[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
notarial deed vs private contract Switzerland

Our Expert in Switzerland

Notarial Deed vs Private Contract in Switzerland, When Do You Need a Notary?

By Global Law Experts
– posted 7 hours ago

Every property buyer, company founder and lender in Switzerland eventually faces the same practical question: notarial deed vs private contract Switzerland, which form does the transaction actually require, and what happens if you choose the wrong one? The answer determines whether a right can be registered, how a court will weigh the evidence, what fees you will pay and how quickly the deal closes. This guide compares the two instruments dimension by dimension, names the situations where Swiss law mandates an authentic deed, and delivers a concrete decision checklist so you know exactly when to use a notary in Switzerland.

The Notarial (Authentic) Deed, What It Is, When It Applies and Who It Suits

A notarial deed, also called an öffentliche Urkunde or acte authentique, is a public instrument prepared and certified by an officially authorised notary. The notary verifies the identities and legal capacity of the parties, reads or explains the operative clauses, witnesses the signing and then certifies the document with an official seal. Once certified, the deed becomes a public record and can be lodged directly with the land register or commercial register.

When Swiss law requires or strongly favours the authentic deed

  • Transfer of real property. Under Art. 216 of the Swiss Code of Obligations (CO), a contract for the sale of immovable property must be executed in the form of a public deed to be valid. A private contract alone is legally void for this purpose.
  • Land-registry entries. Ownership transfers, easements, usufructs, mortgages and pre-emptive right annotations all require an authentic act for entry in the Grundbuch (land register).
  • Company incorporation and certain corporate acts. Founding a limited company (AG/SA) or a limited-liability company (GmbH/Sàrl) requires notarisation of the articles of association and the incorporation deed. Share-capital increases in certain forms likewise need a notarial act.
  • Mortgage and charge registration. A mortgage note (Schuldbrief) or mortgage lien (Grundpfandverschreibung) must be created by authentic deed for land-registry inscription.
  • Powers of attorney for registry acts. Where a party is represented at a land-register or commercial-register signing, the authority frequently must be notarised.

Formalities and procedural flow

The standard sequence runs: (1) the notary prepares or reviews the draft instrument; (2) the parties attend a signing appointment, presenting valid identification; (3) the notary reads or explains the document and the parties sign in the notary’s presence; (4) the notary certifies the deed with an official attestation; (5) the notary submits the instrument to the relevant register for entry. In Switzerland, the organisation of the notariat varies by canton, some cantons operate a Beamtennotariat (state-employed notaries), while others use a freiberufliches Notariat (independent notaries in private practice). The national umbrella body, swisNot, maintains a register of authorised practitioners.

The Private Contract, What It Is, When It Applies and Who It Suits

A private contract (Privatschriftlichkeit / acte sous seing privé) is a written agreement concluded and signed by the parties without the involvement of a notary. Under the Swiss Code of Obligations, the general rule is freedom of form: a contract is binding as soon as the parties reach mutual assent, and writing, let alone notarisation, is only required where a specific statute imposes it.

Evidence value of a private writing

A private contract carries ordinary probative weight. Its contents and the authenticity of the signatures can be challenged in litigation. Unlike an authentic deed, it does not benefit from the statutory presumption of correctness that attaches to public instruments. Where disputes arise, the party relying on the document bears the burden of proving its genuineness and the authority of the signatory.

Signature practices

Parties to a private contract are free to choose wet-ink signatures, qualified electronic signatures (which Swiss law treats as equivalent to handwritten signatures under certain conditions) or, for lower-risk agreements, simple electronic signatures. Witnessing is not legally required but is sometimes used to strengthen evidentiary value. Certified translations may be needed if the document must be used abroad.

Typical use cases for a private contract

  • Sale or purchase of movable assets, vehicles, equipment, inventory.
  • Service agreements, NDAs and consulting contracts.
  • Commercial lease agreements (provided no long-term registration in the land register is required).
  • Preliminary reservation agreements for property, though these carry significant enforceability risks; industry observers note that buyers who rely solely on a private reservation often discover that the agreement is either void or practically unenforceable because the underlying sale requires a notarial deed.
  • Share-purchase agreements (SPAs) in M&A, the contractual obligations between buyer and seller are typically documented in a private contract, but closing formalities (transfer of registered shares, amendment of articles) may trigger company-incorporation notarisation requirements at the commercial register.

The core limitation is clear: a private contract cannot by itself create, transfer or extinguish a right that must be entered in the land register or that Swiss statute requires to be in authentic form.

Notarial Deed vs Private Contract, Side-by-Side Comparison

The table below maps the ten dimensions that matter most when choosing between a notarial deed vs private contract in Switzerland. Use it as a quick reference before reading the detailed analysis that follows.

Dimension Notarial (authentic) deed Private contract
Legal requirement Mandatory for real-property transfers (Art. 216 CO), land-registry entries, mortgage creation and most company incorporations Legally valid for most contractual obligations; insufficient for rights requiring registration
Evidentiary weight Statutory presumption of correctness; treated as conclusive public record Ordinary probative value; signature and authority may be contested
Registration / land-register effect Required for entry in the Grundbuch (ownership, mortgages, easements, reservations) Cannot produce a land-register change on its own
Cost Notary fees approx. 0.1 %–0.5 % of purchase price (varies by canton) plus registry fees No notary fee; only drafting/legal fees if lawyers are used
Timing Slower, notary scheduling, formalities, canton registry processing Faster to negotiate and execute; may delay later registration
Liability / professional duty Notary verifies identity, capacity and compliance; professional liability applies No neutral certifier; parties rely on own counsel; higher counterparty risk
Enforceability Immediately accepted by registries and banks; some deeds required for the right to take effect Enforceable between parties; third parties may refuse without notarisation
Lender / third-party acceptance Preferred or required by lenders for mortgage/charge security May be insufficient for lender or registry requirements
Cross-border recognition Public-deed format simplifies apostille, legalisation and foreign recognition May need additional legalisation; more friction for foreign authorities
Amendment / reversibility Registry changes generally require a new authentic deed Easier to amend by mutual written agreement

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis

Enforceability and evidence

The enforceability of a deed vs a contract in Switzerland turns on a clear statutory distinction. An authentic deed benefits from a presumption of correctness: courts treat its contents and the facts attested by the notary, identity of parties, date of signing, declarations made, as proven unless rebutted by strong counter-evidence. A private contract carries no such presumption. Signatures, capacity and even the existence of consent can all be challenged more easily. For high-value transactions, the practical difference is significant: a lender enforcing a mortgage note recorded in an authentic deed faces far less procedural friction than a creditor relying on a privately signed acknowledgement of debt.

  • Notarial deed: presumption of correctness; public record; difficult to contest.
  • Private contract: ordinary burden of proof on the party relying on it; vulnerable to forgery or authority challenges.

Registration and land-registry consequences

Land-registry notarisation is not optional for most property-related rights. Under Art. 216 CO, a sale of immovable property is only valid if executed in the form of a public deed. The land register (Grundbuch) will refuse to record a change of ownership, a new easement, a mortgage or even a reservation of a pre-emptive right unless the applicant submits a properly certified authentic instrument. A private reservation agreement, common in practice, does not bind the seller to transfer and cannot be annotated in the land register by itself.

  • Must notarise: ownership transfer, mortgage creation, easement, usufruct, long-term leases requiring annotation.
  • Private contract sufficient: preliminary term sheets, non-binding letters of intent, short-term leases not requiring registration.

Cost and notary fees in Switzerland

Notary fees Switzerland are regulated at the cantonal level, creating wide variance. Most cantons calculate fees as a percentage of the transaction value for property deals, with additional fixed-rate charges for certification and registry submission. The table below illustrates typical ranges.

Cost item Notarial deed (typical) Private contract (typical)
Notary fees, property purchase Approx. 0.1 %–0.5 % of purchase price (varies by canton). Example on CHF 1,000,000: CHF 1,000–5,000 notary only, plus registry fees No notary fee; lawyer drafting fees variable (CHF 1,000–3,000+ depending on complexity)
Land-registry fee Separate fee, often fixed component plus percentage; typical range CHF 200–1,500+ depending on canton and transaction value N/A, private contract alone cannot trigger a registry entry
Company incorporation Notarial deed fee plus commercial-register charges; minimums vary by canton and entity complexity Not available for AG/SA or GmbH/Sàrl, notarial deed is required
Indirect cost (litigation / enforcement) Lower dispute risk typically reduces future legal costs Higher potential litigation costs if authenticity or terms are contested

Because canton tariffs differ materially, always confirm the actual fee schedule with the notary’s office or the cantonal authority before committing. For a property purchase of CHF 1,000,000, the combined notary and registry cost in a low-fee canton may be under CHF 2,000, while in a higher-fee canton it can exceed CHF 5,000.

Timing and procedural flow

A notarial transaction typically requires two to four weeks from instruction to registry entry: the notary prepares or reviews the draft (several days), schedules a signing appointment (one to two weeks’ lead time is common), certifies the document on the day and then submits it to the land or commercial register (processing times vary by canton, from days to several weeks). A private contract can be signed the same day the parties agree on terms, but if the deal ultimately requires notarisation for closing or registration, the time saved at the outset is simply shifted to a later stage.

Liability and professional duty

A Swiss notary is a public officer with statutory duties. These include verifying the identity and legal capacity of the parties, confirming that the transaction complies with applicable formalities, and providing limited explanations of the deed’s legal consequences. If the notary breaches these duties, professional-liability claims are available. This built-in layer of verification reduces the risk of identity fraud, incapacity challenges and procedural defects, but it does not replace independent legal advice on the commercial terms of the transaction. Parties should still engage their own counsel for tax planning, due diligence and negotiation strategy.

Dispute resolution and enforcement practicalities

In enforcement proceedings, courts and debt-collection offices treat authentic deeds with greater deference than private documents. A creditor holding a notarially certified mortgage note, for instance, can initiate enforcement through the land register and the debt-collection process with minimal additional proof. A creditor relying on a private contract may first need to obtain a court judgment confirming the debt before enforcement can proceed, adding months and cost. Lenders are acutely aware of this difference, which is why Swiss banks and institutional lenders routinely require notarial deeds for mortgage and charge security. The pros and cons of notarisation weigh most heavily in this dimension: the upfront cost of an authentic deed buys faster, cheaper enforcement downstream.

What Changes in 2026

No federal statutory change has altered the formal requirements for notarisation or the distinction between authentic deeds and private contracts up to mid-2026. The core rules, Art. 216 CO for property sales, the Civil Code provisions on land-register entries, and the Code of Obligations provisions on company formation, remain in force as before. The likely practical effect of recent market developments, however, is increased emphasis on fee transparency: canton notary offices and consumer platforms now publish more detailed tariff information than in prior years, and lenders continue to tighten their documentation requirements, making the notarial-deed route effectively non-negotiable for any transaction touching the land register or a regulated lender.

Decision Framework: Notarial Deed vs Private Contract

Use the table and checklists below to decide whether you need a notary or whether a private contract is sufficient for your transaction. If any single “Choose the notarial deed” trigger applies, plan for notarisation from the outset, retrofitting an authentic deed later always costs more time and money.

If your priority is… Choose…
Registering ownership or a mortgage/charge in the land register Notarial deed
Minimising upfront transaction cost with no registry or third-party need Private contract (with strong drafting and escrow)
Fast interim deal memorandum before a registered closing Private contract now, but engage a notary early for the closing deed
Cross-border recognition or lender requirements Notarial deed
Flexibility to amend terms quickly between parties Private contract (with clear amendment clause)
Maximum evidentiary certainty and third-party acceptance Notarial deed

Choose the notarial deed when:

  • The transaction creates, transfers or extinguishes a right that must be entered in a public registry, land ownership, mortgage, easement or certain corporate acts.
  • A lender, bank or other third party explicitly requires an authentic instrument.
  • You need the highest evidentiary certainty for a high-value deal or foreseeable cross-border recognition.
  • The transaction involves company incorporation (AG/SA, GmbH/Sàrl) or a statutory corporate act requiring notarisation.

Choose the private contract when:

  • The subject matter is movable property, services or commercial terms that do not require registration.
  • You need a fast preliminary agreement and will follow up with an authentic deed for registry formalities at closing.
  • Cost sensitivity is the primary driver, both parties trust each other, and strong contract drafting plus escrow or guarantee mechanisms are in place.
  • The agreement is genuinely interim, a term sheet, letter of intent or framework agreement preceding a formal closing.

When to Engage a Lawyer or Notary

Knowing when to call a professional is as important as choosing the right document form. Engage a notary or lawyer, or both, when any of the following situations applies:

  • Registry entry required. If the transaction must be recorded in the land register or commercial register, a notary appointment is mandatory, start early to avoid delays.
  • Significant tax exposure. Property-transfer taxes, stamp duties and capital-gains implications vary by canton and can exceed the notary fee. Get legal advice before signing.
  • Complex securities or structured finance. Mortgage notes, pledges over shares or multi-layered security packages require coordinated notarial and legal work.
  • Cross-border elements. Foreign buyers, sellers or entities trigger additional requirements, apostille, legalisation, Lex Koller compliance checks, that a combined notary-and-lawyer team handles most efficiently.
  • Company formation or restructuring. Incorporating an AG or GmbH, increasing share capital, or merging entities involves notarial formalities and commercial-register filings that must be sequenced correctly.

Bring the following documents to the notary appointment: valid government-issued identification for all parties, existing title documents or land-register extracts, any previous registrations or annotations, powers of attorney (notarised if required), and the draft contract or term sheet.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Swiss Code of Obligations, official text (Fedlex)
  2. swisNot, Property law and notary guidance
  3. Neho, Notarisation explainer
  4. Neho, Notary fees
  5. Walder Wyss, Signing and Closing Private Acquisitions in Switzerland
  6. Bär & Karrer, Reservation agreements in Swiss real estate
  7. Comparis, Property purchase contract guide
  8. Institut für Notariatsrecht und Notarielle Praxis (University of Bern)

FAQs

Who can notarise a document in Switzerland?
Only officially authorised Swiss notaries may issue authentic deeds. Their organisation varies by canton, some are state employees, others are independent practitioners. The national body swisNot maintains a directory. Always confirm that your notary is registered in the canton where the property or company is located.
Not always. Most contracts are valid as private writings under Swiss law’s general principle of freedom of form. However, a deed is required wherever a specific statute mandates it, most notably Art. 216 CO for real-property sales and the Code of Obligations provisions governing AG and GmbH incorporation.
You need a notary whenever the transaction must be recorded as an authentic act or when a third party, the land register, a lender, the commercial register, requires one. The most common triggers are property transfers, mortgage creation, easement registration and company incorporation.
An authentic deed carries a statutory presumption of correctness, is accepted by registries and lenders without further proof, and substantially reduces the risk of costly evidence disputes. It is also the only form that can produce a valid land-register entry for most real-property rights.
Notary fees vary by canton and transaction type. For a property purchase, expect approximately 0.1 %–0.5 % of the purchase price for the notary fee alone, plus separate land-registry fees. On a CHF 1,000,000 purchase, the notary fee typically falls between CHF 1,000 and CHF 5,000. Always request a fee estimate from the cantonal notary before the appointment.
Yes. Swiss notaries commonly notarise documents drafted in foreign languages. However, an official or certified translation into the local official language may be required for land-register or commercial-register submission, and for cross-border recognition purposes.
In most cases, yes, you can subsequently execute an authentic deed to effect registry changes. But the delay, additional notary fees and potential complications with lenders or counterparties make this a more expensive path than notarising correctly from the start.
Cross-border recognition, apostille and legalisation requirements, and increased bank and lender scrutiny all amplify the advantages of an authentic deed. Foreign buyers must also clear Lex Koller restrictions on non-resident property acquisition. Getting both a notary and a Swiss-qualified lawyer involved early is strongly recommended.
how to register for ekap
By Global Law Experts

posted 55 minutes ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Notarial Deed vs Private Contract in Switzerland, When Do You Need a Notary?

Send welcome message

Custom Message