GmbH Formation Switzerland: Complete Guide (2026)
Most founders who contact us about GmbH formation Switzerland assume the hardest part is choosing a name or opening a bank account. In reality, the step that trips up more than half of first-time applicants is the Stampa Declaration — a document that most advisors forget to mention until the notary appointment is already booked. After 18 years and more than 1,000 formations handled from our office at Grafenauweg 4 in Zug, we have seen every version of that particular delay. This guide walks you through every stage so that you do not become a cautionary tale.
Image: 1200×630px hero — Swiss Commercial Register filing process
What Is a Swiss GmbH?
Image: 800×450px — GmbH structure vs AG comparison
A GmbH (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung) is Switzerland’s equivalent of a limited liability company. It sits between a sole proprietorship and a full Aktiengesellschaft (AG) on the scale of complexity and cost. Shareholders are liable only up to their capital contribution; personal assets are protected. The legal basis is the Swiss Code of Obligations (OR/CO), Articles 772 to 827.
If you are weighing the two main corporate structures, our Swiss AG vs GmbH comparison covers the decision in detail. The short version: a GmbH is typically the right choice for SMEs, service businesses, startups, and foreign groups establishing a Swiss subsidiary, provided that shareholder privacy is not a primary concern.
Key Characteristics of the Swiss GmbH
Image: 800×450px — GmbH key facts infographic
Before starting the formation process, you need to understand what you are building.
Minimum share capital: CHF 20,000. Unlike the AG, the entire amount must be paid in at formation. There is no option to pay only half now and the rest later. The funds sit in a capital deposit account (Kapitaleinzahlungskonto) until the Commercial Register entry is confirmed.
Shareholders are publicly listed. Every shareholder and their capital contribution appears in the Commercial Register (Handelsregister). This is searchable by anyone through ZEFIX, the federal company search portal. If confidentiality matters to you, the AG structure offers meaningfully more privacy.
Share transfers require a notarial deed. You cannot sell or transfer your GmbH share via a simple contract. Every transfer must be executed before a notary, which adds friction but also protects existing shareholders from unwanted new members.
At least one managing director must be resident in Switzerland. Under Article 718 of the Code of Obligations, at least one person with individual signatory rights must be domiciled in Switzerland. If no founder lives here, a Swiss nominee director can satisfy this requirement.
Notarisation is required. The articles of association (Gesellschaftsvertrag) must be executed before a public notary. This is not optional and cannot be done remotely via a foreign notary.
Step-by-Step: How GmbH Formation Switzerland Works in 2026
Image: 800×450px — formation timeline from name check to register entry
Step 1: Name Check and Reservation
Start with a name search on ZEFIX (zefix.ch). Your proposed name must be unique, not misleading, and must include the designation “GmbH” or “Sàrl” (French-speaking cantons) or “Sagl” (Ticino). Names that imply a public authority or a regulated activity require additional approvals.
Once you confirm availability, we can begin drafting the articles.
Step 2: Draft the Articles of Association
The Gesellschaftsvertrag must contain, at minimum:
- Company name and registered address
- Purpose (Zweck) of the company
- Amount of share capital and division into shares
- Names of shareholders and their contributions
- Names of managing directors
The purpose clause deserves careful attention. Too narrow and you need a notarial amendment every time the business evolves. Too broad and some cantonal registers will push back. We draft purpose clauses that are broad enough to last years without triggering change fees.
Step 3: Prepare the Stampa Declaration
This document is consistently the most overlooked part of GmbH formation Switzerland. The Stampa Declaration is a signed statement from each founding shareholder confirming that:
- No hidden side agreements exist regarding the shares
- No contributions in kind are being made (or if they are, they are disclosed)
- The subscriber is the true beneficial owner
Missing or incorrectly prepared Stampa Declarations cause the Commercial Register to reject the application. Your notary will require it before the signing appointment.
Step 4: Open a Capital Deposit Account
Before the notarisation can take place, the share capital (CHF 20,000 minimum) must be deposited in a special capital deposit account (Kapitaleinzahlungskonto) at a Swiss bank. This is not a regular business account. The bank will issue a blocking confirmation letter, which the notary requires.
Opening this account has become more complex since 2022, as Swiss banks apply enhanced due diligence to newly forming entities. Our team coordinates directly with several banking partners to accelerate this step. For guidance on the broader banking picture, see our page on corporate bank accounts in Switzerland.
Step 5: Notarisation
All founders (or their authorised representatives via power of attorney) must appear before a Swiss notary to execute the articles of association. The notary verifies identity documents, confirms the Stampa Declaration, reviews the capital deposit confirmation, and certifies the deed.
Notary fees for a standard GmbH formation in Switzerland range from CHF 800 to CHF 1,500 depending on the canton and the complexity of the articles.
Step 6: Commercial Register Application
The notary or your legal representative files the registration application with the cantonal Commercial Register. The application includes:
- Certified articles of association
- Stampa Declaration(s)
- Capital deposit confirmation
- Details of managing directors and signatures
The Commercial Register fee is approximately CHF 600 for a standard GmbH. Registrations in Zug, our home canton, are processed efficiently, which is one reason Zug canton remains popular with international founders.
Step 7: Capital Release and Account Conversion
Once the Commercial Register confirms the entry, the bank releases the blocked capital into the company’s operating account. From this point the GmbH is fully operational.
Total timeline: 2 to 4 weeks for a straightforward formation. Complex structures, contributions in kind, or slow banking responses can extend this.
Real-World Story: The Logistics Startup That Almost Filed Twice
Image: 800×450px — document preparation and Commercial Register filing
In early 2026, a founder named Tobias Reiner contacted us after a previous advisor had submitted his GmbH registration application to the Zug Commercial Register without the correct Stampa Declaration. The Register rejected the filing and required a complete re-submission with notarisation. By the time Tobias reached us, he had already paid one set of notary fees and was facing a second appointment — an unnecessary delay of three weeks and roughly CHF 1,200 in duplicated costs.
We coordinated directly with the notary’s office, prepared a corrected Stampa Declaration the same day, and filed a clean application within 72 hours. His GmbH was entered in the register nine business days later.
The lesson: GmbH formation Switzerland is not difficult, but it is precise. One missing document resets the clock.
GmbH Formation Costs in Switzerland (2026)
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Here is a realistic cost breakdown for a standard GmbH with no contributions in kind and a single class of shares:
| Item | Cost (CHF) |
|---|---|
| Share capital deposit | 20,000 (released after registration) |
| Notary fees | 800 to 1,500 |
| Commercial Register fee | ~600 |
| Legal/advisory fees (Lawsupport) | varies by scope |
| Translation (if non-German documents) | varies |
| Bank account setup (some banks charge) | 0 to 500 |
The share capital is not a sunk cost. It belongs to the company and is available for operating expenses after the Register entry. The actual out-of-pocket formation expense, excluding capital, typically runs CHF 1,500 to 3,000 for a straightforward formation handled professionally.
GmbH vs AG: When the GmbH Is the Right Choice
Image: 800×450px — comparison chart GmbH vs AG key criteria
The GmbH suits you if:
- You want the simplest compliant Swiss corporate structure
- Share capital below CHF 100,000 is preferable
- You are setting up an SME, a consultancy, a technology startup, or a subsidiary of a foreign company
- You are comfortable with public shareholder disclosure
- You do not plan to raise equity from many investors or pursue a public listing
If investor rounds, strict shareholder anonymity, or a larger capital base are on the agenda, our Swiss AG formation guide will help you think through the decision properly. You may also want to read about holding company structures in Switzerland if group ownership is part of your plan.
Real-World Story: The Foreign Subsidiary That Needed Speed
Marta Kolovic, head of European expansion at a Slovenian software company, needed a Swiss GmbH registered within four weeks before a key contract could be signed with a Zurich-based client. The client’s procurement policy required a Switzerland-registered entity as counterparty. Her company had no Swiss residents on its team.
We arranged a Swiss nominee director through our nominee director service, drafted articles with a technology services purpose clause, coordinated the capital deposit with a cantonal bank, and filed the registration application following notarisation on day 11. The GmbH appeared in the Commercial Register on day 22. The contract was signed on day 28.
Speed was only possible because every document was prepared correctly the first time.
Swiss Resident Director Requirement
Image: 800×450px — Article 718 CO requirement explained
This is the single most common practical obstacle for foreign founders. Article 718 CO requires that at least one managing director with individual signatory rights be domiciled in Switzerland. If you and your co-founders are all based outside Switzerland, you must either:
- Appoint a Swiss-resident employee as managing director
- Engage a professional nominee director service
A nominee director is a licensed professional who holds the directorship and Swiss signatory rights on behalf of the company under a clearly defined contractual arrangement. The beneficial owner retains full operational control. This is a standard, legally compliant practice widely used by international businesses establishing Swiss entities. Learn more on our Swiss nominee director page.
Tax Considerations for the Swiss GmbH
Image: 800×450px — cantonal corporate tax rate comparison
GmbH taxation in Switzerland operates at three levels: federal, cantonal, and municipal. The effective combined corporate tax rate varies significantly by canton. Zug, for example, has one of the lowest cantonal rates in the country, which is why a disproportionate share of Swiss GmbH formations by international founders happen here.
GmbH profits are subject to corporate income tax. Distributions to shareholders are taxed as dividend income at the shareholder level, creating economic double taxation, though participation relief (Beteiligungsabzug) may apply when a GmbH holds significant stakes in subsidiaries.
For a full breakdown of rates, cantonal variations, and holding structures, see our guide to corporate tax in Switzerland. You can also compare rates across cantons in our cantonal tax comparison.
Common Mistakes in GmbH Formation Switzerland
Image: 800×450px — checklist of common errors and how to avoid them
1. Incomplete Stampa Declaration. As noted above, this alone accounts for a large share of registration rejections.
2. Purpose clause too narrow. “Development of mobile applications for the hospitality sector in Switzerland” may describe today’s business perfectly, but it will require a notarial amendment the moment you add a new service line.
3. Capital deposit account opened too late. Some founders try to notarise before the bank has issued the blocking confirmation. The notary cannot proceed without it.
4. Ignoring the residency requirement. Assuming a foreign director can simply list a Swiss address without actually being domiciled there. The Commercial Register verifies residency.
5. Choosing the wrong canton. Tax rates, register processing times, and local notary availability vary. Zug is consistently efficient and tax-competitive, but the right canton depends on your specific circumstances.
Request a Free Assessment
Lawsupport (Morgan Hartley Consulting) has handled GmbH formation Switzerland for over 18 years from our office at Grafenauweg 4, Zug. We have completed more than 1,000 formations for clients in more than 40 countries. We manage every step: name check, articles of association, Stampa Declaration, capital deposit coordination, notary appointment, and Commercial Register filing.
No travel is required. Founders can authorise us by power of attorney to act on their behalf throughout the process.
Request a Free Assessment and receive a fixed-fee quote within 1–2 business hours.
- Phone: +41 44 51 52 592
- Email: info@lawsupport.ch
- Address: Grafenauweg 4, Zug, Switzerland
For context on how the GmbH fits within the broader Swiss corporate framework, start with our guide to company formation in Switzerland.
Frequently Asked Questions: GmbH Formation Switzerland
Q: How long does GmbH formation in Switzerland take?
For a straightforward formation with no contributions in kind, no complex ownership structures, and no delays in the banking process, the typical timeline is 2 to 4 weeks from first instruction to Commercial Register entry. Complex structures or slow bank responses can extend this to 6 to 8 weeks.
Q: Do I need to travel to Switzerland to form a GmbH?
No. We can handle the entire process by power of attorney. Founders located anywhere in the world can instruct us remotely. Identity verification for the notary and bank can generally be completed via certified copies or video identification procedures, depending on the bank.
Q: Can a foreign company be the sole shareholder of a Swiss GmbH?
Yes. A foreign company can hold 100% of a Swiss GmbH. There are no minimum Swiss shareholder requirements. The managing director residency requirement (at least one Swiss-resident director with individual signatory rights) still applies.
Q: What is the difference between a GmbH share and an AG share?
GmbH shares (Stammanteile) cannot be transferred without a notarial deed. AG shares (Aktien) are generally freely transferable unless the articles restrict this. GmbH shares also appear in the public register alongside the shareholder’s identity, whereas AG shareholders are not publicly disclosed.
Q: How much does it cost to change the articles of a GmbH after formation?
Any amendment to the articles of association requires a shareholders’ resolution and notarisation, followed by a Commercial Register update. Costs typically include notary fees of CHF 500 to 1,000 and a register fee of around CHF 200 to 400, depending on the canton and the nature of the change.
Q: What is the Stampa Declaration and why does it matter?
The Stampa Declaration is a signed statement from each founding shareholder confirming that no hidden side agreements exist, no undisclosed contributions in kind are being made, and the subscriber is the true beneficial owner. It is the most commonly overlooked document in GmbH formation Switzerland and the leading cause of Commercial Register rejections.
Q: What is the minimum share capital for a Swiss GmbH?
The minimum share capital is CHF 20,000, and the entire amount must be paid in at formation. The funds are held in a capital deposit account until the Commercial Register entry is confirmed, then released to the company.
Q: Can I use a nominee director for my Swiss GmbH?
Yes. Article 718 of the Code of Obligations requires at least one managing director with individual signatory rights to be domiciled in Switzerland. If no founder lives in Switzerland, a professional nominee director can satisfy this requirement. The beneficial owner retains full operational control.
Q: Are GmbH shareholders publicly visible in Switzerland?
Yes. Every shareholder and their capital contribution appears in the Commercial Register, searchable through ZEFIX. If shareholder confidentiality is a priority, the AG structure offers more privacy.
Q: Which Swiss canton is best for GmbH formation?
Zug is consistently popular with international founders due to its low effective corporate tax rate (approximately 11.9% combined), fast Commercial Register processing times, and an established professional services ecosystem. The right canton depends on your specific circumstances, which we assess at the outset.
Lawsupport (Morgan Hartley Consulting) | Grafenauweg 4, Zug | +41 44 51 52 592 | info@lawsupport.ch