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Switzerland Tax Guide for Small Businesses:
An Executive Summary

This is an introductory guide for Small-Business Owners, linking in to our full Switzerland Fact-File. If you'd rather dive right in to the Fact-File, you can use the navigation on the right of this page, or start from the Switzerland home page.

Business Formation: The government has a fairly light touch in terms of statutory requirements. You don't need anyone's permission to start a business, and you won't have to register or license your business unless you form a partnership or a limited company (Stock Corporation or GmbH), or unless you require a special license, eg to run a pub or make atom bombs. Limited companies do have to be registered of course, and have to report annually. Partnerships also have to be registered. And remembering that the only two certainties in life are death and taxes, inevitably you'll have to make annual tax returns, whether you're a limited company or not. If you're really a small business, you won't have to bother with VAT. Of course if you take on staff, life becomes more complicated!

Domestic Taxation: The big issues are the choice of canton, and whether to be taxed as an individual trader or as a company. There are major differences between cantons, which compete for your business; broadly, though combined individual and corporate rates top out at 23%. But allowances and deductions may make a big difference, so you should study your chosen canton carefully. Broadly, if you are building an investment-heavy business, a company may be best, while if you are in a simple cash in/cash out sort of business, being an individual trader may be better. Husbands and wives can play some interesting variations, and get the best of both worlds. Longer term, the holy grail is to turn income into capital, but it isn't easy - the tax authority got there before you! If you're not Swiss, another goal is to remain non-resident, which means not having a permanent establishment (fixed place of business) so that you get taxed only on Swiss-source income. If there's one aspect of your business on which you should consider taking paid-for advice, it's probably the tax structure. It's so important to get it right at the beginning!

International Taxation: A small business usually has a static location, and you'll trade from there. If you're selling goods overseas it's straightforward, at least within the EU and EEEA, but if you're selling services to corporates it can be more complicated because the foreign country may take a bite out of your returns, called withholding tax. Then you have to turn to double tax treaties to try to get the money back. It's all a bit of a jungle. And if you're big enough, VAT is an extra complication. If you set up a branch in a foreign country, you need to try to avoid the 'permanent establishment' trap, and you may get bogged down in local VAT. If you send staff - or yourself - to work in foreign countries you need to think hard about their tax situation in advance, both in respect of local income taxation and perhaps because of withholding tax. E-commerce companies have special opportunities and special problems, although the new EU VAT rules do simplify matters to some extent.

Tax-Efficient Structures: With reasonably low corporate and individual tax rates, there appears to be not much need for exotic structures to minimize tax; but if you are resident and thinking of becoming wealthy (who isn't!), things are not so simple. There is a case to be made for locating businesses in low-tax, 'offshore' jurisdictions, especially if you are eventually planning to retire somewhere out of Switzerland. As yet, there are no 'CFC' rules in Switzerland, so that profits made in such places can stay there. Offshore structures are often useful for inheritance tax and asset protection reasons as well, and anti-avoidance law has not gone nearly so far in Switzerland as in, for example, the UK. Non-resident small businesses meaning to trade in Switzerland can also use offshore structures, as long as they avoid the 'permanent establishment' trap.

Business Incentives: There are a number of support schemes operated by various levels of government, some of them in association with the European Union, offering direct grants to support employment, rebates on taxes, tax credits for investors in small businesses, and R&D tax credits. It is well worth investigating what's on offer. However, the saying: 'He who sups with the devil needs a long spoon' comes to mind. The schemes are well-intentioned, no doubt, but they can be intensely bureaucratic, with very intrusive qualification procedures, and a long 'tail' of reporting requirements.

Employing People: Many businesspeople will just tell you: 'Don't do it'. 'Marry in haste; repent at leisure', they say, and it was never so true than when it comes to employment. Don't kid yourself that employees will feel that they owe you anything. Today's workers, encouraged by a slew of anti-business legislation from Brussels, and the general nannying attitude of government, often feel that the world owes them a living. Many employers of course bring problems on themselves by treating employees as little better than slaves. At all events, try as hard as you can to use contractors (ie self-employed people) rather than employees. The tax authority has plenty to say about that, of course, so if you are left with no choice, realize that you will have to operate 'PAYE', provide various statutory social benefits, and conform with local Swiss employment law, albeit that is much more liberal than elsewhere in Europe. Of course, there are plenty of exceptions to these rather sweeping generalizations. Lucky you if you find some!

Welfare and Lifestyle: Meaning, for the business person herself. Obviously, state social welfare schemes apply to business owners as much as to anyone else, although there may be problems if you operate across national borders. Many business-people will want to have improved (meaning private) health benefits, and almost all will want to find tax-efficient ways of making provision for their pensions. It's important to separate these from your business itself, in case of failure. If you have it in mind to retire to somewhere warmer and less highly taxed, then the time to start is now, in terms of building up a pension away from the grasp of the tax authorities, although individual tax rates in Switzerland are not very high.

International Aspects: Perhaps you plan to live out your life as a respected and contented member of your local community. The salt of the earth, one might say, if that's not patronising. But some people will find themselves drawn intentionally or otherwise to an international existence, doing business and/or living in other countries. There are many challenges: apart from the difficulty of arranging your tax affairs satisfactorily, there are the problems that go along with property ownership, education of your children, international removals, health care and pension provision, just to take some of the more obvious issues. Of course no one can predict the future with any certainty, but there are all too many stories of people who have trapped themselves in the wrong investment in the wrong currency in the wrong place, with multiple taxmen on their backs. Most such problems are avoidable, with forethought.



 

Introductory Guides

Brief, clearly written summaries with links to relevant sections of the Fact-File. The Fact-File itself is linked in full below.

 

Fact-File

Part 1: Switzerland Business Formation for Individuals

  1. Switzerland Individual Business Structures
  2. Switzerland Individual Business Registration
  3. Switzerland Individual Business Registration Cost
  4. Switzerland Individual Business Licensing
  5. Switzerland Foreigners in Business
  6. Switzerland Business Organisations
  7. Switzerland Business Accounting
  8. Switzerland Family Business Ownership
  9. Switzerland Venture Capital
  10. Switzerland Individual Business Franchises

Part 2: Switzerland Individual Business Domestic Taxation

  1. Switzerland Individual Business Tax Residence Rules
  2. Switzerland Permanent Establishment
  3. Switzerland Individual Income Tax Rates and Bands
  4. Switzerland Personal Allowances and Business Deductions
  5. Switzerland Husband and Wife Partnerships
  6. Switzerland Partnership Income Taxation
  7. Switzerland Limited Companies Income Taxation
  8. Switzerland Business Profit Retention
  9. Switzerland Business Losses
  10. Switzerland Value Added Tax (VAT)
  11. Switzerland Individual Business Capital Gains Tax (CGT)
  12. Switzerland Individual Business Other Taxes
  13. Switzerland Individual Artists Royalties
  14. Switzerland Individual Business Tax-Efficient Profit Distribution

Part 3: Switzerland Individual Business International Taxation

  1. Switzerland Individual Business International Tax Liability
  2. Switzerland Individual Business Withholding Taxes
  3. Switzerland Double Tax Treaties

Part 4: Switzerland Individual Business Tax-Efficient Structures

  1. Switzerland Individual Business Tax-Efficient Structures
  2. Switzerland Individual Business Trusts and Foundations
  3. Switzerland Individual Business for Non-Residents
  4. Switzerland Individual Business use of Offshore
  5. Switzerland Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC) Rules
  6. Switzerland Personal Estate and Inheritance Planning

Part 5: Switzerland Small Business Incentive Programs

  1. Switzerland Small Business Support Schemes
  2. Switzerland Training Incentive Schemes
  3. Switzerland R&D Tax Credits
  4. Switzerland Individual Business Tax Holidays

Part 6: Switzerland Individual Business Employment Issues

  1. Switzerland Individual Business Employer Responsibilities
  2. Switzerland Employment vs Self-Employment Tax Issues
  3. Switzerland Apprenticeship and Work Experience Schemes
  4. Switzerland Employee Dismissal Rules
  5. Switzerland Business Owner Employment and Invoicing Rules

Part 7: Switzerland Business Owner Welfare and Lifestyle

  1. Switzerland Business Social Security
  2. Switzerland Business Domestic Pensions
  3. Switzerland Offshore and International Pensions
  4. Switzerland Individual Business Healthcare
  5. Switzerland Individual Business Banking Services
  6. Switzerland Education
  7. Switzerland Individual or Business Leaving Switzerland
  8. Switzerland Domestic Real Estate
  9. Switzerland International Real Estate