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Understanding how to notarize company documents in Switzerland is a prerequisite for every founder, corporate secretary, or in-house legal team planning an incorporation or structural change in the country. Swiss federal law mandates that the formation of an AG (Aktiengesellschaft) or GmbH (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung) must be executed before a public notary through a formal public deed, there is no valid shortcut around this requirement. In 2026, the process carries additional weight: enhanced beneficial-ownership (BO) and know-your-customer (KYC) verification obligations now require notaries to conduct more rigorous identity and ownership checks before executing any corporate deed.
At the same time, several cantons have begun piloting or expanding e-notarisation options, creating a patchwork of remote possibilities that vary significantly depending on where the company’s registered office will sit. This guide walks through every stage, from document preparation and the notary appointment itself through to commercial register filing, costs, and the practical workarounds available when founders cannot be physically present in Switzerland.
Before diving into detail, the following numbered sequence captures the end-to-end process for a standard incorporation. Whether you are forming an AG or a GmbH, these core steps apply.
| Criterion | AG (Aktiengesellschaft) | GmbH (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung) |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum share capital | CHF 100,000 (at least CHF 50,000 paid in) | CHF 20,000 (fully paid in) |
| Public deed required? | Yes, mandatory | Yes, mandatory |
| Shareholder list published? | No (bearer or registered shares) | Yes, GmbH shareholders are recorded in the commercial register |
| Phase | Estimated Duration | Key Variable |
|---|---|---|
| Document preparation | 1–2 weeks | Complexity of articles; foreign-founder document legalisation |
| Notary appointment & public deed | 1–3 business days | Notary availability; canton appointment lead times |
| Commercial register entry | 3–14 business days | Canton workload; e-filing vs manual submission |
| Total (straightforward case) | 2–4 weeks | All documents ready; local founders with Swiss IDs |
Switzerland’s notarial system is governed at the cantonal level, which means that who can notarize a document in Switzerland depends entirely on the canton in question. There is no single federal notary office. Broadly, Swiss cantons follow one of two models, or a hybrid of both.
For corporate formations specifically, only a notary licensed and practising in the canton where the company’s registered office will be located may execute the public deed of incorporation. A Zurich notary cannot validly notarise a GmbH formation whose seat is in Geneva, and vice versa.
It is important to distinguish between three related but legally distinct functions:
Knowing what do you need to open a company in Switzerland, and having those documents prepared before the notary appointment, is the single most effective way to avoid delays. The required documentation varies by entity type, but the core elements for an incorporation are consistent.
| Entity Type | Core Notarised Documents | Additional Notes (Foreign Founders / Capital) |
|---|---|---|
| AG (Aktiengesellschaft) | Public deed of incorporation; articles of association; declaration of paid-in capital; founders’ resolution appointing board and auditors | Bank confirmation of capital deposit required; BO declarations mandatory; foreign IDs may need apostille or legalisation |
| GmbH (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung) | Public deed of formation; articles of association; shareholder list with capital contributions | Lower capital threshold (CHF 20,000, fully paid); notary still mandatory; BO declarations apply |
| Branch office / representative office of foreign company | Notarised power of attorney; certified signatures of authorised representatives; certified articles or charter of the parent company | Parent-company documents typically require legalisation or apostille; certified translations into an official Swiss language may be needed |
Foreign founders face additional requirements that can extend preparation time by one to three weeks:
The public deed of incorporation is the centrepiece of the formation process in Switzerland. Without it, neither an AG nor a GmbH can come into legal existence. Here is how the notary appointment itself typically unfolds.
Once the public deed is executed, the notary prepares the application package for the commercial register. In most cantons, it is the notary, not the founders, who submits the filing. The package typically includes the authenticated public deed, the articles of association, the board and auditor appointments, the BO declaration, and the capital deposit confirmation (where applicable).
Every Swiss company must be entered in the commercial register of the canton in which its registered office is located. The Zefix central index, maintained by the Federal Office of Justice, allows public searching of all registered entities across all cantons, but the actual registration and examination process is handled at the cantonal level.
Once the notary submits the filing, the cantonal register office examines the application for formal and substantive compliance. This includes verifying that the articles of association conform to the Swiss Code of Obligations, that all mandatory appointments have been made, and that BO declarations have been properly completed. If the register office identifies deficiencies, it will issue a query (Beanstandung) and the clock pauses until the deficiency is cured.
| Canton | Typical Filing Turnaround | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Zurich | 3–7 business days | E-filing available; generally the fastest major canton |
| Geneva | 5–10 business days | French-language documentation required; some manual processing |
| Bern | 5–14 business days | Can be slower for complex structures; bilingual canton (German/French) |
| Vaud | 5–10 business days | Latin-model notaries; French-language filings |
| St. Gallen | 4–8 business days | Hybrid notarial model; digital submission options expanding |
| Zug | 3–7 business days | High volume of corporate registrations; efficient processing infrastructure |
Once accepted, the entry is published in the Swiss Official Gazette of Commerce (SOGC). From the date of publication, the company holds full legal personality and can operate, open bank accounts, and enter into contracts in its own name.
Remote notarization in Switzerland remains an evolving and canton-dependent area. Unlike some jurisdictions that have embraced fully virtual notarisation, Swiss law still generally requires the physical presence of the parties before the notary for the execution of a public deed. However, 2026 has brought meaningful developments in several cantons.
Industry observers expect this canton-by-canton expansion to accelerate, though a uniform federal framework for e-notarisation is not yet in place. The current landscape can be summarised as follows:
| Canton | Remote / E-Notarisation Available? | Typical Conditions and Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Zurich | Limited, pilot programmes | Qualified electronic signatures accepted for certain certifications; full public deed still requires in-person attendance |
| Geneva | Very limited | No general e-notarisation for incorporations; power of attorney workaround accepted |
| St. Gallen | Expanding pilot | Some notaries accept video identification for preliminary checks; public deed execution remains in person |
| Zug | Limited, pragmatic approach | High receptivity to power-of-attorney arrangements; some digital submission tools for supporting documents |
| Bern | Minimal | Traditional in-person model predominates; limited digital options for ancillary certifications |
The most widely accepted workaround for founders who cannot travel to Switzerland is to grant a power of attorney to a Swiss-based representative, typically a lawyer or a corporate services provider. The power of attorney must meet specific requirements:
This approach is broadly accepted across all cantons and is the practical standard for how to notarize company documents in Switzerland when foreign founders are involved.
Notary fees in Switzerland are regulated at the cantonal level, and there is no single national fee schedule. Some cantons (particularly Latin-model cantons like Geneva) apply percentage-based tariffs linked to the transaction value. Others (such as Zurich) use fixed or hourly rates set by the cantonal government. As a general guide, the following scenarios illustrate typical cost ranges.
| Scenario | Estimated Notary Fee | Additional Costs to Budget |
|---|---|---|
| GmbH formation, local Swiss founder, CHF 20,000 capital | CHF 800 – CHF 1,500 | Commercial register fee (CHF 600–800); certified copies (CHF 50–150) |
| AG formation, foreign founders, CHF 100,000 capital | CHF 1,500 – CHF 3,500 | Register fee (CHF 600–800); apostille/legalisation (CHF 100–300 per document); certified translations (CHF 200–500) |
| Share capital increase, existing AG | CHF 1,000 – CHF 2,500 | Register amendment fee (CHF 300–600); new BO declaration if ownership changes |
These figures are indicative and subject to cantonal variation. Founders should request a binding fee estimate (Kostenvoranschlag) from the notary before the appointment. Additional expenses, such as bank charges for the capital deposit account, legal advisory fees, and courier costs for apostilled documents, should also be factored into the total budget.
Even experienced corporate teams encounter avoidable errors during Swiss notarisation. The following checklist highlights the most common pitfalls and the steps needed to remedy them before they cause delays or, in the worst case, an invalid filing.
The following milestone plan assumes a standard GmbH or AG formation with at least one foreign founder. Adjust timescales if all founders are Swiss-based and documents are straightforward.
| Week | Milestone | Key Actions |
|---|---|---|
| 0–1 | Preparation & document gathering | Engage notary and legal advisor; draft articles of association; begin BO declarations; order apostilles for foreign documents |
| 1–2 | BO/KYC pre-checks & notary scheduling | Submit ID copies and BO declarations to notary for pre-verification; confirm capital deposit with bank; schedule notary appointment |
| 2–3 | Notary appointment & public deed execution | Attend in person or via authorised representative; sign public deed; notary authenticates and prepares filing package |
| 3–4 | Commercial register filing | Notary submits application to cantonal register; monitor for deficiency queries |
| 4–5 | Register examination & publication | Register office reviews and publishes entry in SOGC; company receives legal personality |
| 5–6 | Post-registration steps | Obtain commercial register extract; set up bank accounts; register for VAT/social insurance if applicable; file BO register notification |
Forming a company in Switzerland or executing a corporate change requires careful coordination between document preparation, BO/KYC compliance, notarial execution, and commercial register filing. Each canton imposes its own notarial rules, fee structures, and processing timelines, and the 2026 landscape adds new compliance layers that make it essential to verify requirements early. For founders and corporate teams unfamiliar with cantonal differences, engaging a qualified Swiss notary at the planning stage is the most reliable way to avoid costly delays and ensure the public deed is executed correctly the first time. Explore the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with experienced notary-services professionals across Switzerland.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Armin Gilg at Fortis Law AG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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