rather than waiting for formal applications, reflecting a broader trend toward dialogue-driven supervision noted in recent NKF practice updates.
| Criterion | Art. 86a (Founder route) | Art. 86 (Supervisory route) |
|---|---|---|
| Who initiates | Founder (personally) | Supervisory authority or board application |
| Precondition | Express reservation in charter + 10-year wait | Compelling reasons (objective shift from founder’s intent) |
| Scope of new purpose | Broad (not unlawful, immoral or impossible) | Must stay as close as possible to original intent |
| Transferable | No, personal to founder; lapses on death | N/A, authority-driven |
| Typical timeline | 2–4 months (simple); up to 6 months | 3–6 months or longer (evidence-intensive) |
Not every situation calls for a purpose amendment. Where the original purpose is exhausted, the assets are insufficient, or the governance structure is no longer viable, foundation boards must weigh whether to restructure (typically through a merger or asset reassignment to another foundation) or to dissolve the entity entirely. The decision has significant legal, tax and reputational consequences.
| Option | Legal Trigger / Approvals | Practical Timeline & Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Restructure / Merger | Agreement of supreme organs of both foundations; supervisory consent may be required; assets must be directed to a related purpose | 3–6 months typical; preserves continuity and public profile; may need beneficiary consents; tax-neutral if correctly structured |
| Purpose amendment (Art. 86a / 86) | Founder reserved right (Art. 86a) or supervisory-authority change (Art. 86), strict standards as detailed above | 2–6 months (depends on evidence and supervisory backlog); low asset disruption if approved |
| Dissolution | Purpose unattainable, unlawful, or already achieved (Art. 88 ZGB); court or supervisory-authority order | 3–9 months; wind-up costs; distribution constraints (assets to entities with a similar purpose unless charter specifies otherwise); reputational and tax consequences |
A foundation merger in Switzerland is often preferable to dissolution in the following scenarios:
The following workflow applies to both founder-initiated (Art. 86a) and supervisory-authority (Art. 86) purpose amendments, with notes where the steps differ.
Estimated costs: Notary fees range from several hundred to a few thousand Swiss francs depending on the canton and the complexity of the charter amendments. Legal advisory fees are highly variable. Supervisory filing charges are generally modest (often under CHF 500), though complex cases involving detailed evidence review may attract higher administrative costs.
Foundation board duties in Switzerland are anchored in the ZGB and elaborated in the Swiss Foundation Code. When a purpose change is proposed, whether by the founder or the board, the governing body must act with heightened diligence.
The following redacted templates illustrate the essential language. All templates should be adapted by qualified Swiss counsel before submission.
“I, [Founder Name], as founder of [Foundation Name] (CHE-xxx.xxx.xxx), having expressly reserved the right to amend the foundation’s purpose in Article [X] of the charter dated [Date], and more than 10 years having elapsed since [establishment / the last such amendment], hereby declare that I wish to amend the purpose of the foundation from [current purpose] to [proposed new purpose]. I confirm that the proposed purpose is not unlawful, immoral or impossible. I request that the competent supervisory authority approve this amendment. Signed: [Founder Name], [Date].”
“RESOLVED that the Board of [Foundation Name] acknowledges the application of the founder under Article 86a ZGB to amend the foundation’s purpose from [current purpose] to [proposed new purpose]. The Board notes that the statutory ten-year period has elapsed. The Board [supports / takes note of] the proposed amendment and authorises [Name, Title] to file the application with the [Federal / Cantonal] Supervisory Authority together with the required documents.”
“Dear [Supervisory Authority], The Board of [Foundation Name] hereby applies under Article 86 ZGB for an amendment of the foundation’s purpose. The original purpose, [current purpose], has acquired a fundamentally different significance due to [describe compelling reasons]. The Board proposes that the purpose be amended to [proposed new purpose], which remains as close as possible to the founder’s original intention. Enclosed: board resolution, current and proposed charter, financial statements, evidence of changed circumstances. We remain at your disposal for any questions or a preliminary meeting.”
Changing a Swiss foundation’s purpose is neither straightforward nor impossible. The right route depends on whether the founder reserved the amendment right (Art. 86a ZGB), whether compelling external circumstances justify supervisory intervention (Art. 86 ZGB), or whether foundation restructuring in Switzerland, through merger or asset reassignment, offers a more practical outcome than either amendment or dissolution. In every case, early engagement with the supervisory authority, rigorous compliance with statutory processes, and experienced legal counsel are essential. For practitioners seeking a comprehensive PDF guide on how to change foundation purpose in Switzerland, the checklist, templates and comparison tables in this article provide a practical starting point.
For case-specific guidance, explore the Switzerland practice area on Global Law Experts or contact a listed foundation-law adviser directly.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marie Flegbo-Berney at BONNARD LAWSON, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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