Quick summary
Switzerland is commonly used for private banking, holding companies, commodity trading, family offices, wealth planning. It may be useful for legal tax planning and international structuring, but the correct outcome depends on residence, ownership, business activity, source of income, substance, reporting rules and treaties.
Key facts
Best for
Private banking, holding companies, commodity trading, family offices, wealth planning
Not ideal for
Cheap company setup or low-cost banking
Is Switzerland the right fit?
Switzerland is strongest for private banking, holding companies, commodity trading, family offices, wealth planning. It is good when EU reputation, treaty access, or European clients matter more than the lowest possible cost.
Use it when
- You need holding / wealth / banking.
- Your activity, invoices, clients and banking story are easy to explain.
- You are ready to maintain accounting, renewals and compliance properly.
Avoid it when
- Your real goal is only “low tax” without substance or documentation.
- You need the cheapest possible setup with no ongoing administration.
- Cheap company setup or low-cost banking
Banking reality
Banking is possible, but banks will look closely at activity, source of funds, client countries, ownership, and whether the company has real commercial logic.
Cost reality
Best when you can pay for proper setup, accounting, and compliance without overbuilding the structure.
Documents usually needed
- Passport and proof of address for owners/directors.
- Clear business activity description and expected countries of trade.
- Source of funds / source of wealth explanation.
- Contracts, invoices, website, CV or company profile where relevant.
Timeline and red flags
Simple cases may be completed in a few weeks, but banking, compliance checks, and document quality can change the timeline.
Watch out: Weak source-of-funds evidence, nominee-only thinking, no clear business activity, mismatched client geography, and assuming company tax solves personal tax.
Better alternatives to compare
Company setup
Typical setup depends on entity type, shareholders, directors, local address, office or substance requirements, licensing, accounting, audit, and banking needs.
Estimated setup: $4,000–$15,000+
Estimated annual maintenance: $4,000–$20,000+
Company tax
Corporate tax varies by canton; some cantons are significantly lower than others
Use this as a headline summary only. Corporate tax can change based on source of income, permanent establishment, controlled foreign company rules, withholding taxes, VAT/sales tax, sector rules and tax treaties.
Personal tax and tax residency
Personal tax varies by canton; lump-sum taxation may exist for eligible foreign nationals in some cantons
Banking
Corporate banking difficulty: Medium.
Banks may ask for passport and ID, proof of address, company documents, business model, source of funds, tax residency information, contracts, expected transactions and proof of real activity.
Funds, holding companies and structures
AG/GmbH, family office structures, holding companies
Compliance and reputation
Low; expensive and compliance-heavy
Always check beneficial ownership rules, CRS/FATCA reporting, economic substance, AML requirements, accounting and audit obligations.
Sources and verification
We use official government pages, professional tax summaries, OECD data, public registries and reputable comparison data. Last checked: 18 June 2026.
